In a Fryer itr really taste good!
Answered By: Abe - 7/8/2006 |
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Maple Roast Turkey and Gravy
INGREDIENTS:
2 cups apple cider
1/3 cup real maple syrup
2 tablespoons chopped fresh thyme
2 tablespoons chopped fresh marjoram
2 1/2 teaspoons grated lemon zest
3/4 cup butter
salt and ground black pepper to taste
14 pounds whole turkey, neck and giblets reserved
2 cups chopped onion
1 cup chopped celery
1 cup coarsely chopped carrots
2 cups chicken stock
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme
1 bay leaf
2 tablespoons apple brandy (optional)
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DIRECTIONS:
Boil apple cider and maple syrup in a heavy saucepan over medium-high heat until reduced to 1/2 cup (about 20 minutes). Remove from heat and mix in 1/2 of the thyme and marjoram and all of the lemon zest. Add the butter, and whisk until melted. Add salt and ground pepper to taste. Cover and refrigerate until cold (syrup can be made up to 2 days ahead).
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C). Place oven rack in the lowest third of oven.
Wash and dry turkey, and place in a large roasting pan. Slide hand under skin of the b****t to loosen. Rub 1/2 cup of the maple butter mix under the b****t skin. If planning on stuffing turkey, do so now. Rub 1/4 cup of the maple butter mixture over the outside of the turkey. With kitchen string, tie legs of turkey together loosely.
Arrange the chopped onion, chopped celery, and chopped carrot around the turkey in the roasting pan. If desired, the neck and giblets may be added to the vegetables. Sprinkle the remaining thyme and marjoram over the vegetables, and pour the chicken stock into the pan.
Roast turkey 30 minutes in the preheated oven. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C), and cover turkey loosely with foil. Continue to roast, about 3 to 4 hours unstuffed or 4 to 5 hours stuffed, until the internal temperature of the thigh reaches 180 degrees F (80 degrees C) and stuffing reaches 165 degrees F (75 degrees C). Transfer turkey to a platter, and cover with foil. Reserve pan mixture for gravy. Allow turkey to sit about 25 minutes before removing stuffing and carving.
To Make Gravy: Strain pan juices into a measuring cup. Spoon fat from juices. Add enough chicken stock to make 3 cups. Transfer liquid to a heavy saucepan and bring to a boil. In a small bowl, mix reserved maple butter mixture with flour to form a paste, and whisk into the broth. Stir in thyme, bay leaf, and apple brandy. Boil until reduced and slightly thickened. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Answered By: scrappykins - 7/8/2006 |
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For a juicy turkey you can brine it the night before. Anyway that you decide to cook it your turkey will be moist. Here is a recipe for brine two quarts of vegetable stock/broth, cup of salt, half a cup of sugar. Put the vegetable stock in a pan on the stove heat it up put the salt and sugar in to dissolve. Let it cool. Large bucket or pan that has enough room to complete cover the bird. Pour the stock in add cold water put the bird in and ice on top and make sure the bird is covered with the liquid. Store in a cold dark place like garage leave over night. In the morning drain the bird and cook it.
Answered By: Antoinette O - 7/8/2006 |
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Welcome to North America : If you want to get the Turkey on Turkey I sugges you go to the Natianal Turkey Fedration. They have everything that you need to know about them on food safety, handling, preparation and recipes.
Answered By: askthechef - 7/8/2006 |
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Depending on the size of the turkey, it needs to thaw out in the REFRIDGERATOR for a few days ahead of time. Cooking times will also depend on how many pound the bird is. The bigger the bird in pounds, the longer it'll take to cook. You'll want to cook the bird in a roasting pan, not one of those roasting bags. The best time to start cooking the turkey is around 6 am. This will ensure that the turkey is fully cooked by 1 or 2 pm. The oven should be about 350 degrees. Rub butter or margarine lightly on the bottom of the pan. Make a foil strip about 2-3 inches wide & lay it on the pan, leaving about 4 inches on each side. Season your bird on the top with garlic powder, black pepper, seasoned salt. Dressing, aka stuffing, goes inside the bird to cook while the turkey's in the oven. You can cheat & buy Mrs. Cubbinson's or Stove Top, or make your own. If you make your own, you can use day old bread, chopped celery, chopped onion & sage seasoning. Some people make it with cornbread & the same ingredients. If you're using Stove Top, it doesn't need to cook inside the turkey. Place the stuffing/dressing inside the bird & use cooking twine to lace its legs together to hold the stuffing/dressing inside during cooking. Place bird over foil strip, cover with lid & place into preheated oven. Use a meat thermometer to check the temperature of the turkey. When done, it'll be nicely golden brown on the outside. During baking, use a baster to drizzle the grease over the turkey for added flavor & seasoning. Don't discard the drippings after removing the turkey from the pan. Use it to make gravy. The foil strip is used to remove the turkey from the pan. Be careful!! This foil strip will be hot!! Use potholders to lift turkey onto an extra large platter. To carve turkey, use an electric carving knife. Cut off legs first, then set aside. Continue carving with front to back gentle movements.
I made my first turkey the above way Thanksgiving of 2005. My grandmother was leery as she or my mother have always made the turkey. It came out just like theirs & both were available for questions & guidance. We've never had a dry turkey either & mine was juicy & delicious like theirs has been in the past.
Source(s):
Personal experience, watching & helping make the Thanksgiving turkeys ever since age 5 (current age 33).
Answered By: Belle - 7/8/2006 |
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I don't know how authentic it is, but we deep fry ours. It is SO good.
Answered By: motleycfan - 7/8/2006 |
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When you get the turkey home, rinse it out and make sure you take the little packets of kidneys, giblets and the neck out of the cavities. If you buy a frozen one, it will need to defrost in your refrigerator for a week. If you buy a fresh one, it's ready to use as soon as you get home.
