• en_US
  • es_MX
  • Community Resources
  • About Us
  • Archives
Monday, May 19, 2025
No Result
View All Result

  • La Jolla Village News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Beach Bay Press
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Peninsula Beacon
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Downtown News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Uptown News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • La Mesa Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Mission Times Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • College Times Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Mission Valley News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Arts Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Community Resources
    • Report News
  • Publications
    • La Jolla Village News
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Beach Bay Press
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Peninsula Beacon
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Downtown News
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Uptown News
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • La Mesa Courier
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Mission Times Courier
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • College Times Courier
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Mission Valley News
      • Top Stories
      • News
      • Features
      • Opinion
      • Education
      • Art & Entertainment
      • Sports
      • Business Directory
      • Expert Advice
      • Real Estate
    • Find Your Newspaper
    • Archives
  • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Education
    • Local Sports
    • Report News
  • Event Calendar
  • Business Directory
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Digital Editions/Archives
SDNews.com
Home News

Happy Thanksgiving: How to Cook the Perfect Turkey

Tech by Tech
November 16, 2009
in News, Uptown News
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Happy Thanksgiving: How to Cook the Perfect Turkey
0
SHARES
73
VIEWS
Happy Thanksgiving: How to Cook the Perfect Turkey

Uptown Food and Wine: The Word on the Bird

By Ron James

“Thanksgiving, man. Not a good day to be my pants.” Kevin James

bird With the exception of turkeys, almost everyone enjoys Thanksgiving. We get together, enjoy good food and wine and give thanks for the bounty of the past year. For many of us this year, bounty may be an overstatement, but we can still be thankful for family, friends and surviving in general.

Thanksgiving is also a time when countless men and women take on the awesome responsibility of cooking a turkey. Many are white-knuckled novices who scour the Internet, call Mom or tweet their BFFs in search of the vital cooking secrets, in order to avoid being humiliated and emotionally scarred for life. Their nightmare and a common Thanksgiving Day reality is an overcooked, tough, bone-dry turkey, or a perfectly-browned but dangerously raw bird that has a good chance of poisoning everyone at the table.

Even for us old pros, cooking a turkey can be intimidating. You would think that after a few years, the task would become routine. Not. The problem is that every year, it seems, there’s a new way to cook the damned thing.

In just the last decade or so there have been a dozen popular ways to cook turkeys. To name a few — slow cooking, speed cooking, steam roasting, rotisserie, cooking in a paper bag, smoking, grilling, deep frying, and recently brining. I’ve used most of these techniques (with the exception of deep frying — too dangerous for me, especially after a few glasses of wine) and they’ve all worked just fine to one degree or another. There was one exception: When I brined the turkey, it tasted terrific, but the gravy produced from the drippings in the pan and the stuffing were intolerably salty.

The “Judy Bird” Technique

So, in the spirit of Thanksgiving, here’s the latest and I believe the greatest way to cook your holiday bird and wow your guests. I got the recipe from a Los Angeles Times food feature by Russ Parsons. He calls it the “Judy Bird,” named after super San Francisco chef Judy Rodgers. Folks from around the world flock to Rodgers’ Zuni Café for her famous roast chicken. One of the key elements to her delicious chickens is salting them thoroughly a day in advance. In the case of our turkey, it’s salted thoroughly three days in advance.

To see if this technique would work, Parsons had the LA Times test kitchen cook birds using the Judy version, and three techniques they had successfully used in the past. The first was cooked in an old-fashioned roaster, the second cooked at high heat and the third cooked after being brined or soaked in a salt water bath for days.

Parsons was blown away with the results. “I wish everyone who had ever told me that ‘a turkey is a turkey’ could have been there for the judging,” he wrote. “These were remarkably different birds, and the clear winner was the dry-salted Judy Bird.”

So I and about a zillion other readers tried the dry-salted technique and loved the results. The meat was firm, tender, juicy and delicious, and although there was a little residual salt in the stuffing and gravy, it wasn’t over the top as it was with brining. Just use a little less salt in your stuffing if you’re going to stuff the bird, and check the gravy before adding any salt, and you’ll be fine.

Here’s how the dry-salt technique works. The salt draws water in the meat to the surface but after a time it moves back into the meat. In effect, the bird is marinating in its own juices. The turkey will not be overly salty if you follow the recipe instructions on the amount of salt used.

Selecting the Bird

The type of turkey for this recipe depends upon your preferences and pocketbook. If you’re into the “slow food” movement or just want to experience a noticeably richer taste than supermarket commercial brands, you may want to splurge on a heritage, heirloom or pasture-raised organic turkey. Most Uptown markets will have fresh turkeys available and pre-ordering is suggested.

Just one thought before you go out and order a heritage or other special turkey. In many taste tests, the store-bought commercial Butterball-type turkey bested the more expensive kind. This is simply because most of us were raised with that flavor and texture profile, and anything different is a bit off-putting. So if your wallet is fat and you want to be somewhat adventurous, give the pricier birds a try. If times are tough and you want Mom’s turkey, go for the commercial version on sale everywhere.

And a word about fresh turkeys. Many years ago, I ordered my first fresh turkey from a mom-and-pop market in Ocean Beach. The day before Thanksgiving when I picked up the turkey, I discovered to my chagrin that the bird was frozen as hard as permafrosted bowling ball. I was incensed with this turkey of a turkey and demanded my money back.

