Annual Turkey Recipe (2024)

15 November 2014

Annual Turkey Recipe (1)

Annual Turkey Recipe

By Frank Turk

Annual Turkey Recipe (2)
Just a picture from the Internet

I'm trying to escape the tradition of posting this too late for you to use it, so I'm tossing it up as a weekend extra. For those who are opposed to Turkey, it also works great on Chicken. It makes utterly-lousy Pizza.

You do not have to be "truly reformed" to use this recipe. You just have to like Turkey and stuffing.

Roasting a turkey isn't as hard as it sounds. Here's a basic recipe to get you started. In this case, the turkey is stuffed. DO NOT stuff the turkey and put it in the fridge overnight: that's bacteriologically a bad idea, and we want you all to enjoy Thanksgiving on the sofa, not on a hospital gurney.

Ingredients:

12- to 14-lb. turkey, thawed if purchased frozen
1 bag, your favorite "Italian" croutons
2-4 bouillon cubes
2-3 stalks, celery, chopper or cubed
1 cup carrots, chopped
½ cup onions, finely chopped
1 tsp, dried parsley
1 cup, cashews
Pepper and Garlic Salt

STEPS:

  1. Preheat your oven to 325. Remove the cooking racks, then place one rack into oven at the lowest position.
  2. Unwrap your THAWED Turkey in a clean sink, and remove the giblets – that bag of stuff that you never thought you would use for anything because it looks gross. It's not gross. You may have to unhook the metal clip which holds the legs together in order to get all the giblets out; you may have to run some warm water into the bird to get the giblets out. Don't be afraid.
  3. Start a medium-sized pot of water boiling – not more than 3 cups. Put your packet of giblets in the water (sans wrapping paper), along with your bouillon cubes and the carrots, celery and parlsey. 2 cubes will make a somewhat-mild flavored stuffing; 6 will make a very salty and spicy stuffing. You know what you like best, so add the cubes to the low end of your tolerance for spicy. For your reference, I usually use 4 cubes. Boil this mix for about 30 minutes – long enough to cook the giblets thoroughly.
  4. While the soup (yes: you very smart readers knew that we were making soup, didn't you?) is cooking, wash the Turkey thoroughly, inside and out. I wouldn't use soap as you might miss a spot in the rinse and ruin your hours of hard work here, but washing the bird is an important health safety tip. If we were deep frying the bird (that's the Christmas recipe), washing is pretty much unimportant because if some germ can survive the deep fryer, it will kill you before you eat any of the dinner. Anyway, clean the bird thoroughly and put it in a large roasting pan. For this recipe, the deeper the roasting pan, the better. I suggest a large disposable roasting pan from WAL*MART even though it might possibly ring up at the wrong price.

    If you get bored waiting for the soup to finish up, this would be a good time to rub salt and pepper into the skin of your bird. Visually, salt and pepper the skin so that it looks like very light TV static. Do the top (the breast side) and the bottom (where the shoulders are); do not worry if you put less on the breast side. Because of the way this bird is going to cook, pay special attention to salting and peppering the wings and drumsticks.

  5. You now have a clean, prepped bird and a very delicious-smelling pot of soup. You have to make stuffing now. Remove the soup from the heat and remove the giblets. If you are a complete carnivore (like me), take the fully-cooked giblets to your food chopper and chop them up and put them back into the soup (you can't chop up the neck, but if you have 20 minutes, de-bone the neck and put your neck meat into the soup).

    Those of you grossed out by chopping up the giblets can throw them away. The rest of us will weep for you.

    Now empty the bag of croutons into the soup. If you used about 2 cups of water, you will get a somewhat-damp bread-and-soup mixture; if you used about 3 cups of water, you will get a very wet bread-and-soup mixture. I like the latter better, but some people like their stuffing more dry than others. The extraordinary secret here is that a soupier stuffing makes for a more-moist bird in the final product. After the soup and the bread are well- mixed, add the cashews and mix again.

  6. When you have this mixing complete, use a tablespoon and start loading the stuffing into the bird. Pack the stuffing down into the bird to get the cavity of the body completely full of stuffing. Don't leave any air pockets. Once the Turkey is completely stuffed, position it in the roasting tray breast-side down (I learned that from watching Emeril) in the center of the pan, and load the pan with the rest of your stuffing mix.
  7. Cover the Turkey, and place it inside your oven. After 2 hours in the heat, remove the cover and roast for another hour. In this final hour, the skin of the exposed parts should turn golden brown. At the end of the third hour, test the bird with a meat thermometer; the center temperature should be 175-180 degrees F. It will be the most unbelievable bird you every ate.

Annual Turkey Recipe (3)

Labels:centuri0n,turkey recipe

Annual Turkey Recipe (4)Annual Turkey Recipe (5)

Posted byFX TurkonSaturday, November 15, 2014

10 comments:

Annual Turkey Recipe (6)

Joshua Fredericosaid...

That's spiritual food for sure. Thanksgiving is one of the most edifying times of the year that way.

11:41 AM, November 15, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (7)
Michael Coughlinsaid...

I thought you weren't going to post anymore about Mark Driscoll?

haha. Passed this onto the wife to see if she wanted to try it.

4:11 AM, November 16, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (8)

Annual Turkey Recipe (9)

Dan L.said...

This looks great. Giblet soup! Passed it on to my wife.

8:13 AM, November 16, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (10)
Chris Hsaid...

What needs to change for a chicken? Being Canadian, my need for turkey is both past and far future. But chicken, well, that's a good thing.

I would grade my last effort at roasted chicken a solid C+. I'd love to do better.

6:08 PM, November 16, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (11)

Annual Turkey Recipe (12)

FX Turksaid...

My opinion is that this recipe translates without any ingredient changes for chicken. Check your local cook book for the roasting time you need by weight.

7:07 AM, November 17, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (13)

Annual Turkey Recipe (14)

FX Turksaid...

My wife's opinion is that chicken tastes better than turkey to start with, so this recipe makes a dinner fit for any occasion.

7:08 AM, November 17, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (15)

Annual Turkey Recipe (16)

Unknownsaid...

Sometimes you just have to feed the sheep. ;)

9:54 AM, November 17, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (17)

Annual Turkey Recipe (18)

Unknownsaid...

Do you think this will work for chicken recipe?

7:07 AM, November 23, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (19)

Annual Turkey Recipe (20)

FX Turksaid...

Yes. My wife's opinion is that chicken tastes better than turkey to start with, so this recipe makes a dinner fit for any occasion.

4:01 PM, November 23, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (21)
Kirbysaid...

Frank,

It's the Saturday after Thanksgiving 2014 and I want to say a hearty "thank you!!" to you for this recipe. We'd gotten into a serious unstuffed-roasting-bag rut out of convenience. I said to my wife, "we gotta try this." And she did.

Wow! not only was the turkey awesome, but that stuffing is great. It was worth the extra time . . . totally.

-Kirby

6:04 AM, November 29, 2014Annual Turkey Recipe (22)

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