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First Time Turkey Cooker
Posted on 11/17/17 at 10:34 am
Posted on 11/17/17 at 10:34 am
Need some advice or tips. Gunna cook it in the oven. What are some MUSTS? Thanks in advance, friends
Posted on 11/17/17 at 10:41 am to agreenway6
If you're trying to perfect the process, I'll leave the floor for other posters.
If you're not very experienced in the kitchen, I highly suggest cooking it in a turkey bag (any grocery store will have them). Its incredibly hard to screw up. Mine have all turned out well, with 0 experience.
Although I told a friend the same, and he accidentally used Broil instead of bake and melted the bag to the turkey.
If you're not very experienced in the kitchen, I highly suggest cooking it in a turkey bag (any grocery store will have them). Its incredibly hard to screw up. Mine have all turned out well, with 0 experience.
Although I told a friend the same, and he accidentally used Broil instead of bake and melted the bag to the turkey.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 11:03 am to agreenway6
Use a stick of butter as lipstick for that bird every 45 mins.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 11:21 am to Pitch To Johnny
Let me clarify that I have little to no cooking experience lol
Posted on 11/17/17 at 11:24 am to agreenway6
Fry it. Much easier. Just make sure that thing is fully de-thawed before putting it in the oil!
Posted on 11/17/17 at 1:38 pm to agreenway6
Posted on 11/17/17 at 3:05 pm to Havoc
Make sure you pull the neck and gizzards out of its bunghole.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 3:19 pm to WhoDatTigahsTampa
quote:
fully de-thawed
Wouldn't that be frozen?
Posted on 11/17/17 at 5:03 pm to agreenway6
quote:
Let me clarify that I have little to no cooking experience lol
If you took this on to cook for the family, maybe sneak in one already cooked from somewhere instead. a BBQ place as an example.
Reality is a turkey is easy to cook though.
Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C). Place rack in the lowest position of the oven.
Remove the turkey neck and giblets, rinse the turkey, and pat dry with paper towels. Place the turkey, breast side up, on a rack in the roasting pan. Loosely fill the body cavity with stuffing. Rub the skin with the softened butter, and season with salt and pepper. Position an aluminum foil tent over the turkey.
Place turkey in the oven, and pour 2 cups turkey stock into the bottom of the roasting pan. Baste all over every 30 minutes with the juices on the bottom of the pan. Whenever the drippings evaporate, add stock to moisten them, about 1 to 2 cups at a time. Remove aluminum foil after 2 1/2 hours. Roast until a meat thermometer inserted in the meaty part of the thigh reads 165 degrees F (75 degrees C), about 4 hours.
Transfer the turkey to a large serving platter, and let it stand for at least 20 to 30 minutes before carving.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 6:50 pm to agreenway6
quote:
Let me clarify that I have little to no cooking experience lol
I cooked a turkey for a bunch of friends for the first time 2 years ago because noone volunteered. Used the bag and it turned out great. Watch a youtube video of how to prep it and follow the instructions on the bag. Super easy.
-Let it fully defrost
-Put your hand up its arse and take out the neck/gizzards/etc.
-Use a stick of butter and lather it up all of its skin like you're putting on lotion
-Season all over generously with salt/pepper/Slap ya momma (Your preference here)
-Put some flour in your bag and shake it around so theres a light coating (I assume this is so it doesn't stick to the skin)
-Put bird in bag
-Seal with the tie that comes with the bag
-Bake for however long and what temp the bag says.
There are much better ways of doing it, but thats as easy as it gets, and the bag keeps it from drying out. Like I said, first time ever and it worked just fine. People were asking how long I've been cooking turkeys. (We were fresh out of college, so they were easy to impress.)
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:28 pm to agreenway6
1 - Get that frozen bird into the refrigerator today. It will likely take him until Wednesday to properly thaw.
2 - Like someone else said, Get a Turkey cooking bag at Walmart.
3 - Mid day Wednesday, un-bag him and remove the paper bag from the opposite end from where the big hole is where they removed his guts. Keep this in the refrigerator. You will use it he next day.
4 - Dry him off with paper towels, season him liberally with garlic powder, black pepper and drop him into a plastic trash can bag (that doesn't leak). Add a quart of apple juice and a tablespoon of salt to the liquid and seasoning mix. I you have it, add two 6 inch sprigs of rosemary and two teaspoons of thyme. Squeeze the air out and place him back into the refrigerator, or an ice chest with enough ice to keep him chilly cold so he won't spoil and send everyone to the hospital.
5 - Early the next Day (Thanksgiving morning) is cook your turkey time. He will take 15 minutes per pound to cook at 325 degrees in the cooking bag.
