Perfect Roast Turkey

Need a gluten free main course? Perfect Roast Turkey could be a spectacular recipe to try. One portion of this dish contains roughly 51g of protein, 17g of fat, and a total of 480 calories. This recipe serves 12 and costs $2.39 per serving. 1911 person found this recipe to be delicious and satisfying. A mixture of butter, ice water, kosher salt, and a handful of other ingredients are all it takes to make this recipe so delicious. From preparation to the plate, this recipe takes around 17 hours. It will be a hit at your Thanksgiving event. It is brought to you by A Family Feast . Overall, this recipe earns an outstanding spoonacular score of 89%. Users who liked this recipe also liked Perfect Roast Turkey, Perfect Roast Turkey, and The Perfect Roast Turkey.

Servings: 12

Preparation duration: 870 minutes

Cooking duration: 150 minutes

 

Ingredients:

2 whole bay leaves

1 tablespoon black peppercorns

1 cup packed brown sugar

3 tablespoons butter, melted

2 large carrots cleaned but not peeled with tops trimmed off, roughly cut

2 stalks of celery with leaves roughly cut

2 quarts chicken stock

1 gallon of ice water, or more as needed to cover turkey during the brining process

1 teaspoon juniper berries

1 cup kosher salt

1 tablespoon kosher salt

1 medium onion, peeled and roughly cut

Peel of 1 large naval orange

1 bunch parsley with stems

1 large or two small fresh rosemary sprigs

6 whole large fresh sage leaves

2 good sized sprigs fresh thyme

1 turkey, 12-14 pounds

2 quarts vegetable stock

1 teaspoon whole allspice berries

3 whole medium garlic cloves, crushed

1 large apple chopped or crushed fine, core and all

Equipment:

pot

cutting board

knife

roasting pan

oven

kitchen thermometer

tongs

aluminum foil

sauce pan

frying pan

Cooking instruction summary:

The night before your dinner, place all brine ingredients listed EXCEPT the ice water into a medium pot. Bring to a boil then simmer on low for two minutes. Cool the brine to at least room temperature. (An easy method is to fill the kitchen sink half way with cold water and set the hot pot into the cold water being careful to not let the water spill over. Stir the pot and the cold water will become warm because the heat from the pot is transferred to the water. Drain the water and repeat a few times and within 10-15 minutes, the pot of brine will be room temperature and no longer hot.)While the brine is cooling remove the neck and gizzards from the turkey and rinse the turkey in cold water. Save the neck for our Perfect Turkey Gravy recipe (see that recipe here), and either discard the gizzards or save them for other recipes if desired. Place the rinsed turkey on a clean cutting board breast side down and with a sharp knife or kitchen shears, remove the back bone (save the back bone for your gravy as well).Removing the back bone will allow the turkey to cook evenly instead of the breast meat over-cooking while the legs and thighs take longer to be done. You can remove the back bone before or after brining it doesnt matter.In a large pot (big enough to hold your turkey submerged with brine) place the turkey, neck and back into the pot and cover with the brine and a gallon of ice water, making sure the turkey is completely submerged. Add more water if needed.Cover and refrigerate the pot with the brining turkey overnight.The following day, about three hours before you want the turkey to be finished, remove the turkey from the brine and discard the brine, saving the neck and back for your gravy (see our Perfect Turkey Gravy recipe here).Preheat oven to 500 degrees and place the oven rack on the lowest section of the oven.Rinse the turkey and pat dry.In a large roasting pan place the celery, carrots, onion, chicken stock and parsley. Then place a V shaped rack with the point of the V facing up (which is the opposite of how you normally use it) over the vegetables and stock.Place the turkey over the rack so that it saddles the rack breast up. Bend the wing tips under the wings and tuck the leg ends down into the rack so the turkey doesnt slide.Brush the turkey with the melted butter and then sprinkle the salt.Place in the pre-heated oven uncovered for 30 minutes to brown.Remove after 30 minutes and lower oven to 325 degrees. Place a probe thermometer into the thickest part of the breast and set the alarm for 160 degrees. (If you do not have a thermometer, a 12-14 pound turkey should take 2 to 2/12 hours to cook depending on your oven). Tent the turkey with foil and place back in the oven.While the turkey is roasting, make a stock for your gravy (follow our recipe here), reserving one quart of that stock for later to heat the carved meat (see step 18 below).When the turkey reaches 160 degrees, remove from oven and transfer turkey to a serving platter saving the drippings and solids in a separate container for gravy. Because the backbone is gone, the turkey will be easy to pick up with long handled tongs.Allow the turkey to rest for at least 15 minutes. While the turkey rests, you can make your gravy (recipe here). Once the resting time has passed, cut and remove the leg portions and thigh portions to a platter. Remove wings to the platter. Carve each whole breast off and add to the platter. (Save and freeze that carcass to make a future turkey stock for another time see our great Turkey Stock recipe here.)You can slice and serve now or hold for later while you prepare the rest of your dinner. To prepare turkey meat to hold for later, carve the meat from the legs and thighs and place in the empty roasting pan from earlier. Carve the breasts into thick slices and add those neatly to the roasting pan. Separate the wingette from the drummette and add those to the roasting pan.When ready to serve, heat the reserved quart of stock in a sauce pan and pour over the cooked sliced turkey in the roasting pan then transfer the hot cooked turkey to your serving platter along with the gravy made earlier.If the gravy is too thick, use a little stock from the sliced turkey pan to thin out.

