Okay, I am gonna grade your video like a school test, from A+ to F, and then I will explain why you got each grade.
1. Video Quality = A+
2. Audio Quality = C
3. Story fluidity = B
So, you did great on the video quality. Good lighting that offers nice rich inviting tones. Smooth motions and panning. Very cinematic. Great job there.
Your audio is just lacking. I am listening to your video using a $300 pair of Audio-Technica professional studio headphones and at 50% volume, I can barely hear any sound. Most people are gonna be watching your video on their smartphone and they are not gonna hear anything at all even at max volume. But I know why you did it this way? You were filming outdoors. We do not live in a quiet world, especially in the US. I live 30 miles in the middle of nowhere and I can seldom find a time where it is quiet enough to capture quality outdoor audio. Just yesterday I was out in the forest filing a herd of wild hogs and when I revered the footage, my mic picked up an oil pumpjack that was half a mile away and a jet flying overhead at 30,000 feet. It looks to me like you live in a city or urban area, so you will never have quiet outdoors. To avoid capturing all the background noise, you reduced your mic sensitivity way down. If you want to shoot outdoors, you have two options. Replace all your audio artificially with studio-created sound, or just mute the audio and add a music track. Your audio volume needs to be a LOT louder. 80% of your viewers will be watching your video on a smartphone with tiny weak speakers. Make sure they can hear the audio. Remember Audio, is actually more important than video. Video tells you what is going on. Audio is what helps you FEEL what is going on. Take any great movie like Star Wars (the original) and Last of the Mohicans, and watch it with the audio muted. You see quite rapidly that those movies are not that great without the soundtrack.
Your story fluidity needs to be smoother. You have some great shots, but you keep repeating them over and over again. You just need to show each shot once. Viewers only need to see you skin one chicken leg. They only need to see you score one chicken leg. They only need to see you bread one chicken leg. You do each of these actions three or four times each and it is very redundant. Some of your shots drag on too long necessarily. Modern audiences have the attention span of a Facebook Meme. They want the message delivered as quickly and as short as possible. When editing your video, try to reduce your shots to only what is necessary for the viewer to understand what is going on.
One personal side note, you made me cringe a couple of times with your knife work. I am a lifelong knife person. The first leg you skinned, you held the leg in your hand and sliced the skin with the knife edge pointed towards your hand just above your wrist. That is a violation of knife safe handling procedure. You never cut towards yourself, especially not right on top of your wrist. Later on, you do it a safer way by laying the leg on the board and slicing it down towards the board. Use that shot, and delete the first shot. I will guarantee you that if you leave that first shot in, you are gonna get nailed in the comments and they won't be as nice as me.
I hope this helps.