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Start thawing in fridge today?
Start cooking Sunday at 7am for a 4pm dinner??
Thanks
newbie cook
Start cooking Sunday at 7am for a 4pm dinner??
Thanks
newbie cook
Boy I hope you mean 325 cause at 425, the oil is likely to catch fire...It cooks at 425 about one minute/lbs.
Important note here - if you're deepfrying the turkey, remove the popups. Otherwise, leave it in. When oven roasting a turkey, removing the popup before hand just creates a hole from which the juices can escape.To really do it right, you need two meat thermometers. One for the body, one for the thick meat on the drumsticks. Forget the "pop-up" thingey that comes with some birds.
In that case, you'll want the Turkey Cork, SKU 00202228-1. Be sure to specify size and have your 38 digit account number ready.Greebo said:When oven roasting a turkey, removing the popup before hand just creates a hole from which the juices can escape.
Greebo said:For fastest and safest thawing, put the turkey in the pan as Bruce suggested, cover with cold water, but then keep a very slow trickle of cold water running into the pan.
The water density makes for the best convection, and the constant flow of new cold water keeps it from getting too warm. This is the fastest method of thawing meat short of actually cooking it in the process, and the constant water change means you keep the turkey cold enough to avoid the bio danger zone.
Run that all day, and then let sit in the fridge over night and you should have a nicely thawed turkey by Sunday.
BTW: Deep fried turkey is SOOOO good - try it sometime.
DONT cook your turkey based on the X minutes per pound approach. Use a meat thermometer which has an external display (digital). You can pull the turkey at 175 (thigh temp) and let it rest and natural carryover will take it the rest of the way to 180 without drying out the breast too much.
You could also consider a turkey brine ahead of time - MMM talk about flavor infusion.
Personally, I oppose stuffing a turkey - to cook the stuffing fully you gotta kill the bird, and if you dont cook the stuffing fully, you run serious biological risk. I'm with A.B. on this one - stuffing is evil.
Sorry.
You are correct. 3.5 minutes/lbs in peanut oil @ 325.Greebo said:Boy I hope you mean 325 cause at 425, the oil is likely to catch fire...
But it DOES cook up some REALLY moist turkey!
Richard said:You are correct. 3.5 minutes/lbs in peanut oil @ 325.
I just hung up from talking to my brother (to verify the #s). He related a recent event involving a deep fryer, a turkey, beer, 3 other different kind of turkeys, and a fire.
A const. crew decided to celebrate completion of building a home. They decided to deep fry a turkey. They got the oil hot, dropped the bird in, and went inside to watch the game and drink some beer. Unwatched, the oil did catch fire. Basically, the garage was a total loss and there was fire damage to the attached house.
Greebo said:Important note here - if you're deepfrying the turkey, remove the popups.
That is a damn good point you have there. And that goose sounds mighty fine. Yummy is right!cameronbm said:Turkeys come with popups???
No, No, No, turkeys come with #4/#6 shot. Next thing you'll tell me is that turkeys come from a store.
Its goose braised in white wine this year -- Yummy!
Bruce
And burns probably 100x that number. It is really important to accurately gauge the capacity of the fryer and the volume required. The simplest way is to do a 'dry' run with water before you start playing with hot oil. Common sense, yes, but of three people I know who deep fry birds all three have overfilled the fryer. Otherwise, they are fairly smart folks.Dave Krall CFII said:If memory serves, staistically it's 1 to 2 dozen serious house fires per year in USA from turkeys frying.
imQ said:A nice sized turkey, rubbed in olive oil. On the smoker at 8am. pecan smoke till about 4pm, let rest on kitchen counter so the house gets the proper infusion of smoke. Watch the wifes eyes roll back in her head when she tastes it. Yes yes yes....
imQ said:I keep it about 225 (according to the thermo. on the smoker.)for the most part. I've never served one undercooked, however that's my biggest fear. (outside of it not tasting right.) I do check with a meat thermometer before taking it out of the smoker. The biggest bird started at 6am and finished at 6:30 pm.
Um.. thats definately not faster than oven or oil cooking. He's talking about 12 hours of smoking...Dave Krall CFII said:I guess there's something about smoke infusion that makes meat "cooked" sooner and at lower temps because I can't imagine conventionally baking a turkey safely at ~225 F. Where's the chemists' explanations when we need them ?
Greebo said:Um.. thats definately not faster than oven or oil cooking. He's talking about 12 hours of smoking...
Greebo said:Oh, it will COOK the meat, but it probably won't brown the meat. It will take a long time (ie, 12 hours) to bring the meat up to temperature, but it will get there. It is in the nature of thermodynamics that the turkey will increase its temperature over time to match that of its surroundings - the oven.
I do question, however, whether cooking the meat that slowly creates a higher risk of bacterial infection (ie food poisoning) or whether you have to keep the meat at temperature longer once it reaches temp. The "danger zone" for biological poisoning is in the 60f - 100f range, and if the turkey is cold it will take a long time to come thru that range giving the bacteria lots of time to be fruitful and multiply before the meat then gets hot enough to cook them too...
It does seem kinda scary...
I'm not sure if you're being flip or not. I've been cooking over open fires and in smokers for some time, and thru luck or whatever I haven't poisoned anyone yet. I'd throw it out first.Dave Krall CFII said:That's what I figured too for straight oven baking but, the smoke meathod must have some chemicals that acts synergistically to enhance the process and make it safe.
Are you kidding!? At least go get a real hot meal somewheres. What neck of the woods are you in again? Someone has to have a fast mover and come and rescue you.terzap said:Sigh...it's lovely to "hear" so many men discussing cooking. I'll just sit back and relax.
BTW...my preferred holiday fare is goose with a sauce made from zinfandel port, or mallard with spiced cherry sauce or rum raisins, but this year, it's ramen noodles, thank Goodness, a nice, quiet, no obligation, sleep in and do nothing holiday weekend. (Unless of course someone calls me to go flying.)
terry