Mix together 2 cups of salt, 1 cup of sugar and 4 cups of water. Boil so that the salt and sugar dissolve. Then let it cool.
Put your turkey in a very large, deep pot and pour the brine mix over it. Add more water until it's totally covering the bird. Then cover and refrigerate (or if you're way up north and there's snow outside, put the bird outside) and let it soak overnight.
In the morning, remove the turkey from its bath and put in a heavy, deep roasting pan that's much larger than the bird. You can make a stuffing/dressing to go with it and either put it in the larger cavity of the bird, or just put it in a baking pan and cook it the last hour with the bird. (There are THOUSANDS of good recipes out there, from cornbread to oysters, savory/sage to chestnut...they're ALL good!)
Cut some large pieces of celery, carrots, a couple of potatoes and a large onion, and slice one lemon into quarters. If you don't stuff the bird, put these inside the bird to flavor it. Otherwise, put them around the bird to flavor the juices that drip out. Add 2 cups of water to the bottom of the pan. Cover and slide into the oven, preheated to 350 degrees.
Roasting will take about 15 minutes per pound if the turkey is not stuffed. Stuffed turkeys require an additional 1/2 to 1 hour cooking time.
8-12 pounds......2 3/4 - 3 hours
12-14 pounds....3 - 3 3/4 hours
14-18 pounds....3 3/4 - 4 1/4 hours
18-20 pounds....4 1/4 - 4 1/2 hours
20-24 pounds....4 1/2 - 5 hours
When it's done, let the turkey sit in the pan about 15 mins to rest. Then transfer to a serving tray. Surround with the roasted vegetables, if you'd like. Otherwise just toss them.
Strain everything from the pan juices and stir in a mix of 2 tablespoons cornstarch and 1/2 cup of milk that you've shaken til there are no lumps. Put the pan over medium heat and stir the milk/cornstarch into the pan juices, season with some salt and pepper; stir until thickened and smooth. This is the gravy for your dinner.
You can add side dishes like mashed potatoes, mashed sweet potatoes or a sweet potatoe casserole, green beans or asparagus, a nice salad with cranberries and chopped apples that's dressed with Raspberry Vinaigrette, and a cooked cranberry sauce. The traditional desserts are apple and pumpkin pies with either vanilla ice cream or whipped cream on top.
Hope you have fun and enjoy it. Good luck!
Answered By: yellow_jellybeans_rock - 7/8/2006 |
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I've got an easy method for cooking a turkey and it ends up looking really elegant.
I start off using a big bag to cook the turkey in and then towards the end I tak the bag off so the turkey gets nice and brown. Be sure your turkey is completely thawed and dry it well with paper towels. I use my fist to seperate the skin from the b****t, rub oil and salt and pepper in there and arrange fresh sage and bay leaves under the skin- just remind your guests not to eat the bay. Then I stuff lemons, onions, garlic, etc (anything fragrant) into the cavity, put the turkey into a bag put it in your roasting pan and place that into a 300 degree oven. Keep tabs on the internal temperature and when it reaches 170 degrees remove the bag and baste the turkey with butter until the internal temp reaches 185, and you have a nice golden brown skin. You should be able to see the sage and bay leaves through the skin which will look really special when you bring it to the table. Good luck!
Answered By: heatherraemccoy - 7/8/2006 |
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It may not be authentic, but it's the easiest since there's some many other dishes to prepare for dinner...I use a oven roaster bag,
http://www.alcoa.com/reynoldskitchens/en/product.asp?cat_id=1337&prod_id=1790http://www.alcoa.com/reynoldskitchens/en/product_info_page.asp?info_page_id=760&prod_id=1790&cat_id=1337 it takes less time to cook and has jucier meat.....we have 3 different types of stuffing made by different guests, (milk cracker, sausage and stove top stuffing) so the turkey doesn't get stuffed at all....For the most part, I follow the directions that come with the bag for a 22 lb. bird using more spices though.(poultry seasoning, pepper, garic powder)
Gravy---that's a different story, homemade never comes out right, so i buy it pre-made.
Thanksgiving Turkey
1 Reynolds Oven Bag, Turkey Size
1 tablespoon flour
2 stalks celery, sliced
1 medium onion, sliced
12 to 24 pound turkey, thawed
Vegetable oil
PREHEAT oven to 350°F.
SHAKE flour in Reynolds Oven Bag; place in roasting pan at least 2 inches deep. Spray inside of bag with nonstick spray to reduce sticking, if desired.
ADD vegetables to oven bag. Remove neck and giblets from turkey. Rinse turkey; pat dry. Lightly stuff with your favorite stuffing recipe, if desired. Brush turkey with oil. Place turkey in bag on top of vegetables.
CLOSE oven bag with nylon tie; cut six 1/2–inch slits in top. Insert meat thermometer through bag into thickest part of inner thigh, not touching bone. Tuck ends of bag in pan.
BAKE until meat thermometer reads 180°F, 2 to 2 1/2 hours for a 12 to 16 lb. turkey, 2 1/2 to 3 hours for a 16 to 20 lb. turkey, and 3 to 3 1/2 hours for a 20 to 24 lb. turkey. Add 1/2 hour for stuffed turkey. For easy slicing, let stand in oven bag 15 minutes. If turkey sticks to bag, gently loosen bag from turkey before opening oven bag.
http://www.alcoa.com/reynoldskitchens/en/recipes/product_recipe_search.asp?Step=ShowRecipe&RecipeID=689&parent_info_page_id=744&info_page_id=745&prod_id=1790&cat_id=1337
http://www.alcoa.com/reynoldskitchens/en/recipes/recipe_search.asp
Answered By: Swirly - 7/8/2006 |
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