Dry-Brined and Grilled Turkey

Final Grilled_Turkey_PicSince we still have Christmas and New Years, there is still time to make this incredibly great turkey. It’s an easy method, easiest I’ve used anyway, and we were delighted with a super moist perfectly done bird.

So plan just a bit ahead and this beauty can be yours.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 turkey (ours was nearly 12 lbs which is about the best size)
  • 4-6 tbsp of kosher salt
  • olive oil
  • bunch of varied fresh herbs such as parsley, sage, oregano, rosemary, thyme

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Start with a fresh turkey if possible, otherwise thaw completely 3-4 days before cooking day. Remove giblets and use in whatever manner you normally do.
  2. Slide your fingers and hand under the breast skin from both sides until you have loosened it all, and then push down around the thighs and legs loosening it as well.
  3. Take about 1 tablespoon of salt in hand and reach into the right breast and work the salt around. Then do the left side, and then using a bit less for each leg and thigh area. Put about a tablespoon in the cavity. Then salt the entire outside using a tablespoon or two.
  4. Once done, place in a cooking bag of turkey size, secure the opening well, and place in the. You want to “brine” this for 3 days. Each day, turn it over, from breast to back. (You can use 2 days or even one if you must be it is best if you can do this for the entire three days)
  5. At the end of the third day (evening before the cooking), remove from the bag, dry as much as you can and place on a regular roasting rack over a baking dish. Doesn’t matter which side is up. Place in the fridge again, uncovered and leave until about an hour or so before you are going to start grilling. The drying process will make the skin nice and crispy.
  6. Remove from fridge an hour or so before grilling. Pour olive oil over the back and using your hands, massage the entire back of bird, making sure it’s nicely oiled. Turn over and do the same to the breast and legs. Tuck the wings under the bird with breast up.
  7. Fill the cavity with fresh herbs. You can also add onions if you wish.
  8. Heat up the grill.
  9. If using charcoal, line the sides of the grill leaving a big space in which you would place an aluminum roasting pan. You will put the bird over the pan with the charcoal piled on either side. Cover with the grill. Grill, turning the breast down about half way until temperature registers 165° in the thickest part of the leg.
  10. If using a gas grill (which we did), heat up the right and left jets but leave the middle one off. This is where you would place the turkey. Place turkey in the middle, and close the top. Continue on high for an hour. Turn the bird, go another hour. Ours was done in 2 hours perfectly.
  11. Remove from heat, tented with aluminum foil and leave for at least 30 minutes, or until you are ready to eat. It’s easier to carve when it’s cooled.

SERVES: 10

NOTES: I vastly prefer the gas grill since you don’t have to worry about the mess of trying to add briquets and the temperature remains even throughout the cooking time. Also when you are done, you can shut the grill down, and just leave the bird in for its resting time.

SOURCE: Adapted from about 4 recipes and my own preferences.

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Succulent Roast Turkey

A roasted turkey can be sublime.

If you do it right.

I’ve done turkey every way I think. Smoking is great, but a long process and you need equipment. Traditional stuffed turkey is okay, but horribly dry. Brining a turkey makes it utterly moist (even the white meat) and rethinking the methodology of roasting will make it even more evenly cooked and crispy and juicy.

So pay attention.

First brine as directed here. Then drain, and leave uncovered in the fridge for 12 hours to dry out. (This is what makes the skin crispy.

When you are ready to roast the bird, follow the directions below.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 10-12 lb turkey, brined and dried
  • a bunch of fresh herbs (including thyme, rosemary, sage, and parsley)
  • 2 onions, 2 carrots, 2 ribs of celery, chunked up
  • chicken broth
  • 1/4 c butter or olive oil

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Let the turkey sit out for a while to let it come to room temperature.
  2. Tuck in the wings and tie up the legs.
  3. Place the herbs in the cavity. (Dressing in the bird is hard to work. The raw bird contaminates the dressing and if not done correctly can be dangerous. Besides, it sucks up the moisture. So do the dressing in a pan.
  4. Pre-heat oven to 400°.
  5. Rub the turkey with softened butter or melted, or the olive oil. All over.
  6. Place the turkey in a roasting v-rack, BREAST DOWN and into the roasting pan. Surround with the veggies, and add broth to a depth of about 1/4 inch. You may need to add more later.
  7. Roast for 45 minutes. Remove from oven.
  8. Give the bird a quarter turn so that wing is up. Baste with juices from the pan, and return to oven for 15 minutes.
  9. Remove again, quarter turn to breast up, baste, and return for 15 minutes.
  10. Remove again, quarter turn to other wing, baste and return for 15 minutes.
  11. Remove again, quarter turn to breast side down, baste and return until internal temp at thigh is 175°, approximately 30-45 minutes more. (larger birds will take longer obviously)
  12. When done, remove from pan to serving area. Tent foil over it, and let sit for 30 minutes. DON’T FAIL TO DO THIS. (Can be kept for a good hour). Carve and serve.

Note: This method works fine for chicken as well. Ducks and Geese require a slightly different method. I’ll get to that soon.