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From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

We spatchcocked chickens all summer. I never thought of doing it with a turkey but makes perfect sense. Technically so you know spatchcocking is different than butterflying. You don't push all the way flat to break the breastbone for spatchcocking as you do with butterflying. I'm so going to do this next week. Can you tell us your buttermilk brine recipe?

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

Corn Bread-Sausage Stuffing With Apples, I'm making bread stuffing for the first time.
And Brussel Sprouts with Bacon

From Recipes

Seriously Meatless: Tahina

I think I'd need a lot more than 3 lemons to make it palatable for me. I've had too many bad hummus' where all you taste is the peanut buttery tasteless taste of the tahini.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Zingerman's Guide to Better Bacon'

I love bacon so much that when invited to other people's houses for brunch I bring bacon just in case they weren't thinking of making any. I love bacon so much I have actually made and eaten bacon maple ice cream.

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Recent Comments | Response to Comments

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

We spatchcocked chickens all summer. I never thought of doing it with a turkey but makes perfect sense. Technically so you know spatchcocking is different than butterflying. You don't push all the way flat to break the breastbone for spatchcocking as you do with butterflying. I'm so going to do this next week. Can you tell us your buttermilk brine recipe?

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

Corn Bread-Sausage Stuffing With Apples, I'm making bread stuffing for the first time.
And Brussel Sprouts with Bacon

From Recipes

Seriously Meatless: Tahina

I think I'd need a lot more than 3 lemons to make it palatable for me. I've had too many bad hummus' where all you taste is the peanut buttery tasteless taste of the tahini.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'Zingerman's Guide to Better Bacon'

I love bacon so much that when invited to other people's houses for brunch I bring bacon just in case they weren't thinking of making any. I love bacon so much I have actually made and eaten bacon maple ice cream.

From Serious Eats

Gadgets: The Goodbyn Back-to-School Lunchbox

It's so cute and looks like it would be easier to clean than the laptop lunchboxes but its size and the inability to keep it cool make it a huge drawback for a regular school lunchbox. It would have been fine last year when my daughter was in preschool and they have a refrigerator for lunches but this year she's in kindergarten and no fridge. They really need to do an insulated sleeve for it with handles.

From Talk

Funeral Food

My condolences on your impending loss.

On the Lebanese side of my family someone always bring lamb and green bean stew and a pot of rice. It's great at room temperature and such a comfort. At my grandfather's funeral someone bought it and all of us felt it was like the first real meal we'd had in days after all the cold cuts, cookies, etc.

From Talk

What one food mag should I get?

Right now I subscribe to Saveur and EatingWell. I used to subscribe to Cook's Illustrated as well.

CI lapsed at one point and I picked up an issue about 6 months later and realized about 50% of the content was familiar and sure enough I pulled out an issue from 2 years prior and there were about 5 recipes in the old one that were "revisited" in the new one. So I didn't resubscribe.

Saveur I probably won't renew b/c the past several issues have had way too much advertorial in it. I used to really love the magazine but now I find it take about 15 minutes to get through and I don't have that happiness I used to have.

EatingWell has been a great source for health recipes. I find it less laden with "low fat" fake things than Cooking Light plus it just concentrates on food.

From Talk

Paying for someone else's party?

@janaatwg you did nothing wrong. Miss Manners says showers are the ONLY party where you are actually expected to bring a gift since the main purpose of the party is to shower the bride or mother to be with gifts.

I do find the pay to come birthday party kind of tacky. What if the birthday person's best friend is out of work and can't afford the $20/person?

From Serious Eats

The Serious Eats Ginger Beer Taste Test

Blenheim's extra spicy and rye (Old Overholt) is my favorite highball. It's not called ginger and jack, it's called a highball, btw. I'll have to try Great Uncle Cornelius' b/c it's not easy to find Blenheim's up north.

From Serious Eats

Cook the Book: 'On the Line'

mussels in garlic cream cheese sauce or shrimp with garlic pepper sauce and a little white wine.

From Talk

Eating Well and Cheaply: Any More Ideas Out There?

@rockchick I was actually addressing the person above me with the only spending $30/week b/c they have a well stocked pantry.

Looking at the past few entries of your blog though you don't appear to include the food the people give you or you scavenge from your offices or the meals that you eat out whether you pay for them or someone else does. Or the stuff you appear to find deep in your freezer.

