View Full Version : Thanksgiving Menu's
Team Sergeant
11-12-2014, 20:03
Thanksgiving Menu's
Who's making what? ;)
I'm thinking:
Rotisserie Turkey, Rotisserie Duck or Smoked Turkey Breast
Stuffing, Brioche-Pear Stuffing With Italian Sausage and Almonds
Sweet Potato Gnocchi with Maple Cinnamon Sage Brown Butter
Pear and Blue Cheese Salad
Cheesy Mushroom and Broccoli Casserole
Glazed Carrots
and making my own turkey stock a few days before to make turkey gravy one day prior.
Those are my Thanksgiving ideas, and yeah, I got them off the internet after a long search. If you google them you'll find the recipes.
I'll have whatever my wonderful wife puts upon the table and be blessed for it - one of the many things to be thankful for each and every day.
I'm a lucky dog my friends, a lucky dog.
(1VB)compforce
11-13-2014, 08:35
I'm only cooking for a few people so I'm going with a plated meal, but several courses. I haven't nailed down the exact menu yet, but the main features will be:
Mixed Greens salad
Pork Sausage appetizer (I grind and stuff my own sausage)
Turkey Roulade (breast with turkey thigh meat pate for the filler)
pumpkin ice cream on a vanilla/Boston cream pie or a pumpkin based tart.
I may play with molecular a bit and have an edible wishbone on each plate. It depends on whether I can get the mix right to keep it soft enough not to be dangerous/pokey, but still look like and break like a bone.
I like the idea of the gnocchi, I may borrow that.
Bones will, of course, be used for stock and turned into gravy or sauce.
Streck-Fu
11-13-2014, 08:39
With any luck over the next week or two, I will be having a venison roast of some sort.... :cool:
Sweet Potato Gnocchi with Maple Cinnamon Sage Brown Butter
That sounds seriously good....
Team Sergeant
11-13-2014, 11:23
With any luck over the next week or two, I will be having a venison roast of some sort.... :cool:
That sounds seriously good....
And the Gnocchi can be made a day ahead.....;)
2018commo
11-13-2014, 18:06
We are headed to the OBX; hoping for fresh striped bass and a couple of duck breasts wrapped in bacon. Will have a couple of NY Strip Steaks in reserve.
Non-traditional, but very much in season.
Roguish Lawyer
11-13-2014, 18:46
I'm hosting Thanksgiving for the first time in almost 20 years. It is going to be epic! :munchin
Habu-MFFI 175
11-13-2014, 19:23
I usually deer hunt all morning and then come home to eat. Since my deer stands are less than 300 meters from the back door, won't take me long to walk back when they call "come and get it". :D
Then a quick nap if all is quite, it not back to the woods and take a nap in real peace and quite. Sit back up late afternoon and finish the hunt.
So what ever the little woman puts on the table....turkey, ham, collards, and what ever else she wants to cook.
I figure I'll just toss a turkey in the microwave for an hour or two. For veggies, I'll stir some canned green beans into canned cream of mushroom soup and top it with French’s French Fried onions. Instant mashed potatoes topped with Campbell’s canned gravy. Stove Top stuffing, and, of course, jellied cranberry sauce sliced to order. Ummm, ummm, ummm! Just like mom used to make. :D
Pat
(1VB)compforce
11-13-2014, 21:20
I figure I'll just toss a turkey in the microwave for an hour or two. For veggies, I'll stir some canned green beans into canned cream of mushroom soup and top it with French’s French Fried onions. Instant mashed potatoes topped with Campbell’s canned gravy. Stove Top stuffing, and, of course, jellied cranberry sauce sliced to order. Ummm, ummm, ummm! Just like mom used to make. :D
Pat
Don't forget to microwave some bacon to put on top of the beans :D
Don't forget to microwave some bacon to put on top of the beans :D
No, no, no. Can't go messing with mom's recipes. :eek:
Pat
The Sweet Potato Gnocchi with Maple Cinnamon Sage Brown Butter, I just looked up and they sound tasty!! I may have to make these this year. Freak out my redneck in-laws!! :D
InnovativeCGO
11-14-2014, 07:58
we are going to deep fry a turkey again this year. we deep fried a bird last year for the first time and it came out great.
i used a dry cajun rub and 3 gallons of peanut oil. it left one hell of a mess in the driveway but I was able to get the stain off with some degreaser.
