ThanxGivin' Menu........

batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
edited November 2011 in Strut Central
Weather permitting id really like to smoke my bird tomorrow morning.
Ill give it a spiced up cider wash tonight and hopefully drag the grill to the courtyard real early before my moms arrives.
I saw a cool recipe in a magazine where u slather the bird with duck fat the night before. I thought about it and did ask in some supermarket downtown but didnt really hunt down a tub of that shit. I might layer some bacon across the breasts.

Broing sides:
Regular ass green beans - simple garlic.
Cranberry sauce from the can - cause my mother likes that 50's shit.
Pureed roasted Yams - cream and maple syrup in the mix.
Brown rice maybe for starch. I dont wanna do mashed potatoes since i have yams.
For the first time i might try Cornbread stuffing outside of the bird cavity - an old lady told me she cops the Willams and Sonoma Cordbread mix which she finds closer to her Southern taste compared to the sweet Jiffy stuff.
I've already made a batch of Roasted Turkey Stock which i will use as a base for the gravy.
Pumpkin pie and some ice cream.
Gotta cop some Pino on my way home after work.
Buscuits.

It sucks having to work today cause i would have spent all day and night prepping for tmmws dinner..

Whatchall doin?

  Comments


  • i use a ton of herbs de provence mixed with black pepper and butter and stuff it between the skin and the breast.

  • We have a pretty good menu lined up..
    My wife roasted a small turkey last night to make turkey stock for the stuffing and gravy so we won't have to use chicken stock. We are doing a classic oyster dressing with bacon and pearl onions. Everything is going to be from scratch. there will be the ubiquitous cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes and rolls. In addition there will be a spinach/gruyere souflet and creamed squash. Also Brussels sprouts and greens. Pumpkin pie and a chocolate/caramel tart.

    The wine will be Noblio Sauvignon blanc.

    I'm looking forward to it.

  • Wet brine that turkey before you smoke it Batmon.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,789 Posts
    Solid Steel Radio Show 18/11/2011 Part 3 + 4 - Ruckus Roboticus by Ninja Tune

    Bob Marley _ Thank You Lord _ HIP-O
    Kashmere Stage Band _ Thank You _ Now-Again
    Sly And The Family Stone _ Thankful N' Thoughtful _ Epic
    Donovan Carless _ Be Thankful _ VP Records
    Spanky Wilson And The Quantic Soul Orchestra _ I'm Thankful (Pt. 1) _ Tru Thoughts
    Otis Redding _ I Wanna Thank You _ Stax
    Earth Wind & Fire _ Gratitude _ Columbia
    Afrika Bambaataa _ Thank You _ Celluloid
    Melvin Sparks _ Thank You (Pt. 1) _ Prestige
    Maceo And All The King's Men _ Thank You _ House Of The Fox
    Biz Markie _ Something For The Radio _ Cold Chillin'
    Donald Byrd _ Thank You For Funking Up My Life _ Elektra
    William DeVaughn _ Be Thankful For What You've Got _ WMOT Records
    Mighty Voices Of Wonder _ I Thank You Lord _ Numero Group
    Sam And Dave _ I Thank You _ Atlantic
    Fred Wesley & The J.B.'s _ Interlude _ People Records
    The J.B.'s _ Thank You For Lettin' Me Be Myself And You Be Yours _ People Records
    Gus Poole _ Hallelujah, Alright, Amen _ Novasonic

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    Garcia_Vega said:
    Wet brine that turkey before you smoke it Batmon.

    Ok.

    Turkey does dries out like a mutha.

    But doesnt brining turn the meat all rubbery?

  • Not in my experience. I've also found that wet brining is better than dry brining.

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    Garcia_Vega said:
    Not in my experience. I've also found that wet brining is better than dry brining.

    No doubt. I guess ill throw in some cider in the brine.

  • I started my brine late last night. Some salt, brown sugar, garlic clove, rosemary, pepper corns, and turkey stock
    Gonna take out the turkey and let it dry in the fridge tomorrow, then rub down with some herb butter (sage, rosemary, thyme, oregano)
    dice up an apple, some celery and carrots, stuff inside the bird, then roast

    Sides: roasted brussel sprouts with bacon and walnuts, simple green beans, stuffing, mashed potatoes, and dinner rolls.

  • batmon said:
    Garcia_Vega said:
    Not in my experience. I've also found that wet brining is better than dry brining.

    No doubt. I guess ill throw in some cider in the brine.

    I've done a cider brine the past few years -- cider, salt, herbs (bay leaves, thyme), peppercorns, lemons, and whatever else sounds good...

    I'm smoking it this year -- can't wait

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    meistromoco said:
    batmon said:
    Garcia_Vega said:
    Not in my experience. I've also found that wet brining is better than dry brining.

    No doubt. I guess ill throw in some cider in the brine.

    I've done a cider brine the past few years -- cider, salt, herbs (bay leaves, thyme), peppercorns, lemons, and whatever else sounds good...

    all cider or a warm water and cider blend

  • batmon said:
    meistromoco said:
    batmon said:
    Garcia_Vega said:
    Not in my experience. I've also found that wet brining is better than dry brining.

    No doubt. I guess ill throw in some cider in the brine.

