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Turkey Day Recipes

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
I'm right there with everyone on the fried Turkey. Never a juicier bird have I had. There are some key elements - fully defrosted is critical - as is a bone dry bird when you drop it in. I use a whole roll of paper towels to dry it off, never had a boil over... If anyone's interested in frying their first turkey - let me know via PM (same as last year) and I'll send you a .PDF file I have that is the soup to nuts about how to fry a turkey.

As for recipes, I've got a sweet potato one that I like. PSW makes a kick-ass pear salad that I'll share with you as well. And by kick-ass I mean totally sweet... I just gotta get home to post it.
 

gaijin6423

Ask me about ninjas!
Brine your turkey! Since I came to Cherry Point, my mom has brought the turkey from Pittsburgh* (yes, in a cooler), and I brine it the night before cooking. It imparts a lot of flavor and keeps the meat very moist.

My typical brine looks like this:
1-2 Tbsp of whole black peppercorns
3-4 Bay leaves
1 Tbsp dried thyme (use about 6 sprigs if you use fresh)
2 Cups of Kosher salt
1 Gal water
1 Gal ice water

Put everything but the ice water in a big ass pot, bring to a simmer, and wait for all the salt to dissolve. Turn off the heat, and let it cool for a while. This will let the ingredients steep a while. Once everything has cooled to about room temperature, add the ice water. Put the bird in an insulated cooler (I have a water cooler that I use just for brining meat), add the cold brine solution, and close it all up until the next day.

I don't stuff turkey. Hygienic reasons aside, I think it just takes too damn long to cook a stuffed bird, and I have too much shit to make in the oven. I do include some aromatics in the roasting pan, though. I typically use something like:
2 medium yellow onions, cut into chunks
3-4 cloves of garlic, crushed
2-3 carrots, cut into large pieces
2-3 celery stalks, cut into large pieces
2 shallots, quartered
2 bay leaves
3-4 sprigs of thyme

Dry the bird, rub with canola or peanut oil, and lightly salt and pepper it. Start the turkey at 500 deg for the first half hour or so, which will begin to crisp the skin nicely. Turn the oven down to 350 deg and continue to roast until the bird hits an internal temp of 160 (carryover will take it over the safe point, but check both the breast and thigh temperature, just to be sure). I use an instant-read, remote probe thermometer with a temp alarm on it. Once done, remove the bird, cover loosely with foil for at least 15 minutes, and you can make gravy from what's left in the pan.

If it looks like the recipe from Good Eats, that's because it's close.

*--Due to a sacred oath, sworn by me to my mother, I cannot reveal the source of the bird. They recently began shipping birds, and there's stiff competition to get one every year. Aside from killing your own, these are the best birds I've found.
 

Mumbles

Registered User
pilot
Contributor
I do Big Bird every year, NO bird is complete without oyster stuffing, 16 Oz of Chesapeake or Chincoteague oysters mixed in with partially cooked (3/4) sausage, celery, onions, can of cranberry, egg and corn bread makes killer eats!

a_big_bird_thanksgiving.jpg
 

sickboy

Well-Known Member
pilot
a friend of mine made his "thanksgiving cocktail" consisting of cranberry juice, potato vodka, and gravy. I DO NOT recommend this.
 

exo

Member
The best turkey in the world is brined. Take a large pot, fill it with water, salt, a few herbs, sugar, and some oil and soak the turkey over night in it before you cook it. Will be the juiciest bird you have ever tasted. Be sure to follow an actualy brine receipe though...
 

McBuff

Sees the light
+1 to deepfrying and brine-ing but I'm a bit of a traditionalist.

If you're roasting (which really is the easiest way to do it) just a few tips. If you can, use a thick roasting pan instead of the disposable aluminum ones. Find a way to elevate the turkey out of the drippings. I just use a wire cake rack. Most important: cover the breast with something. I use strips of bacon and attach with toothpics. I also cover that with cheesecloth and baste about every 30 minutes. I have yet to have a dry turkey.
 

CommodoreMid

Whateva! I do what I want!
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
The best turkey in the world is brined. Take a large pot, fill it with water, salt, a few herbs, sugar, and some oil and soak the turkey over night in it before you cook it. Will be the juiciest bird you have ever tasted. Be sure to follow an actualy brine receipe though...

I will third the brining support here. My family did it last year and while we aren't going to do it this year since they're all coming down to Pcola since I can't leave (damn IFS), I wish we could. My only complaint is while you're mixing the recipe it kind of made the house smell like ass.
 

utak

Registered User
I concur with brining the turkey. I use vegetable stock (for subtle aromatic flavor to the turkey meat), kosher salt, and brown sugar. Works every time.
 

brownshoe

Well-Known Member
Contributor
I've a really simple recipe for roasted turkey from, Julia Child. It's in a cookbook I'd gotten from PBS years go for a donation I'd made. It's all about stuffing the bird with aromatic vegetables, spices, then roasting. Very tender turkey, really moist and tasty. Vermouth and white wine are involved. Makes a great gravy.

I've followed the recipe many times with great success. I'll scan the recipe and email it to you tomorrow when I get to the office, if you'd like.

Steve
 

haubby

Well-Known Member
None
Contributor
Whatever you do to your turkey...brine it the night before. It's makes all the difference in the world.
 

phrogpilot73

Well-Known Member
OK, so it turns out that my sweet potato recipe is pretty similar to nzachman's. The only thing different is that mine includes ground cinnamon and I put the little bitty marshmallows on top. However, I do have two that we us:

PSW's Grandmother's Kick-Ass Pear Salad RecipeTM
  • 1 Package Cool Whip
  • 1 Can of Pears
  • 1 Package Cream Cheese
  • 1 Package Lime Jello
  • 1/4 tsp lemon flavor
Drain and save the juice from the pears, and add water to make one cup. Boil the pear juice/water mixture in a saucepan. Add 1/4 teaspoon lemon flavor and 1 package lime jello to the hot juice. Stir until dissolved. Combine pears with one package cream cheese and blend. Pour in jello mixture and blend. Add small carton of cool whip and blend. Refrigerate until firm (preferably overnight).

Cranberry Rum Brie
  • 2 tsp Rum Extract
  • 2 Tbs Brown Sugar
  • 1/2 Cup Crushed Cranberry Sauce (whole berry)
  • 1/8 tsp nutmeg
  • 1 large Brie wheel (room temp)
  • 2 Tbs chopped Pecans
Combine sugar, rum extract, cranberries, and nutmeg. Peel/cut off rind from top of brie. Top with mixture & sprinkle with Pecans. Bake at 500 deg for 5 min or until melted.

Still looking for Mom's Creamed Onion Recipe...
 

Schnugg

It's gettin' a bit dramatic 'round here...
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
Might I recommend trying Oyster Stuffing:

stuffing.oyster.jpg


made from:

oysters.jpg


oysters.jpg

So good!!!!!!
 
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