I'm all for stretching dollars and making sure that every bit is used up of produce or meat or whatever one eats. In fact I'm a big proponent of that. It's just in the grand scheme of things Americans already spend less on food than anyone else in the world. I don't like the idea that food is an evil necessity that we should spend as little on as possible. I'd rather we just return to whole foods (not the grocery store), maximize what we do buy and buy good food that's good for us.

From Talk

Eating Well and Cheaply: Any More Ideas Out There?

So I"m confused is it you only spend $30/week after you stocked up your pantry before starting this? Or do you only eat $30 worth of food per week? Did you figure in the cost of joining a co-op into your weekly budget? How about a CSA? I used to obsessively read posts about people who fed a family of 6 on $100/week with four growing children and then I realized they didn't count non food items or they didn't count what they had in their pantry, or they didn't count their CSA pickup, etc., etc.

We do things to save money like buying in bulk where possible, buying cheaper cuts of meat, stocking up on pantry items at Trader Joe's when we go to Massachusetts. We could save a lot of money if we didn't drink beer or coffee. We go picking strawberries, blueberries, raspberries during the summer and freeze a bunch. I freeze tomato sauce as well and make my own stock so 1 chicken feeds a family of 3 for usually 2 dinners, a lunch and then whatever I use the stock for. Make breadcrumbs from old bread, etc. A lot of good suggestions I've gotten have come from The New English Kitchen by Rose Prince.

I would be interested in seeing more of a study on how much people spend on food and food related items over the course of an entire year, including CSA, co-op membership charges, etc I always got the feeling reading those virtuous posts that in the end they didn't really spend that much less money than I did if you actually factor everything in.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Super Bowl Party Giveaway: La Frieda Black Label Burgers

There once was some marathon hamburger meat
that no one could ever beat
one day it fell
and said "oh hell"
soon the other runners said, "let's eat."

From Serious Eats

Liberté Yogurt: My Holy Grail of Dairy Products

Love Liberte. Buy here in Vermont all of the time. Was very sad when I went to their website and found all sort of flavors that they don't carry here. However I was sort of glad that they discontinued the bigger containers of the flavored ones b/c I was able to finish them in one sitting.

From Serious Eats

Seriously Delicious Holiday Giveaway: Zingerman's Praise the Lard Gift Box

The first time I made bacon in the oven the bacon turned out crispy with bacon fat crystallized on it so with every bite you got the crunch of bacon and the meltingly wonderful mouthfeel of bacon fat. That's my favorite pork memory along with bacon ice cream. sigh bacon.

From Talk

PETA wants meat eaters in Vermont to pay higher insurance rates.

I live in Vermont. Pretty ridiculous since vegetarian doesn't mean healthier. Not to mention we're pretty pro-local food up here which is pretty difficult to do in this climate if you don't eat meat. But if PETA wants to alienate us hippie, commie socialists they're doing a good job. BCBS is the health insurance for all of the teachers in Vermont.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I've done this for years (although I like to cut through the backbone, using a cleaver and meat mallet). A rich mushroom/ricotta/parmesan mixture goes between the skin and the flesh, and I smoke the turkey at an average grill temperature of 350º.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I was following the great Alton Brown Says No to Stuffing the Turkey debate a little while back. Someone suggested using the above technique, roasting your turkey on a wire rack directly above the pan of stuffing/dressing. That sounds great to me. Perfectly cooked turkey, with turkey-enhanced stuffing. Yes!

http://www.seriouseats.com/2009/11/alton-brown-says-no-to-stuffing-the-turkey-dressing-thanksgiving.html

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

Dear Grace: I made this yesterday. I spatch-cocked my turkey saturday morning, after a 12 hour brine, for a friends' thanksgiving saturday afternoon. It turned out SO awesome. I've pretty much hated every other turkey that I've ever had/made except for this one. and it was so fast! I was really worried because after 20 minutes at 400F, there was a 40 deg F temperature difference between my thigh and my breast. (or 22.2 deg C difference). I ended up cooking the breast to a higher temperature than you recommended, yet none of my turkey meat was dry.

