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Turkey Tips

Posted by fawnridge 10A (My Page) on
Tue, Nov 21, 06 at 12:03

Turkey Tips
Ricky Ginsburg

Just so there's no doubt as to my qualifications - I've been cooking turkeys for over 35 years, probably cook around six a year. Here are three tips for making your turkey a successful investment:

1. Start the bird cooking breast side down. Cook it that way for the first half of your total cooking time (i.e. if you need 4 hours to cook the turkey, cook it 2 hours breast down.) Take the turkey out of the oven, flip it quickly, and put it back in to finish cooking. All the juices will have soaked into the white meat, along with all that flavor! You'll never dry out the breast meat if you do this.

2. Carving the finished bird. Remove the dark meat - all of it - drummers, wings, thighs, butts - and set them where I can reach them. Take a small knife and separate the breast meat from the breastbone (that white triangular chunk that runs the length of the breast.) Slide the knife in between the ribcage and sever the connections to the meat. Last, slit the meat from the tail and neck so that the breast meat is free. Lift the entire breast - as a single unit - and place it flat on your cutting board. Slice across the breast, making pieces 1/2" to 5/8" thick. Again, the white meat will stay moist and everyone gets a narrow sliver of skin (where all the flavor hangs out!)

3. The greatest stuffing in the known universe - cut between 6 and 12 potatoes into chunks and boil them. Don’t peel the potatoes; that’s where all the nutrients are! While the potatoes are cooking, sauté three large onions in chopped pieces. Cut the crust off a loaf of white bread and cut the bread in half, twice. Mash the potatoes, onions, bread, and four cloves of chopped garlic in a bowl. Add two sticks of melted butter or margarine that’s had a teaspoon of cayenne pepper mixed in to the bowl and mix thoroughly. Stuff the turkey, all cavities and let it cook.

Happy Thanksgiving!


Follow-Up Postings:

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RE: Turkey Tips

Will definitely try the breast down thing next time I do a turkey - it sure makes sense. (Enjoyed the pics too!)

I learned from a friend about a recipe that cooks the turkey overnight at a temp of 250......just enough I would think to keep the nasty bacteria from thriving....have you ever heard of this?


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RE: Turkey Tips

I do this with chickens and turkey now. I took Ricky's advice two years ago and I wouldn't cook a bird any other way now.


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RE: Turkey Tips

I will be giving this a try. I haven't cooked a turkey in a while.My husband has always fried them, but this year he has to work.
I am expecting 25-30 people and I don't want to mess it up.

Funny thing is I rarely ever eat any turkey, because I love eating all the different side dishes....and all the yummy desserts.


 
 

 

 


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