Streck-Fu
11-14-2014, 08:29
we are going to deep fry a turkey again this year. we deep fried a bird last year for the first time and it came out great.
i used a dry cajun rub and 3 gallons of peanut oil. it left one hell of a mess in the driveway but I was able to get the stain off with some degreaser.
You either used too much oil or put the bird in too quickly.
First, make sure the bird if fully defrosted before trying to fry it.
Determine how much oil you need first by putting the bird in fryer pot and cover with water (no heat obviously). Remove the bird and mark the water height. That is you oil fill line.
When you do get the oil hot and go to put the bird in, go very slowly as the water in and on the bird evaporates explosively. Drop it in slow enough that it doesn't boil over. It takes a minute or two.
Frying a turkey is my favorite way to cook it but I don't want to go to the hospital over it...
Snaquebite
11-14-2014, 08:42
Turkey cooking tips..... Waiting on TS to weigh in :munchin
1. Don’t buy a frozen turkey. A fresh bird will always have flesh that is more moist and tender.
2. Don’t preheat your oven to a temperature lower than 350 degrees F or the turkey’s skin won’t lock in enough juices to ensure a moist bird.
3. Don’t cook your brined turkey before rinsing the meat. Without a good rinse, excess surface salt and any herbs or sugars that could potentially burn will be left on the skin.
4. Don’t leave the bird’s tips uncovered while grilling. If you don’t cover the wing tips and the tips of the drumsticks with foil, you will end up with charring.
5. Don’t pierce the turkey’s skin when putting fat (truffle butter, duck fat, etc.) between the flesh and the skin; but do consider this method, as it imparts even more flavor to your bird.
6. Don’t stuff a bird ahead of time or you will increase the chances of promoting the production of bacteria that can cause food poisoning. Better yet, cook your stuffing in a separate casserole. I usually stuff mine with carrots, onion, and lemon.
7. Don’t carve the bird directly after cooking. Let it rest for 30 to 40 minutes to redistribute the juices before you carve.
8. Don’t carve the white meat before the dark meat. The dark meat (legs and thighs) should always be carved before the white meat (turkey breast), since the latter dries out faster.
9. Don’t throw raw flour into pan juices to make gravy. Lighter and more flavorful methods include blending the chunks of carrots, turnips and other winter vegetables that have roasted beneath the turkey and adding the puree to the gravy, or whipping generous dollops of truffle butter into the pan juices for a taste of luxury.
10. Don’t serve your gravy without tasting it first. Always make sure to sample gravy to adjust the seasoning.
mark46th
11-15-2014, 11:43
Going to my brother's house up in Idaho for Thanksgiving this year. His wife won't let me in her kitchen because the last time I made gravy that everyone said was the best they ever tasted. So now, I am PNG. But my wife(Chinese) makes a delicious rice stuffing that she will make before hand and bring along.
My thoughts on gravy- I am from the Midwest, I thought gravy was a drink until I was in high school...
Team Sergeant
11-17-2014, 09:50
Turkey cooking tips..... Waiting on TS to weigh in :munchin
1. Don’t buy a frozen turkey. A fresh bird will always have flesh that is more moist and tender.
2. Don’t preheat your oven to a temperature lower than 350 degrees F or the turkey’s skin won’t lock in enough juices to ensure a moist bird.
3. Don’t cook your brined turkey before rinsing the meat. Without a good rinse, excess surface salt and any herbs or sugars that could potentially burn will be left on the skin.