 

Step by step:


1. The night before your dinner, place all brine ingredients listed EXCEPT the ice water into a medium pot. Bring to a boil then simmer on low for two minutes. Cool the brine to at least room temperature. (An easy method is to fill the kitchen sink half way with cold water and set the hot pot into the cold water being careful to not let the water spill over. Stir the pot and the cold water will become warm because the heat from the pot is transferred to the water.

2. Drain the water and repeat a few times and within 10-15 minutes, the pot of brine will be room temperature and no longer hot.)While the brine is cooling remove the neck and gizzards from the turkey and rinse the turkey in cold water. Save the neck for our Perfect Turkey Gravy recipe (see that recipe here), and either discard the gizzards or save them for other recipes if desired.

3. Place the rinsed turkey on a clean cutting board breast side down and with a sharp knife or kitchen shears, remove the back bone (save the back bone for your gravy as well).Removing the back bone will allow the turkey to cook evenly instead of the breast meat over-cooking while the legs and thighs take longer to be done. You can remove the back bone before or after brining it doesnt matter.In a large pot (big enough to hold your turkey submerged with brine) place the turkey, neck and back into the pot and cover with the brine and a gallon of ice water, making sure the turkey is completely submerged.

4. Add more water if needed.Cover and refrigerate the pot with the brining turkey overnight.The following day, about three hours before you want the turkey to be finished, remove the turkey from the brine and discard the brine, saving the neck and back for your gravy (see our Perfect Turkey Gravy recipe here).Preheat oven to 500 degrees and place the oven rack on the lowest section of the oven.Rinse the turkey and pat dry.In a large roasting pan place the celery, carrots, onion, chicken stock and parsley. Then place a V shaped rack with the point of the V facing up (which is the opposite of how you normally use it) over the vegetables and stock.

5. Place the turkey over the rack so that it saddles the rack breast up. Bend the wing tips under the wings and tuck the leg ends down into the rack so the turkey doesnt slide.

6. Brush the turkey with the melted butter and then sprinkle the salt.

7. Place in the pre-heated oven uncovered for 30 minutes to brown.

8. Remove after 30 minutes and lower oven to 325 degrees.

9. Place a probe thermometer into the thickest part of the breast and set the alarm for 160 degrees. (If you do not have a thermometer, a 12-14 pound turkey should take 2 to 2/12 hours to cook depending on your oven). Tent the turkey with foil and place back in the oven.While the turkey is roasting, make a stock for your gravy (follow our recipe here), reserving one quart of that stock for later to heat the carved meat (see step 18 below).When the turkey reaches 160 degrees, remove from oven and transfer turkey to a serving platter saving the drippings and solids in a separate container for gravy. Because the backbone is gone, the turkey will be easy to pick up with long handled tongs.Allow the turkey to rest for at least 15 minutes. While the turkey rests, you can make your gravy (recipe here). Once the resting time has passed, cut and remove the leg portions and thigh portions to a platter.

10. Remove wings to the platter. Carve each whole breast off and add to the platter. (Save and freeze that carcass to make a future turkey stock for another time see our great Turkey Stock recipe here.)You can slice and serve now or hold for later while you prepare the rest of your dinner. To prepare turkey meat to hold for later, carve the meat from the legs and thighs and place in the empty roasting pan from earlier. Carve the breasts into thick slices and add those neatly to the roasting pan. Separate the wingette from the drummette and add those to the roasting pan.When ready to serve, heat the reserved quart of stock in a sauce pan and pour over the cooked sliced turkey in the roasting pan then transfer the hot cooked turkey to your serving platter along with the gravy made earlier.If the gravy is too thick, use a little stock from the sliced turkey pan to thin out.