The high temperature of 450 I first used when I made this Thomas Keller recipe for simple roast chicken, where he also roasts at 450 deg F. (http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/My-Favorite-Simple-Roast-Chicken-231348)

Interestingly enough, even without brining, Thomas Keller's recipe for cooking chicken at high temperature also avoids dry chicken meat.

his roast chicken recipe is good practice for this recipe in my opinion because of the following reason:

When I made that recipe, I followed the commenters' and my sister's advice, and layered potatoes underneath the roast chicken because otherwise there is quite a bit of smoking.
Why is this important?
The spatchocked turkey also smokes quite a bit when cooking at 450F.
So be prepared for that. I thought it might be butter, but Keller's recipe doesn't call for butter, so it's simply from the poultry.

the smoke is nothing that opening all the windows in my 650 sq. ft apartment didn't fix! But I wonder if you could avoid the smoke by, as many who prepare Keller's chicken do, layering potatoes underneath the bird and throwing those into your gravy or something.

I just want to say that these are what I found to be most key in making your recipe:
Brine overnight
dry with LOTS of paper towels
compound herb butter is a MUST on the breast
prepare for the smoking
and definitely turkey resting is key prior to carving

If anyone else experienced the smoking, or same temperature differential between thigh and breast I would love to hear about it.

everyone loved it!! thank you so much G - you RULE!

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I can't wait to try this one. It looks so moist and yummy. Might have to make it for Christmas as well.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

We had a Thanksgiving pre-game last weekend and used the spatchcock method. I used Alton Brown's brine recipe, brined for about 8 hours. A 15 lb bird took about an hour and a half to cook. Our guests said again and again that it was the juiciest turkey they have ever had. A few weeks ago I spatchcocked a chicken as a test run and it was the best roast chicken I've ever made. The brine-spatchcock method is definitely the way to go.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

This technique sounds so good. A couple years ago, I cooked my turkey breast side down technique, that was a very moist turkey. Another time I tried pouring boiling water on turkey while in the sink, again kept the moisture in and was very moist ,and tender, but ruined the skin, too tough and I was bummed as I am a skin lover. coco ps: I will have to try this

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

Just use a large roasting pan with a flat rack instead of a v-shaped rack.

Better yet you can just place the turkey on large chunks of aromatics/mirepoix (onions, celery & carrots) & herbs (or potatoes maybe) and use them as a rack to keep the bird from sitting in drippings. Add a little stock to keep them from burning at roasting temps. They'll be useless after they've roasted for long, but strain them out & deglaze the pan and you have some delicious strong stock for gravy.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I think spatchcocking a turkey may be illegal in several Southern states. Well, maybe if it was consensual ....

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

Also, just so I can start my Christmas planning, has anyone tried to spatchcock a Goose?
In that case I imagine that the fat dripping would be a REAL issue.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

This looks interesting, I have not thought to do it with a turkey.
My question is a about fat drippings. Generally I try to raise the bird in cooking rack (not sure what it is called, an x shaped thing that the bird sits in the top half, that lifts it above the pan)
So then would all the meat sit in the fat while it cooks?
If so, is there enough juice in the pan to make gravy?
Do you grease the pan first so that it doesn't stick?

All the fat loving people, trust me, I am with you, but my family is not, and on this day I cater to their needs.
Thanks
SF

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I spatchcock turkeys all the time for a couple of reasons: One, because I get an extra piece of meat to add flavor to my roasted turkey stock; and two, the most important reason, the turkey lays flat, so I can use the second rack in the oven for the side dishes that are just as important as the turkey. A salute of my Pilgrim hat to whoever thought up this technique.

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

Congrats to our winner bogusrogus, and thanks to everyone who entered! The winner has been notified and the Contest Winners page has been updated.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

@Squeezebottle: Yeah I was wondering about that. There was a bit of hubbub about the dead lamb butchering, but not about the pretty graphic break down of a turkey? ::sighs::

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

Corn Bread Dressing with Pecans and Bacon sounds perfect for our southern-themed Thanksgiving feast!

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

Sautéed brussels sprouts with bacon, maybe toss in some walnuts.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

I spatchcock chickens all year 'round. But I'd never thought to do the turkey - something about liking the visual of the giant bird in the middle of the table. But the time savings seem curiously worth it now.

From Recipes

How to Spatchcock a Turkey

question: article says this technique shaves a half-hour off of the typical 3 hour cook time for a 10-12 lb bird, but then steps 12-13 imply that total cooking time is only about an hour? confused.

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

I'm still fascinated by the Apple-Brined Smoked turkey!

From Serious Eats

Win a Free Organic D'Artagnan Turkey

smoked oyster and sticky rice in lotus leaf
want!!!!

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