4. Don’t leave the bird’s tips uncovered while grilling. If you don’t cover the wing tips and the tips of the drumsticks with foil, you will end up with charring.
5. Don’t pierce the turkey’s skin when putting fat (truffle butter, duck fat, etc.) between the flesh and the skin; but do consider this method, as it imparts even more flavor to your bird.
6. Don’t stuff a bird ahead of time or you will increase the chances of promoting the production of bacteria that can cause food poisoning. Better yet, cook your stuffing in a separate casserole. I usually stuff mine with carrots, onion, and lemon.
7. Don’t carve the bird directly after cooking. Let it rest for 30 to 40 minutes to redistribute the juices before you carve.
8. Don’t carve the white meat before the dark meat. The dark meat (legs and thighs) should always be carved before the white meat (turkey breast), since the latter dries out faster.
9. Don’t throw raw flour into pan juices to make gravy. Lighter and more flavorful methods include blending the chunks of carrots, turnips and other winter vegetables that have roasted beneath the turkey and adding the puree to the gravy, or whipping generous dollops of truffle butter into the pan juices for a taste of luxury.
10. Don’t serve your gravy without tasting it first. Always make sure to sample gravy to adjust the seasoning.
A few I'll add, Pull the bird at 165 and let it rest for half the cooking time, up to 30 minutes. If you're doing turkey breasts you can pull them at 160 and the "carryover" cooking will raise the temp to 165 while they are resting.
Unless you know how to brine or inject a "fresh" bird is not always the answer. Chef's know how to do these things, most folks don't. Why do you think "Butterballs do so well..... these birds are already injected. And brining take a few days and the bird must stay in the fridge, submerged in the brine, do you have that much room in your fridge? If not just brine a breast or two. And there's no way the United States could serve everyone in America a "fresh bird". There no time to kill and move millions of turkeys in less than a week and have them "fresh" on store shelves. Also, the stores would never have that much room for all those fresh birds. The chef that wrote those tips is a gourmet food snob.
Cook your stuffing separate is great advice. To cook stuffing in a bird risks bacteria and an over cooked, dry bird.
I don't agree with the chef's advice on pan gravy, I'll make my own a few days before using turkey stock I make from scratch.
Carving the dark meat first sounds like the chef runs a lot of buffet lines....... If you're that slow on carving make sure you have some great gravy......
One thing chef forgot to add, forget those "plugs" in the turkey breast, purchase a good temperature probe (http://www.amazon.com/Maverick-Remote-Check-Wireless-Thermometer-Probes/dp/B00004SZ10/ref=sr_1_1/192-8336271-4199100?ie=UTF8&qid=1416238988&sr=8-1&keywords=maverick+thermometer+et-7)and check the temp in the turkey thigh. The reason you do this is that the dark meat takes longer to cook because of the muscle structure.
(1VB)compforce
11-17-2014, 10:48
A few I'll add, Pull the bird at 165 and let it rest for half the cooking time, up to 30 minutes. If you're doing turkey breasts you can pull them at 160 and the "carryover" cooking will raise the temp to 165 while they are resting.
One thing chef forgot to add, forget those "plugs" in the turkey breast, purchase a good temperature probe (http://www.amazon.com/Maverick-Remote-Check-Wireless-Thermometer-Probes/dp/B00004SZ10/ref=sr_1_1/192-8336271-4199100?ie=UTF8&qid=1416238988&sr=8-1&keywords=maverick+thermometer+et-7)and check the temp in the turkey thigh. The reason you do this is that the dark meat takes longer to cook because of the muscle structure.