The store owner protested, assuring me that all of his “fresh” turkeys are frozen. “Nonsense,” I said. Seeing that I wasn’t going to budge, the agitated proprietor gave me my money back and muttered something about all of my teeth falling out except for the one with the toothache.

The point of all of this is that the OB market guy was right. And I naively thought that a fresh turkey would be fresh-plucked and pan ready. It seems that fresh doesn’t mean dink when it comes to the temperature of the bird when you get it from the market. It only means that it was not chilled below 26 degrees F. If the turkey is labeled hard-chilled, refrigerated, deep-chilled or not previously frozen it means that it has been chilled from zero degrees to 25 degrees. And if it says frozen then it has been maintained below zero degrees.

Roasted Salt Turkey (The Judy Bird)

Adapted from Russ Parsons of the LA Times and inspired by Judy Rodgers of San Francisco’s Zuni Café

SALTING AND COOKING THE BIRD

All you need for this recipe is a fresh or properly defrosted turkey, 11-15 pounds, and kosher salt. You can use your favorite herb and spice seasoning and butter if you wish. Other versions of this recipe can be found on the Internet with minor variations. Cooking time will vary with the oven, size of the bird and whether it’s stuffed. It should take between 2½ hours and 3 hours, so keep an eye on the thermometer toward the end.

1. Wash the turkey thoroughly inside and out and pat dry with paper towels.

2. Pour one tablespoon of kosher salt for every 5 pounds of turkey into a cup or bowl; for example 2 tablespoons for a 10-pound bird.

3. Sprinkle the salt lightly in the cavity of the turkey and turn it on its back and salt (about a teaspoon) the rest with most of the salt concentrated on the thickest part of the breast. Turn it over and do the same.

4. Place the turkey in a sealable plastic bag and squeeze the air out of the bag as much as possible. Refrigerate for three days — breast side up for two days, and then turn it over breast side down for one day.

5. Take the turkey out of the bag. The turkey will be moist and wet with no sign of salt crystals. Place it on a plate breast side up and refrigerate uncovered for eight hours or more.

6. Take the bird out of the refrigerator and leave at room temperature for about one hour. Preheat the oven to 425 degrees.

7. Put the turkey breast side down on a roasting rack in a roasting pan and place in the oven for 30 minutes. Then remove it from the oven and, using oven mitts or kitchen towels, turn the turkey so that it’s breast side up.

8. Return to the oven and turn the temperature down to 325 degrees. Insert a thermometer into the thigh without touching the bone. When it reads 165 degrees the bird is done.

9. Remove the turkey and place it on a warm platter. Tent the bird with foil and let it rest for at least 30 minutes (VERY IMPORTANT) before carving.

ENJOY!

Previous Post

Netters hit courts for CIF action; Country Day wins Coastal title

Next Post

Scott Marks Movie Review: “Dead Snow”

Tech

Tech

RelatedPosts

img 8046
Downtown News - Top Stories

Drop-in center for sex trafficked minors to open Downtown

by Drew Sitton
May 18, 2025
stevesidell.photography
Beach & Bay Press - Sports

Mission Bay girls lax loses nail-biter in CIF semifinals

by Hector Trujillo
May 17, 2025
mission bay high sports logo
Beach & Bay Press - News

Mission Bay boys lacrosse season ends in playoffs

by Hector Trujillo
May 17, 2025
del mar6
SDNews - Features

Del Mar Thoroughbred Club to start summer racing season July 18

by SDNEWS staff
May 17, 2025
1 sandag bike anywhere day (5)
Beach & Bay Press - Top Stories

WEEKLY BRIEFING – News and events in and around San Diego

by SDNEWS staff
May 16, 2025
2 maritime museum excurion 2
Peninsula Beacon - Features

Peninsula Shepherd Center updates name and outreach efforts to seniors

by Dave Schwab
May 16, 2025
7b41 crawford cover
College Times Courier - News

Third CalKIDS Money Festival set for Saturday at Crawford High

by SDNEWS staff
May 16, 2025
recording studio lunchtime performance may 28, 2024 nelo, rose ali, narmin, harleigh sickles
La Mesa Courier - Top Stories

Making education and music a big hit at Grossmont High School

by Connie & Lynn Baer
May 16, 2025
Next Post
Happy Thanksgiving: How to Cook the Perfect Turkey

Scott Marks Movie Review: "Dead Snow"

Discussion about this post

  • SD News
  • Event Calendar
  • Business Directory
  • Advertise
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community Resources
  • Staff Writers
  • Subscriptions/Support
  • Publications
  • La Jolla Village News
  • Beach Bay Press
  • Peninsula Beacon
  • Downtown News
  • Uptown News
  • La Mesa Courier
  • Mission Times Courier
  • College Times Courier
  • Mission Valley News
  • Find Your Newspaper
  • Archives
  • News
  • Features
  • Opinion
  • Arts Entertainment
  • Education
  • Local Sports
  • Report News

CONNECT + SHARE

© Copyright 2024 SDNews.com Privacy Policy

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • en_US
  • es_MX
  • SDNews.com
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
  • La Jolla Village News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Beach Bay Press
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Peninsula Beacon
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Downtown News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Uptown News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • La Mesa Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Mission Times Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • College Times Courier
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Mission Valley News
    • Top Stories
    • News
    • Features
    • Opinion
    • Education
    • Art & Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Business Directory
    • Expert Advice
    • Real Estate
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Report News
  • Find Your Newspaper
  • Digital Editions/Archives
  • Community Resources
  • RSS Feeds

© Copyright 2024 SDNews.com Privacy Policy