mamagotcha wrote:So any post-mortem discussion on our holiday meals? Funny stories? Lessons learned?
Since moving to MN and building a house, I now am the host for pretty much every holiday. I'm trying to make my life easier with prepping ahead. I'll try to replicate a lot of what I did this year. We had 9 adults and 4 kids under the age of 8 but I also wanted some left overs since we had an early dinner time of 1pm. Here's what I did:
- 1 14lb Schultz Organic farm turkey:
http://www.lindenhills.coop/node/383. This came frozen to our local co-op so I thawed it for three days before putting it into a buttermilk brine for 24 hours. I then oven roasted it using a variation of the Alton Brown method - rubbed with canola oil, in the cavity went an onion, lemon, fresh sage, rosemary, and thyme, cracked pepper over the outside of the bird. In the oven at 500 degrees for 30 minutes, then down to 350 for about 3 hours (12 min per pound is almost right on). One thing though - I had to cover the breast with foil after an hour because it was browning too fast. I removed it for the last 45 minutes. The bird was picture perfect coming out of the oven.
- 1 13lb Kadejan Turkey:
http://www.kadejan.com/index.html. This one was delivered fresh to our Co-Op. I used a dry salt brine 24 hours before the bird was smoked on the WSM. It too, took about 3 hours and was perfect. I'd post a picture but posting pictures has gotten complicated, so I won't - sorry. Lesson learned here is that after you rinse it well, you have to dry it well which is close to impossible since you have to salt the bird under the skin. The water gets trapped and as much as you press the water out, there always seems to be more. Letting it sit on the counter for an hour helps most of the water drip out.
- Turkey stock. I made this two days before. I bought 5-6 lbs of turkey backs, necks and wings and roasted them at 400 degrees for about 40 minutes. I then dumped them into cold water for an hour before throwing in an onion, celery, carrots, and black peppercorns for another hour. This yielded 10 cups of stock. It was great stock - gelatinous with a great turkey flavor. It made my life so much easier on Thanksgiving morning.
- Dressing (not stuffing into the turkey cavity). This is my wife's favorite so I made a double batch. Used two 1 lb rounds of country bread, cubed and dried in the oven the night before. I put the dried bread in a grocery bag overnight and it was ready to go. I mixed about 4 - 5 cups of the stock along with butter, onion, celery, dried and fresh, sage, rosemary, and thyme. It heaped into a 9 inch casserole dish and was baked for about an hour - 40 minutes covered and 20 minutes to get crunchy on top. Very good.
- Corn Pudding - wife made this day of and should have doubled the recipe. Lesson learned. It was a basic recipe with crushed saltines.
- Green Beans with shallots - I browned the shallots the night before and this was a good idea since they always take longer than you want and burn easily unattended. The beans are steamed in a wok, then uncovered and splashed with EVOO for a quick stir fry. The shallots are added last to heat through. Always a popular green side dish.
- Gravy. I made a roux the night before with some turkey fat (thanks stock!) and butter and flour. I got it to a peanut butter color, let it cool and put it in a tupperware container. Super easy the next day. I put the stock in a pot to heat up, in another pot I added the roux with some butter to get it started. Once warm, I added the hot stock and whisked away. It was perfect. Light brown, buttery, medium thickness, and flavorful. I may have to double the recipe next year. I did not use any turkey pan drippings. Not that I didn't want to but as I was assembling everything, it's one more thing to try to coordinate. The made-ahead stock had plenty of flavor and made my morning stress free.
- Mashed potatoes. Nothing fancy, just mashed with butter and whole milk. A staple.
- Sweet potato casserole - this was good but is never eaten as much as the other stuff. I roasted sweet potatoes the night before, peeled them and refrigerated them until Thanksgiving morning. After the turkeys were in the oven/smoker I mashed and whisked them together with some brown sugar, milk and butter. I topped them with marshmallows but I don't like that addition. I prefer pecans or walnuts and will probably go that route next year.
- dinner rolls - assigned to my mom who picked up white mountain rolls from the bakery. She'll get this assignment next year.
- orange jello with mandarin oranges. Wife's dish and a staple, especially for the kids.
- Pies - pumpkin and pecan - Mother in law duties. She can do it again next year.
Over all, it was a success. I will continue to try to carve out room the night before for anything I can prep. With so many dishes and running a smoker outside, then carving and finishing, the less I have to do the better. It was probably the less stressed I've been for any of the holidays so far. Biggest lesson learned - make the stock a couple days in advance. It's a life saver and makes the other dishes that much better.
"It's not that I'm on commission, it's just I've sifted through a lot of stuff and it's not worth filling up on the bland when the extraordinary is within equidistant tasting distance." - David Lebovitz