Pie Lady wrote:Completely off topic, but if schmaltz is chicken fat, how did we get the term schmaltzy to mean overly sentimental?
The GP wrote: I will still use butter, but will try to find other alternatives without sacrificing flavor. I've never worked with ghee -- would that be a good substitute for the herbed-butter rub on the turkey?
tyrus wrote:I'm wondering if anyone saw the Cook's Illustrated from last weekend (I think) with their "new" version of Thanksgiving turkey parts. They take a non-enhanced (no brine) bird and cut it up into a breast, two legs and two thighs.
LAZ wrote:tyrus wrote:The method I liked is to cook the parts on a rack over a pan of stuffing. (Doesn't matter for the turkey itself, but it's great for the stuffing. I think I just did it at 325 degrees straight through. Everything browns much more evenly than when cooking a whole bird. I did split the breast in half.
LAZ wrote:tyrus wrote:I'm wondering if anyone saw the Cook's Illustrated from last weekend (I think) with their "new" version of Thanksgiving turkey parts. They take a non-enhanced (no brine) bird and cut it up into a breast, two legs and two thighs.
The main drawback to this method is that dismembering a turkey takes a heavy cleaver and some muscle to get the backbone out. (Also, you don't really get drippings for gravy this way.)
LAZ wrote:tyrus wrote:The main drawback to this method is that dismembering a turkey takes a heavy cleaver and some muscle to get the backbone out.
tyrus wrote:I'm wondering if anyone saw the Cook's Illustrated from last weekend (I think) with their "new" version of Thanksgiving turkey parts. They take a non-enhanced (no brine) bird and cut it up into a breast, two legs and two thighs. They then roast it, skin side up on the dark meat and skin side down on the white, in a low oven - 285 (IIRC) for about an hour, then flip the breast over (skin side up) and roast for another hour. After that, it's basically done (this is purely the cliff notes version, not the recipe) and they let it rest for up to an hour and a half before setting the oven to 500 and baking for a last 15 minutes to darken and crisp the skin. The result is supposed to be a juicy, well cooked bird with minimal effort.
I may try it only because the turkey can rest for about an hour or so before being finished. With a normal sized oven, finding room to bake the side items, timing, etc is always an issue. If I take the bird out for an hour, I can bake everything else I need while the bird rests.
Any thoughts/comments on this approach? Thanks much.
tyrus wrote:MHays - Sorry - there seems to be a lot of Thanksgiving type threads and I just missed that one in the search. Your approach is also a great idea but it's a little different than what I saw on the CI show. Same concept though!
razbry - I really don't think par-cooking a turkey is the best idea from a food safety perspective. On another thread Cathy2 discusses food safety and turkey prep but I'm not an expert myself. I know that my grandmother ALWAYS slow roasted her bird and sometimes partially cooked it the night before only to finish it the next day. The white meat wasn't as dried out as you'd think it would be but the dark meat was something that approached turkey leg confit. Simply awesome. I wouldn't try it on my family but nobody ever got sick in her kitchen.
Mhays wrote:The GP wrote:
Otherwise, if you aren't feeding anyone kosher, I'd sub bacon grease in your turkey rub...I might even sub bacon grease for butter on a turkey anyway, it has better flavor...(I suppose schmaltz/duck/goosefat would be an excellent option as well)
razbry wrote:What do you think of this idea? Roast the turkey the day before...slightly undercook. Let it cool. Carve it and place it in a pan with the turkey juices. On Thanksgiving day gently re-heat until completely cooked. I'm just trying to make my life easier on THE day.
Menu sounds terrific, but I was wondering about the Saveur Parker House rolls. Have you made the recipe yet? I've made it twice, first time my yeast may have been old as I got poor rise, but second time was fresh cake yeast and still not where I wanted the rolls. Ratios seem right, I almost wonder if the three rises are not leaving oomph for oven spring.thaiobsessed wrote:Parker House rolls from the latest Saveur
G Wiv wrote:Menu sounds terrific, but I was wondering about the Saveur Parker House rolls. Have you made the recipe yet? I've made it twice, first time my yeast may have been old as I got poor rise, but second time was fresh cake yeast and still not where I wanted the rolls. Ratios seem right, I almost wonder if the three rises are not leaving oomph for oven spring.thaiobsessed wrote:Parker House rolls from the latest Saveur
thaiobsessed wrote:Parker House rolls from the latest Saveur
thaiobsessed wrote:I think we've finalized the menu (Mexican-themed since I got shot down on my Southeast Asian theme--I think it was the sticky rice/chinese sausage stuffing that did it)...
Corn bread stuffing with andouille, poblanos and pecans
BR wrote:thaiobsessed wrote:I think we've finalized the menu (Mexican-themed since I got shot down on my Southeast Asian theme--I think it was the sticky rice/chinese sausage stuffing that did it)...
Corn bread stuffing with andouille, poblanos and pecans
Are you using a recipe, and if so, from where? The whole menu sounds great, but this really sounds right up my alley . . . hoping for pictures, comments and maybe a recipe.
that Norman Rockwell moment of bringing out the whole turkey