One thing to mention here. For a long time, when I temped the thigh of a turkey or chicken, I would find that the meat was still raw, even though the thermometer was tellling me it was right. Turns out that dumbass (me) was temping it wrong. TS is (of course) exactly right about using the temp of the thigh meat. The part I'd like to add is that how you place the thermometer matters. My problem way back then is that I was putting the thermometer vertically into the thigh or diagonally. The problem with that is that there is a little dimple in the thermometer and you need to get it far enough into the meat to get to that dimple. Going vertically into the thigh doesn't get you to the right part. Go parallel to the bone like in this pic:
http://www.thekitchn.com/how-to-check-the-temperature-on-a-turkey-cooking-lessons-from-the-kitchn-102442
Team Sergeant
11-17-2014, 12:41
One thing to mention here. For a long time, when I temped the thigh of a turkey or chicken, I would find that the meat was still raw, even though the thermometer was tellling me it was right. Turns out that dumbass (me) was temping it wrong. TS is (of course) exactly right about using the temp of the thigh meat. The part I'd like to add is that how you place the thermometer matters. My problem way back then is that I was putting the thermometer vertically into the thigh or diagonally. The problem with that is that there is a little dimple in the thermometer and you need to get it far enough into the meat to get to that dimple. Going vertically into the thigh doesn't get you to the right part. Go parallel to the bone like in this pic:
http://www.thekitchn.com/how-to-check-the-temperature-on-a-turkey-cooking-lessons-from-the-kitchn-102442
Yup, good post!
As (1VB)compforce posted you need to hit the right spot on the thigh, I cheat.......
At my disposal I have three temperature probes. One is a remote temp probe and you can set it for desired temp. I always set it for about 15-20 degrees short of what I want so I can monitor the last 30 minutes of cooking. I will use a Maverick Thermometer ET-7 (https://www.google.com/shopping/product/7908187875449194371?biw=1769&bih=922&output=search&q=Maverick+Thermometer+ET-7&oq=Maverick+Thermometer+ET-7&prds=paur:ClkAsKraX6sz_xHdPiin5YBzB3y4_hSv8SvTo1ws Ik3RXhRslKbRYqb9Qp3LhW6GZQSUlPjsch8GTmlrjG3rGWY5ZW 9wjrIsWukjPw9Eo6M9ZXqbiOk-zSR9gBIZAFPVH70-lmDW4AxVMfPGFo-_BogzGRKhNA&ei=tUFqVID6FM2vogTHxILIBw&ved=0CGoQpiswAA) for roasting, grilling and BBQing large portions of meat.
And then I use a Maverick PT-100 Pro-Temp NIST/NSF Thermometer (https://www.google.com/shopping/product/8405823453532974877?q=Maverick+PT-100BBQ+Digital&biw=1769&bih=922&bav=on.2,or.r_qf.&tch=1&ech=1&psi=2jxqVKilDcP-iALcrYG4AQ.1416248755372.5&prds=paur:ClkAsKraX5HmOlpA_lrJe4HA9QeGh5BbdWJ5xPW2 IQHLAcaVjmts8YG4YIj1EUJhx1B4vuM0EVw9oC_oduRXErMyw8 bRRPIrL0cbdVb7OuQSNLHsNzSm38dy6RIZAFPVH70ceT-Jac503lM_cVy6_dN2qJFflw&ei=pz1qVL6iO4f2yQSfmYHoAw&ved=0CHAQpiswAQ), it's a commercial grade thermometer to spot check my work. I've used cheaper cooking thermometers and learned my lesson. This thermometer will go to 600 degrees so you can use it for candy and checking very hot oil temps. This is the thermometer that gets the most use.
(I also have an Infrared Cooking Thermometer and use it for checking surface temperatures.)
You eat every day, get some good equipment to assist in cooking, it makes a difference.
(1VB)compforce
11-17-2014, 14:49
Yup, good post!
As (1VB)compforce posted you need to hit the right spot on the thigh, I cheat.......
