What is the best way to cook a turkey and why is it smoking?

Best way to cook a turkey?


  • Total voters
    20

Kevin B.

Not often wrong. Never quite right.
Moderator
Location
Vehicular limbo
I've done the deep fry thing a couple times, not bad but it hasn't ever seemed worth the hassle. I normally just roast the bird and have never been unhappy with that, but now I have a smoker (ho ho ho) and a new favorite turkey. No glamor shots, but I brined this for four days and then smoked it for three hours and I really think this was the best turkey I've ever had. I think next time I'll turn the heat down a little to start and see if I can get it a little smokier, but this was awesome.

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Stephen

Who Dares Wins
Moderator
False, the best way to cook a turkey is to make a ham. Or brisket.
Here, here!

I'm not a huge turkey fan, but I'll eat it once a year. We spatchcock it, rub it with salts and spices, then let it sit overnight in the fridge. Then we roast it over vegetables for 90 minutes. As far as turkey goes, it's pretty good.
 

mbryson

.......a few dollars more
Supporting Member
I just got my turkey completely going. Cutting it close this year. We'll try out AC adapter in the Navigator for the trip to Smithfield. It hadn't defrosted after 10 days in the fridge (it's 37* but maybe not?). I had to precook it at 300* for about 1 hour so I could work with it. We'll see how it goes? I think it might be betterer than normal?

3 cubes of butter
1/2 cup of fresh sage, rosemary, thyme chopped like a horror movie
tablespoon(ish) of chopped garlic
1/2 cup of horror movie chopped onion
2 pkgs of onion soup
1 can of cream of mushroom soup

The boiling butter/seasoning mixture should defrost things pretty quickly (I hope?) and start the cooking going. Bag it and cook it until it hits 170* (per Butterball---seems like that'll be dry? I usually only go to 155*)

I feel like such the molly Mormon homemaker sometimes
 

N-Smooth

Smooth Gang Founding Member
Location
UT
Not a huge fan of the dry bird but my BIL does his in the sous vide and it’s better than any turkey I’ve ever had.

This year I’m contributing the 2 B’s: Bread (made by me) and Baja. It’s an important role.
 

Kevin B.

Not often wrong. Never quite right.
Moderator
Location
Vehicular limbo
I just got my turkey completely going. Cutting it close this year. We'll try out AC adapter in the Navigator for the trip to Smithfield. It hadn't defrosted after 10 days in the fridge (it's 37* but maybe not?). I had to precook it at 300* for about 1 hour so I could work with it. We'll see how it goes? I think it might be betterer than normal?

3 cubes of butter
1/2 cup of fresh sage, rosemary, thyme chopped like a horror movie
tablespoon(ish) of chopped garlic
1/2 cup of horror movie chopped onion
2 pkgs of onion soup
1 can of cream of mushroom soup

The boiling butter/seasoning mixture should defrost things pretty quickly (I hope?) and start the cooking going. Bag it and cook it until it hits 170* (per Butterball---seems like that'll be dry? I usually only go to 155*)

I feel like such the molly Mormon homemaker sometimes
Bag it? 170*? Cream of mushroom soup???

I'm telling Gordon Ramsey.
 

moab_cj5

Well-Known Member
Supporting Member
What ever is best, it wasn’t the way my BIL cooked it today. It was the least amount of food any of us have eaten for turkey day. We are now waiting at the dennys next to our hotel in Provo for food. I’m starving. 😡
I wish I would have seen this sooner. I have tons of Turkey left over and was in Provo. I would have glad given y'all some.
 
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