Nutrition Information:

Quickview
480k Calories
51g Protein
17g Total Fat
29g Carbs
25% Health Score
Limit These
Calories
480k
24%

Fat
17g
26%

  Saturated Fat
5g
34%

Carbohydrates
29g
10%

  Sugar
22g
25%

Cholesterol
166mg
56%

Sodium
11172mg
486%

Get Enough Of These
Protein
51g
102%

Vitamin B3
19mg
96%

Vitamin K
83µg
79%

Vitamin B6
1mg
72%

Selenium
49µg
71%

Vitamin A
3003IU
60%

Phosphorus
451mg
45%

Vitamin B12
2µg
44%

Vitamin B2
0.55mg
33%

Zinc
4mg
28%

Potassium
791mg
23%

Copper
0.41mg
21%

Vitamin B5
1mg
19%

Magnesium
73mg
18%

Iron
2mg
16%

Vitamin C
10mg
12%

Manganese
0.24mg
12%

Vitamin B1
0.18mg
12%

Folate
37µg
9%

Calcium
85mg
9%

Fiber
1g
5%

Vitamin D
0.7µg
5%

Vitamin E
0.47mg
3%

covered percent of daily need
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How to Handle the IRS By Dave Barry It is time once again for our annual feature "Tax Advice for Humans," the column that explains our complex federal tax laws to you in simple, everyday terms that have virtually nothing to do with reality. This is the only tax-advice column that has the courage to give you the following written guarantee in writing: "If, as a result of following the advice in this column, you are for any reason whatsoever confined to a federal prison, we will personally come and live in your house, until your refrigerator is out of beer." So let's get started! Most likely the foremost question in your mind, as you prepare to fill out your federal tax forms, is: "Can I cheat?" A lot of taxpayers are thinking that this is a good year to take advantage of the Internal Revenue Service, because of the way it got hammered in those congressional hearings last September. Remember? One by one, taxpayers went before the Senate Finance Committee and told alarming stories like this: "I got a letter from the IRS computer stating that I owed taxes back to the year 427 B.C., which seemed like a mistake, plus the letter addressed me as `The Dionne Quintuplets,' so I went down to the IRS office to straighten things out, and the next thing I knew I was being dangled from a helicopter by one leg." When the nation heard these stories, everybody was outraged. The IRS formally apologized to the taxpayers and ordered the dismantling of the agency's primary guillotine. So a lot of people are thinking that this year, while the IRS is under fire, is a good time to "play fast and loose" with their tax returns, and maybe even get revenge for the years of abuse by yanking the IRS' chain a little bit. One leading tax-preparation firm, which I will not identify here except by its initials, "H" and "R," has gone so far as to write taunting remarks in the margins of its clients' tax returns, such as: -- "Hey Audit Breath! If you don't believe I spent a 100 percent deductible total of $224,123 on Pez, perhaps you would like me to complain to the Senate Finance Committee?" -- "No I shall NOT enclose Form 10448275-J! I shall use Form 10448275-J for INTIMATE HYGIENE PURPOSES HAHAHAHA!" This kind of thing is of course a lot of fun, but we are not recommending it. What many people do not realize is that, after the IRS finished publicly apologizing to the taxpayers who testified against it last September, it quietly tracked them down and relieved them of all of their worldly possessions including corneas. So we are not recommending that you cheat. You should heed the words of IRS commissioner Charles Rossotti, who, in this year's Letter to Taxpayers, states: "Every citizen owes it to the nation to pay his or her fair share of taxes, unless of course he or she has made a whopping cash contribution to a key congressperson or President Bill `Mr. Coffee' Clinton or Vice President Al `I Honestly Thought That They Were Just A Bunch Of Very Wealthy Buddhist Nuns!' Gore." Here are some questions that you are likely to ask in preparing your tax returns this year: Q: Did the government change the tax laws again? A: Ha ha! That is the stupidest question we have ever heard! Of COURSE the government changed the tax laws! The government had no choice! The government found out that, despite the fact that the U.S. Tax Code is larger than the entire state of Connecticut, there was still one U.S. taxpayer, Norbridge K. Trongle Jr., who was able to correctly prepare his own tax return. The government considered handling this threat to the national security by sending a B-2 "Stealth" bomber to destroy Mr. Trongle's house and financial records, but the Air Force vetoed this plan because of the risk that the $2 billion plane would be brought down by Mr. Trongle's lawn sprinkler. So the House and Senate Joint Tax Mutation Committee swung into action and made a number of significant changes to the Tax Code, which you need to know about. Q: What, specifically, are these changes? A: Nobody knows. Q: How many taxpayers w.

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