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Baked vs Smoked vs Fried Turkey
Posted on 11/20/25 at 7:04 pm
Posted on 11/20/25 at 7:04 pm
What is your favorite and why?
Last few years I've done a smoked or a fried turkey and just wondering what is the preference of the board.
Last few years I've done a smoked or a fried turkey and just wondering what is the preference of the board.
Posted on 11/20/25 at 7:22 pm to Burt Reynolds
I did the smoked then fried one year bc I like wings done like this. It got REALLY dark. Tasted ok, but presentation was lacking.
Posted on 11/20/25 at 7:24 pm to Skenes
Smoked here. Pick up a smoked turkey @ Sam’s, then put it on my offset smoker for 4-6hrs before serving…
Posted on 11/20/25 at 7:55 pm to Skenes
Spatchcocked, and roasted (convection oven.) Baking powder/kosher salt mixture on the chicken makes it pretty damn crispy, and it's not going to overcook. I don't hate fried, but the logistics between that and a properly prepared spatchcocked bird are massively different.
Posted on 11/20/25 at 8:53 pm to Skenes
I think the best whole turkey I've ever had was brined then cooked in the oilless fryer
Posted on 11/20/25 at 9:33 pm to Skenes
My biggest hits have been smoking skinless, boneless breasts and resting in butter. I do inject with butter mixture, dry brine, and heavy black pepper rub. Juiciest turkey's I've ever made. Always comes out consistent.
Posted on 11/20/25 at 10:53 pm to Skenes
Sous vide if you're just going for depth of turkey flavor, it is not something presentable though.
Posted on 11/20/25 at 11:22 pm to Burt Reynolds
quote:
Why not smoked then fried?
Can you explain this process? Thinking of trying it in a regular turkey fryer or my Big Easy Oiless Fryer.
My questions are mainly what temp on smoker and how long? And what temperature for the bird do you pull it off the smoker? I know pork stops taking smoke at 140 degrees.
Do you brine or inject? I bought 3 frozen turkeys for $.57/ lb and want to try something new. Have a lot of experience frying, not a whole lot smoking. And I eat the skin, so would like it crispy. Thanks
Posted on 11/20/25 at 11:41 pm to Skenes
And a follow up. Has anyone ever cooked a turkey on a Weber kettle using a Vortex set up for what they call an “infrared” method?
So you have the Vortex accessory small end of cone is on the charcoal grate and large end is pointing towards lid. Turkey is set on stand, vertical, on top of charcoal grate inside the vortex. Coals go around the Vortex.
Looking to get smoke with crispy skin. Have a Big Easy Oilless turkey “fryer” and a normal turkey fryer/ shrimp boil setup.
Vortex claims the method mentioned above uses “Infrared heat”, which is the same method as The Big Easy cooker. Have tried multiple times to use some type method to get smoke in the Big Easy, with no avail. Big Easy is just a vertical roaster / air fryer, it makes great poultry. Just want smoke on the turkey.
So maybe a “smoke roasted” method versus “smoked and fried”
So you have the Vortex accessory small end of cone is on the charcoal grate and large end is pointing towards lid. Turkey is set on stand, vertical, on top of charcoal grate inside the vortex. Coals go around the Vortex.
Looking to get smoke with crispy skin. Have a Big Easy Oilless turkey “fryer” and a normal turkey fryer/ shrimp boil setup.
Vortex claims the method mentioned above uses “Infrared heat”, which is the same method as The Big Easy cooker. Have tried multiple times to use some type method to get smoke in the Big Easy, with no avail. Big Easy is just a vertical roaster / air fryer, it makes great poultry. Just want smoke on the turkey.
So maybe a “smoke roasted” method versus “smoked and fried”
Posted on 11/20/25 at 11:53 pm to Skenes
Fried, smoked (but very close)
Baked
Baked
Posted on 11/21/25 at 3:51 am to Skenes
Fried, strictly because I think the fried turkey carcass makes the best stock for gumbo
Posted on 11/21/25 at 5:54 am to xXLSUXx
quote:
smoking skinless, boneless breasts and resting in butter
This has become my favorite way too except I wrap and add the butter when the seasoning is set and it has some color around 135. Pull it when the temp gets around 150 and let it rest.
Best, juiciest turkey breast I've ever cooked.
None of my crew likes dark meat anyway and this method is so easy.
Posted on 11/21/25 at 9:40 am to Skenes
Smoked. But has to be prepped with a lotta mayo spread on all skin then a pound of bacon strips laid across the breast. White meat is juicy with crispy skin going this route.
Posted on 11/21/25 at 10:13 am to Skenes
Smoked is my favorite.
Fried had novelty at first, but it's just okay to me now. I dislike when people who fry inject so much crap that you can't taste anything else.
Fried had novelty at first, but it's just okay to me now. I dislike when people who fry inject so much crap that you can't taste anything else.
Posted on 11/21/25 at 11:03 am to Skenes
I prefer fried with smoked a close second. Baked is OK, but not my favorite way to cook one.
In the recent past I would have a pretty big T-Day party and have as many as 20-25 people over and I'd fry 3 for us to eat and at least 2 more for others who like the way they come out to stop by and pick them up when done.
For the past couple years, it's only been 4 of us, so I don't go through the expense of frying one turkey. The past few years I've smoked them after brining them a couple days.
In the recent past I would have a pretty big T-Day party and have as many as 20-25 people over and I'd fry 3 for us to eat and at least 2 more for others who like the way they come out to stop by and pick them up when done.
For the past couple years, it's only been 4 of us, so I don't go through the expense of frying one turkey. The past few years I've smoked them after brining them a couple days.
Posted on 11/21/25 at 11:08 am to Skenes
I break the turkey down. There is no culinary advantage to leaving it whole. Roast the breast, smoke the legs and wings, fry the thighs
Posted on 11/21/25 at 11:22 am to gumbo2176
quote:
I'd fry 3 for us to eat and at least 2 more for others who like the way they come out to stop by and pick them up when done.
same, as it has been for 25 years.....should never have introduced these yanks to cajun fried turkey
Posted on 11/21/25 at 11:32 am to RichJ
quote:
Pick up a smoked turkey @ Sam’s, then put it on my offset smoker for 4-6hrs before serving…

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