How do you prepare your Thanksgiving turkey?

Brine overnight and inject with marinade*. Dry rub the day of. Fry at 350 for 3 minutes a lb.

*marinade is:
1/2 part butter
1/2 part cider
Healthy amount of dry rub mixture. Cook for 10 minutes. Cool and inject 80-100cc all over bird.

-Sam
 
Brine overnight and inject with marinade*. Dry rub the day of. Fry at 350 for 3 minutes a lb.

*marinade is:
1/2 part butter
1/2 part cider
Healthy amount of dry rub mixture. Cook for 10 minutes. Cool and inject 80-100cc all over bird.

-Sam

This sounds great.. I may try this next year.

For this year I went with just a simple dry rub, wrapped and stuck in fridge over night. Will deep fry at around 350 same axe the general rule is 3 min a lb.. but I also check color and temp of bird
 
If I'm cooking it, I deep fry it.

Marinade injections, and a good dry rub.

My wife likes cooking them in the oven. Not sure what she does, but they come out great!
 
Recipe for the best damn turkey ever:



Step 1: Buy turkey & a bunch of other stuff.

Step 2: Give g/f free reign of the kitchen (AKA: stay the hell out of the way).

Step 3: Wait until she tells me it is done.

Step 4: Eat.


:drool:
 
Recipe for the best damn turkey ever:



Step 1: Buy turkey & a bunch of other stuff.

Step 2: Give g/f free reign of the kitchen (AKA: get drunk and watch football).

Step 3: Wait until she tells me it is done.

Step 4: Eat.


:drool:

fixed it.

-Sam
 
I'm a wizard with a knife when it comes to carving, so i usually get pressed into service just prior to the main event.
 
Brine the bird in salt/sugar/spices water overnight. Then to the Webber BBQ for about three hours with a few chunks of alder. The drippings go into a pan to make gravy. After dinner, freeze the carcas to make turkey barley soup in a week or so. A great soup that my mom made every year when I was a kid (1950's) and you can taste the smoke in the soup. Did I mention Sam Adams Winter Lager to fuel the cook??
 
1. Dig four foot deep hole
2. Burn hard wood in hole till hole is filled
3. Extract coals from hole
4. Season turkey, roasts and place ech in dutch oven.
5. Place dutch ovens in hole layering hot coals and ovens
6. Cover hole with dirt
7. Let cook for ten to twelve hours
 
I dont brine. No particular reason why except I have too much other stuff cooking to bother with it.

My turkey is stuffed with a quarterd onion, lemon and orange, plus a big bunch of (fresh from my garden) sage and rosemary. Then I loosen all of the skin and put a few pats of butter under the skin. Lastly, I coat the bird with a light oil and liberally rub with a dry rub.

I place the bird on a rack in a deep pan with celery, carrots, onions and herbs in a bath of white wine. (for aromatics, moisture and GRAVY!)

Roast uncovered (except the wing tips!) till done.

The citrus streams from the inside to make it juicy, and skin is as crunchy as a tortilla chip!
 
Like Baker, I do mine in a Dutch oven. I usually brine it first with sea salt and various fresh herbs, dry and rub down with butter, then sprinkle a bit of Cajun seasoning. I stack DO's in a hole, but don't bury them since I have different things that go on at different times.

**forgot to mention that I toss in whatever vegetable trimmings I've got from prepping the sides to add some moisture and aroma, and make more delicious gravy :D
 
Last edited:
A little late but thought I would chime in. We usually do 3 in the desert every Tday. We smoke one, deep fry the other two. After reading some of these though next year I might have to do one in the dutch ovens.
 

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