Brining
This method is pretty common in the Northeast, and what you do is soak the turkey in a mixture of salt, sugar, water and seasonings for at least 4 hours and up to 24 hours. What this does is plump up the breast meat with a sort of moisture cushion, which keeps the bird moist during cooking and imparts a great flavor. Also brining speeds up the cooking time by about 30 minutes, since water conducts heat.
aschie30 wrote:I will brine. I also find that my turkey stays moist if I dip a cheesecloth in a butter/white wine mixture before roasting and lay it over the bird, and then baste the cheesecloth during cooking with the same mixture (except for the last half hour or so, when I remove it).
Good luck.
stevez wrote:aschie30 wrote:I will brine. I also find that my turkey stays moist if I dip a cheesecloth in a butter/white wine mixture before roasting and lay it over the bird, and then baste the cheesecloth during cooking with the same mixture (except for the last half hour or so, when I remove it).
Ah, the Martha Stewart method. I have been cooking my turkeys that way for the past few years and have been very happy with the results.
stevez wrote:Ah, the Martha Stewart method. I have been cooking my turkeys that way for the past few years and have been very happy with the results.
stevez wrote:aschie30 wrote: I also find that my turkey stays moist if I dip a cheesecloth in a butter/white wine mixture before roasting and lay it over the bird, and then baste the cheesecloth during cooking
Ah, the Martha Stewart method. I have been cooking my turkeys that way for the past few years and have been very happy with the results.
Mike G wrote:First half of the cook, cook the turkey upside down. Flip it for the second half.
Mike G wrote:1) Brine. Okay, maybe you want a recipe for that part.
2) Microwave the stuffing before it goes in the cavity, to get it up to 140 or so.
Mike G wrote:3) First half of the cook, cook the turkey upside down. Flip it for the second half.
Mike G wrote:breasts will look like the car backed over them when you flip it, but don't worry, with at least another hour and a half in the oven to go they'll plump back up into Norman Rockwell painting-perfect golden brown turkeyness.
bern bern wrote:My mother told me last night that she bought a pre-basted turkey and I am not necessarily familiar with what this means. She said that it means that it's injected with oil or something to that effect? Regardless, I was planning on brining, but now this totally throws me for a loop. Will it be too salty or just I just go ahead with the brine?
Thanks for all your suggestions
Khaopaat wrote:We're going to a pre-Thanksgiving dinner where the centerpiece will be a turkey made following this Cook's Illustrated's dry brine article. I've never tried the technique nor have I tasted its results, so I look forward to seeing how it comes out and will post the details here.
Cathy2 wrote:They tested and found you could begin the brining process with a frozen turkey.
Cathy2 wrote: I'm curious if anyone else tried the dry brine who had experience with wet. Which method do you favor? (Why?)
Cathy2 wrote:I brine turkeys no matter what their past may be.![]()