6 - Place the bird breast up in the cooking bag (The Reynolds Wrap folks make good ones that usually can be found in the section beside the aluminum foil and plastic wrap at Walmart). It is probably in the same place at your grocer. You need to go buy the bag today because they will all be gone by next Wednesday. I like to put an orange cut into four pieces Peel and all and a cored apple cut into four pieces in the body cavity on my bird.
7 - Follow the directions on the bag, placing him in his bag, and that into a suitable sized pan, so that if the bag leaks something will catch it and keep your oven clean. Salt and black pepper him. before putting him into his bag. If you like, put one sprig of rosemary in there too.
8 - Cook the bird at 325 F for 15 minutes per pound.
When he should be done, take his internal temperature with a probe thermometer. It should be 165 F. You can also cook him for an extra 30 minutes if you have no thermometer.
Giblet Gravy:
Take the giblets and cook them in chicken broth, with some 1/4 cup chopped celery, 1/4 cup chopped onion and a clove of minced garlic. Simmer them for an hour or so, until you can pull the meat from the neck.
Boil some eggs. The giblet gravy will need at least one, sliced thin. Your dressing will need several.
After the giblets have coked fully, pull the from the broth, pull all of the meat you can from the beck and return that to the broth. Chop the gizzard and liver as fine as you like and return them to the broth. Do not add the neck skin to the broth. Hold this somewhere (not boiling) until just before serving time and then add 1 or 2 Tablespoons of corn starch to some water, stir it up until there are no corn starch lumps and add it to the broth/meat and cook at a low boil until the corn starch thickens to the level you like your giblet gravy. Finally add the thinly sliced boiled egg and your giblet gravy is ready.
Let the turkey rest on a platter for at least ten minutes before slicing.
Here is an alternate method for cooking your bird
1 - Thaw him and brine as above. Dry him early the morning you are cooking and place him breast up, on a poultry rack in a roasting pan. Season with salt and pepper and cook him at 325 F open in the oven.
2 - Every 15 minutes, Baste him with a 50/50 mixture of vegetable oil and melted butter. Brush it on all skinned surfaces if possible. Eventually he may get as brown as you like. At that point, If he is not at an internal (measured in thickest part of the Breast and thigh) temperature of 165 F make a tent out of aluminum foil and put it (shiny side up) over his breast to keep it from drying out too much.
3 - Cook him 15 minutes per pound to an internal temperature of 165 F measured with a probe thermometer in the thickest part of the breast and also in a short leg.
This method will give you a crispy, golden brown skin bird, that may be dryer than the bag method.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:31 pm to agreenway6
Easiest and best is from Alton brown
Brine, dry or wet. Your call. I'm trying a dry brine this year because everything I've read from serious eats and other places or on here says it's better.
Pat dry then rub with butter or oil. Place in oven at 500 for 30 minutes.
Drop down to 350, cover the breasts with foil so it doesn't dry out, put a probe in the thickest part of the breast, and cook until it hits 155. It will carry up to 165 during resting. Don't overcook it.
Rest for 20-30 minutes then carve.
Brine, dry or wet. Your call. I'm trying a dry brine this year because everything I've read from serious eats and other places or on here says it's better.
Pat dry then rub with butter or oil. Place in oven at 500 for 30 minutes.
Drop down to 350, cover the breasts with foil so it doesn't dry out, put a probe in the thickest part of the breast, and cook until it hits 155. It will carry up to 165 during resting. Don't overcook it.
Rest for 20-30 minutes then carve.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:33 pm to WhiskeyThrottle
quote:
Make sure you pull the neck and gizzards out of its bunghole.
Bruh that ain't its bunghole.
But yes, take that shite out and make gravy
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:53 pm to TH03
Spatchcock the bird and you don't have to change temps or cover. Just fyi
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:56 pm to KosmoCramer
True, but most people want to present that classic Thanksgiving turkey on the platter, but end up overcooking it.
Posted on 11/17/17 at 7:57 pm to TH03
Put the turkey leg booties on after cooking
Posted on 11/17/17 at 8:08 pm to TH03
quote:
True, but most people want to present that classic Thanksgiving turkey on the platter, but end up overcooking it.
If you pre carve it, it's honestly just as impressive IMO. And it tastes amazingly better.
Posted on 11/19/17 at 4:37 pm to KosmoCramer
YouTube is your friend.
Posted on 11/19/17 at 4:39 pm to KosmoCramer
Oh yeah, make sure you thaw it (may take two days in the fridge} before you try and cook it. Good luck.
Posted on 11/19/17 at 4:49 pm to agreenway6
Tip #1: If you're planning on buying a frozen turkey, buy it today or tomorrow and put it in the refrigerator placed in a dish with sides to catch moisture. Frozen turkeys can take a couple of days to thaw out before you can cook them.
This post was edited on 11/19/17 at 4:50 pm
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