Easy, Perfect Turkey
by Heather Woods
Primal Cooking Today
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After Amy
was born (third-born) I was desperate to get out of the house and
do something fun. Tom was extremely sweet and signed me up for a
series of 13 cooking classes. One of these classes focused on a
recipe for orange chicken. It was fine, but I tried it with a turkey
and it was 10x better.
So, first
off, forget everything you think you know about preparing a turkey.
Wash it alllll away.
And keep in mind that this will seem like more work than it is...
kind of like trying to explain how to tie a shoe. There are more
words to describe it than movements to it! hehe
Good.
When choosing
your turkey, do everything you can to find one that is fresh, never
frozen. The texture and taste of fresh turkeys are so much better
than frozen.
It is best
to not cook a bird that weighs more than 12-13 pounds. If you have
a large family and need more turkey, then consider cooking two.
It is a pain, but once turkeys get too big they tend to bake unevenly
and dry out considerably. Anyway, not a hard and fast rule, but
worth considering if you have the time and space.
Before you
begin to prepare the turkey for baking, take it out of the refrigerator,
and set on the counter for at least 30 minutes. You need to bring
it as close to room temperature as possible. This will help it to
cook evenly and keep it moist.
Get out your
roasting pan (doesn't have to be huge) and line it with parchment
paper. Only because it will make cleaning up the pan a breeze.
While you
are waiting for it to warm up, get out your ingriedients:
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Salt
Pepper
Thyme
Rosemary
Oranges
Yellow onion
Slice the
oranges into fourth wedges per orange. Onions should be halved,
and then cut into four wedges each half.
Rosemary and
Thyme (as well as other dried herbs) should *always* be ground before
seasoning your dish. Grounding herbs releases oils which makes your
dishes that much more aromatic and tasty! I use a mortar pestle,
because it's awesome! But you can also just roll the herbs between
your fingers to release the oils.
Wash the bird.
And DRY it with paper towels. I had always heard this, but thought
it was goofy, so I never dried it. Turns out, if you don't dry it,
it won't brown correctly. And half the battle of a turkey is a great,
golden color!
Hold the bird
up so that you can easily season the inside of the turkey. Throw
in some salt (don't be stingy--the juices will wash away a lot of
the salt), pepper, and the herbs. Then squeeze a couple of orange
wedges into the bird, then throw the whole thing into the turkey.
Alternate between stuffing onion and orange wedges (squeezing the
juice out first...all over the bird, inside and out) into the cavity.
Then pour 2-3 tablespoon olive oil into/over the produce. This helps
to... actually, I have no idea, but it makes the onions smell amazing
when they are baking!
Now for the
outside of the turkey:
Pour olive oil over turkey and rub it in.
Salt it well, but don't go crazy. I have used sea salt before, and
it doesn't work... much too salty.
Pepper
And then throw the rest of the herb mix all over the turkey, making
sure you get under the wings and drumsticks.
Stick it in the oven. All ovens vary, so this is a difficult call.
I had to use 350 at my old house. I tried 350 in this oven, but it
was too hot. Most likely your oven will need to be anywhere between
325 and 350.
Here's the
most important piece of information. DO. NOT. open the oven door.
At all. Just "Set it, and forget it!" There is no basting
required. In fact, if you try to baste your turkey, you fail!
Why no basting?
Two reasons:
- opening
your oven door cools the oven down by 20-30 degrees every time
you do it. This means the oven over-compensates to try and get
the temperature back up, and this will result in a very dry, unappetizing
turkey.
- After about
15 minutes of being in the oven, the turkey skin will begin to
crisp which means it will become a barrier to any liquids poured
onto it. So just say no to basting. It does no good. And it's
a hassle! We don't need more hassles, do we?
So now the
turkey is in the oven and is just sitting there baking away! (Turn
on the oven light and watch if you must, but leave it be!) In my
experience the cooking time on the turkey package is way off...
much too much time.
For my 12
lb turkey it took about 2.5 hours. (None of this all day business
anymore! With prep and baking, it takes about 3 to 3.5 hours.) It
may take you a few turkeys before you know the perfect time to check
on your bird.
But
for this week I would say go for two hours and then check with your
meat thermometer. Which reminds me...
That stupid
thermometer that comes with the turkey... throw it away. It's useless.
By the
time that thing pops, your turkey is way past done. If you don't
have a meat thermometer go out today and buy one. They are $5-6
for a cheap one (which is the one I use), but you can get fancy,
expensive ones if that makes you feel more confident. Bake your
turkey until the thermometer reads 165. Once that temp is reached,
remove your turkey from the oven, and allow it to cool for at least
an hour. The resting time will allow the juices to stay in the meat
once the bird is sliced. (Recently I read that you should allow
your meat to rest as long as it took for it to bake/cook. That seems
like an awfully long time for things like turkey and pork, but I
went with 1.5 hours today.)
Take out the
oranges and onions so that it can cool off faster. Discard the produce.
Invest in
an electric knife. I love it! It really makes slicing turkey (and
chicken) much, much easier.
I have yet
to master carving a turkey, but this YouTube
helped me figure it out last year.
And that,
my friends, will be the best turkey you've ever had.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Reprinted
from Primal Cooking Today
with permission of the author.
November
21, 2012
Copyright ©
2012 Primal
Cooking Today
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