At my disposal I have three temperature probes. One is a remote temp probe and you can set it for desired temp. I always set it for about 15-20 degrees short of what I want so I can monitor the last 30 minutes of cooking. I will use a Maverick Thermometer ET-7 (https://www.google.com/shopping/product/7908187875449194371?biw=1769&bih=922&output=search&q=Maverick+Thermometer+ET-7&oq=Maverick+Thermometer+ET-7&prds=paur:ClkAsKraX6sz_xHdPiin5YBzB3y4_hSv8SvTo1ws Ik3RXhRslKbRYqb9Qp3LhW6GZQSUlPjsch8GTmlrjG3rGWY5ZW 9wjrIsWukjPw9Eo6M9ZXqbiOk-zSR9gBIZAFPVH70-lmDW4AxVMfPGFo-_BogzGRKhNA&ei=tUFqVID6FM2vogTHxILIBw&ved=0CGoQpiswAA) for roasting, grilling and BBQing large portions of meat.
And then I use a Maverick PT-100 Pro-Temp NIST/NSF Thermometer (https://www.google.com/shopping/product/8405823453532974877?q=Maverick+PT-100BBQ+Digital&biw=1769&bih=922&bav=on.2,or.r_qf.&tch=1&ech=1&psi=2jxqVKilDcP-iALcrYG4AQ.1416248755372.5&prds=paur:ClkAsKraX5HmOlpA_lrJe4HA9QeGh5BbdWJ5xPW2 IQHLAcaVjmts8YG4YIj1EUJhx1B4vuM0EVw9oC_oduRXErMyw8 bRRPIrL0cbdVb7OuQSNLHsNzSm38dy6RIZAFPVH70ceT-Jac503lM_cVy6_dN2qJFflw&ei=pz1qVL6iO4f2yQSfmYHoAw&ved=0CHAQpiswAQ), it's a commercial grade thermometer to spot check my work. I've used cheaper cooking thermometers and learned my lesson. This thermometer will go to 600 degrees so you can use it for candy and checking very hot oil temps. This is the thermometer that gets the most use.
(I also have an Infrared Cooking Thermometer and use it for checking surface temperatures.)
You eat every day, get some good equipment to assist in cooking, it makes a difference.
Don't forget to zero your thermometer too. Especially if, like me, you use the cheap ones. There are two ways to do it (not counting taking it to a lab for calibration):
1) Cold - make an ice water bath. 1/2 ice and 1/2 water. Let it sit for about 10 minutes so the temperature stabilizes and then stick your thermometer in the water leave it there until it stops moving and then set it to 32 degrees.
2) Heat - bring a pot of water to a boil. the water should be deep enough that you can submerge the probe part of the thermometer (not the readout part). Let it boil for long enough for the heat to equalize. If you can stir the water and it stays boiling, it's hot enough. If you stir it and it drops to a simmer, then you still have cooler water on top, which will affect the temp. Once you have the water hot enough that it stays at a boil, or only drops for a moment and comes right back, hold the thermometer in the water until it stops moving. Adjust it to 212 degrees F.
Either of these two will get you within 1.6 degrees of accurate on a standard thermometer. Yes, even digital thermometers need to be adjusted like this. Check the instructions for your thermometer to find out how to do it. Usually on stick thermometers there is a nut at the top that you twist to move it. Sometimes the case the thermometer is in has a handy wrench for turning it. For digital thermometers there is usually a small set screw.
Adjust it to 212 degrees F.
If you live at Sea Level. At our altitude, water boils at 203° F.
Pat
(1VB)compforce
11-17-2014, 15:35
If you live at Sea Level. At our altitude, water boils at 203° F.
Pat
Yup, exactly right. There's a formula for it based on altitude relative to sea level (ASL). Also, the weather can affect it. This is the formal calculation for boiling point:
Pw = 2427.9 - 60.726 * T + (0.44048 * T ^ 2 )
the water boils when Pw = P
P = [760][ 1 - (6.875 66E-6)(h) ] ^ [ 5.255 882 65 ]
P = atm pressure in mmHg
h = height in ft (accurate up to 46 000 ft)
Pw = saturation vapor pressure in mmHg
T = water boiling temp in C
edit, wanted to attribute - I found this formula in several locations, the best layout for it was https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090915192202AAsmjfs
Here's a calculator to plug the numbers into: http://www.csgnetwork.com/h2oboilcalc.html
But for most of us normal joes who can't do maths, 212 is a good enough number to get close. Or we can just use the water bath which works within a degree or two over most of the planet. (Barometric pressure affects freezing point too, but your ice has a known temperature range from the refrigerator settings)
The Reaper
11-17-2014, 18:07
If you live at Sea Level. At our altitude, water boils at 203° F.
Pat
Vinny Gambini: So, Mr. Tipton, how could it take you five minutes to cook your grits, when it takes the entire grit-eating world twenty minutes?
Mr. Tipton: [a bit panicky] I don't know. I'm a fast cook, I guess.
Vinny Gambini: I'm sorry, I was all the way over here. I couldn't hear you. Did you say you were a fast cook? That's it?
[Mr. Tipton nods in embarrassment]
Vinny Gambini: Are we to believe that boiling water soaks into a grit faster in your kitchen than on any place on the face of the earth?
Mr. Tipton: I don't know.
Vinny Gambini: Well, perhaps the laws of physics cease to exist on your stove. Were these magic grits? I mean, did you buy them from the same guy who sold Jack his beanstalk beans?
TR
Vinny Gambini: So, Mr. Tipton, how could it take you five minutes to cook your grits, when it takes the entire grit-eating world twenty minutes?
Mr. Tipton: [a bit panicky] I don't know. I'm a fast cook, I guess.
Vinny Gambini: I'm sorry, I was all the way over here. I couldn't hear you. Did you say you were a fast cook? That's it?
[Mr. Tipton nods in embarrassment]
Vinny Gambini: Are we to believe that boiling water soaks into a grit faster in your kitchen than on any place on the face of the earth?
Mr. Tipton: I don't know.
Vinny Gambini: Well, perhaps the laws of physics cease to exist on your stove. Were these magic grits? I mean, did you buy them from the same guy who sold Jack his beanstalk beans?
TR
My wife's boyfriend, at the time we first met, wrote that movie. :D
Pat
My cousin hosts this year, in addition to turkey, stuffing, my aunt's gravy (mark46th I can drink hers all day long :D) sauteed sweet potatoes in brown sugar and butter, some sort of veggie casserole (I'm considering a riff on ratatouille) rolls and the like we also have pasta with meatballs and sausage in gravy, stuffed artichokes and rice balls. The desserts will be ridiculous and too many to mention.
Nothing is low fat or low cal.
I'll be at the gym all day Friday if anyone needs me. :D
Roguish Lawyer
11-23-2014, 18:24
I'll try to post the full thing later, but I have settled on two turkeys -- one roasted and one smoked on the BBQ . . . :munchin
Roguish Lawyer
11-27-2014, 12:01
Got up at 3 am to start smoking one of my turkeys low and slow. 26 pounder, dry brined for about 10 or 12 hours with my proprietary turkey rub. Damn thing was already done by 8 am because I can't control the temperature on my BBQ when I put it in redneck smoking mode and I went back to sleep after I thought I had it at the right temperature. So I have it covered in foil, trying to keep the BBQ at 170 or so so it doesn't continue to cook. But the damn thing probably is going to dry out and suck. :(
Fortunately, anticipating an appearance by Mr. Murphy, I got two birds. The second one was wet brined for 16 hours. Roasting it now with some aromatics in the cavity.
Other items on the menu today are bacon-wrapped Sriracha onion rings, an artichoke fontina dip, sweet potato and onion tart, sweet potato casserole, green beans, mashed potatoes, two different gravies (one from each bird), and a slew of desserts.
RL - got to ask. How'd the early bird turn out? Bet your family enjoyed your effort none the less.
Roguish Lawyer
11-28-2014, 11:41
RL - got to ask. How'd the early bird turn out? Bet your family enjoyed your effort none the less.
It was surprisingly good. All these Yankees at my house thought it was burned, but when the bark was pulled off it was surprisingly good underneath. The breast was a little drier than I would have liked, but not bad at all. The roasted bird was perfect.
The Reaper
11-28-2014, 12:57
It was surprisingly good. All these Yankees at my house thought it was burned, but when the bark was pulled off it was surprisingly good underneath. The breast was a little drier than I would have liked, but not bad at all. The roasted bird was perfect.
Damned Yankees!
TR
Nuked turkey came out great! :D
OK, Weber gas grill, actually. Dry brined (first time I've done that) and basted with clarified butter. Took 2.5 hours at +/- 340°.
Also had mashed sweet potatoes with butter, sourdough-bread/cornbread dressing, broccoli with cheese sauce, cranberry sauce (forgot it for the picture), and,of course, gravy.
Pat
We just finished our dinner (a day late due to family travel). Now trying to let food settle so we have room for pie. Our menu:
Two turkeys, oven roasted (I like using the Reynolds oven-roasting bags)
Mock wild rice dressing
Mixed vegetables
Mashed potatoes with gravy made from neck/giblet stock
Scratch-made rolls with homemade butter
Cranberry sauce (this is the one thing I don't make myself--we've always liked the canned)
Black olives (all of us are crazy about them except hubby)
Pumpkin pie with whipped cream
Pecan pie
We had two turkeys this year because hubby wanted more drumsticks. I think next time, I'll just buy extra drumsticks and be done with it. I thought both turkeys would fit in my oven at the same time, and they would have if it weren't for the handles on the roasting pans. I forgot to put seasoning in the cavities of the turkeys like I usually do, and it made huge difference (not as good). Next time, though, I want to try my hand at brining the turkey.
(1VB)compforce
11-28-2014, 19:05
So I got off the hook for Thanksgiving and joined a friend's family.
In the picture, from right to left
Smoked Turkey (Orion Smoker with pecan chips)
Mac and Cheese
Green Bean Casserole
Cornbread Stuffing and rolls
Mashed Potatoes.
Not pictured were:
Turkey gravy
Fresh cranberry sauce
Smoked ribs (Weber with hickory)
Brussel sprouts
Waldorf salad
Apple tart
The mac and cheese and apple tart were mine, he and his wife made the rest.
Damned Yankees!
TR
Are there any other kind?
Team Sergeant
11-28-2014, 20:36
It was surprisingly good. All these Yankees at my house thought it was burned, but when the bark was pulled off it was surprisingly good underneath. The breast was a little drier than I would have liked, but not bad at all. The roasted bird was perfect.
You know that sad part is that I know you have the personal phone numbers of a couple of chef's........;)
Live and learn.
IThe breast was a little drier than I would have liked, but not bad at all. The roasted bird was perfect.
Keep a saucepan with warm turkey (or chicken) stock on the stove and let the breast meat take a little sauna before plating.
Team Sergeant
12-02-2014, 21:37
Keep a saucepan with warm turkey (or chicken) stock on the stove and let the breast meat take a little sauna before plating.
What, you run a restaurant? ;)
What, you run a restaurant? ;)
LOL, just love learning and sharing useful tips...
Team Sergeant
12-03-2014, 09:42
I made turkey stock using 4x grilled turkey necks, mirepoix and assorted herbs. I then turned that into the best turkey gravy this side of the Mississippi! That's what you use for slightly dry turkey! ;) (I did my turkey on the rotisserie, it came out perfect.)
mark46th
12-05-2014, 18:41
Actually, my turkey gravy is very simple. Turkey stock from the boiled neck, turkey drippings, turkey base, butter, cream, binder, onion powder and white pepper... I let everyone salt to their own taste.