    I've done a cider brine the past few years -- cider, salt, herbs (bay leaves, thyme), peppercorns, lemons, and whatever else sounds good...

    all cider or a warm water and cider blend

    I've used this recipe as a guide -- http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Cider-Brined-and-Glazed-Turkey-233148

    I add stuff (pepper corns, more herbs, lemons, etc)

    I've also found that for a large bird (20 pounds), it needs more than 15 hours of brining time. I'm doing 2 small birds this year so it should take the brine better and obviously take less time on the smoker...

  • eliseelise 3,252 Posts
    This year, a friend and I are hosting a dinner party for 12 of our friends that are not flying home for the holiday.

    We decided to keep it traditional as much as possible, but threw in some fun homemade desserts and homemade baked breads (from yours truly). Friends are bring appetizers and drinks. We were able to budget it at $10 a person. *pat on the back*

    Turkey (a happy one that wandered freely, supposedly.):herbs, butter, apples, onions, simple, easy.
    Green beans and brussel sprouts with bacon and hazelnuts.
    Stuffing: mushrooms and veggies.
    Cranberry sauce with orange zest.
    Bourbon gravy (you'll soon see a theme here).

    Swedish rye bread with fennel seeds.
    Dinner rolls with sage butter.

    Caramel pumpkin pie.
    Bourbon pecan pie.
    Salted almond ice cream.
    Maple bourbon-caramel cookie ice cream.


    Batmon, I'm interested to hear the result of your turkey this year. Sounds good!

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    elise said:
    Batmon, I'm interested to hear the result of your turkey this year!

    :eyeball: :eyeball:

    :oh_my:

  • eliseelise 3,252 Posts
    batmon said:
    elise said:
    Batmon, I'm interested to hear the result of your turkey this year!

    :eyeball: :eyeball:

    :oh_my:


    Oy vaaaaaaay.

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    elise said:
    batmon said:
    elise said:
    Batmon, I'm interested to hear the result of your turkey this year!
    :eyeball: :eyeball: :oh_my:
    Oy vaaaaaaay.


  • Elise, are you cooking your sprouts with the greenbeans? like a mix or did you mean separate dishes?

  • eliseelise 3,252 Posts
    Grandfather said:
    Elise, are you cooking your sprouts with the greenbeans? like a mix or did you mean separate dishes?

    Hey, Gr*ndfather!

    We are preparing them together instead of separate dishes. Different cooking times for each, so you gotta add the blanched beans after the sprouts have cooked.

  • eliseelise 3,252 Posts
    batmon said:
    elise said:
    batmon said:
    elise said:
    Batmon, I'm interested to hear the result of your turkey this year!
    :eyeball: :eyeball: :oh_my:
    Oy vaaaaaaay.



  • RAJRAJ tenacious local 7,782 Posts
    About to DESTROY this Perkins Peanut Butter Silk Pie tmw.


  • discos_almadiscos_alma discos_alma 2,164 Posts
    Keg of Linden St IPA
    Bloody Mary station in full effect
    4 casseroles (green bean onion, mushroom cornbread stuffing, sweet potato pecan, garlic mashed potato)
    Brined & Baked Turkey
    Honey baked Ham (purchased at Target, bitches)
    Relish / Cheese trays w/ crackers, etc
    Sweet Potato Biscuits
    Apple crisp / Bourbon Pecan / Pumpkin Pies

  • DJ_EnkiDJ_Enki 6,473 Posts
    musica said:
    Honey baked Ham

    These things freakin' rule.

  • Turkey - stuffed and baked
    Garlic Mash Potato's
    Giblet Gravy
    Turnips
    Green Beans w/oil/garlic/feta
    Baked Carets with butter
    Broccoli casserole
    6 kinds of olives
    Homemade rolls

    Traditional night before Thanksgiving meal:
    Homemade pulled Pork BBQ
    Fried Catfish
    Crystal Hot Sauce
    Coleslaw
    Assorted chips
    BEER

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    I have smoked many a turkey and they are always excellent.
    I always brine them. Even if I am not smoking it. Brining is a must.

    If I used cider I would use enough to replace the sugar in the brine. So all or most or at least half cider.

    Last year the paper was full of stories about brining making the meat spongy. I have never had that experience.

    This year I am just bringing a roasted beet salad.
    Spinach
    Beets 2 different colors
    celery
    pecans
    feta
    onions
    garlic
    oil & vinegar

  • deep frying the bird this year (smoked it up last year). we brined it too, the skin gets rubbery, but i find that with anything i smoke that has skin on it...
    mashed spuds
    kale stuffing
    homemade mushroom soup
    bread
    cranberries - 1 can of jellied, 1 can of whole
    cream corn
    candied, coconut yams
    pies - pecan, pumpkin
    mulled wine
    eggnog

    roasted beet salad sounds delicious.

  • batmonbatmon 27,574 Posts
    what wood should i use to smoke with? im gettin up mad early tmmw to do this.

  • LaserWolfLaserWolf Portland Oregon 11,517 Posts
    I don't have a strong opinion on a turkey wood.
    If you are doing the cider brine I would go with apple or other fruit wood.

    Maple has been my go to wood lately, but my neighbor cut down a cherry tree last year and it is curing in my shed now, so I will become a cherry guy next year.

  • dollar_bindollar_bin I heartily endorse this product and/or event 2,326 Posts
    Nothing fancy: dry roasted bird, mashed potatoes, stuffing, gravy, home-made cranberry sauce, veggie, salad, rolls. Turkey dinner with all the trimmings is my absolute favorite meal, so I don't fuck with it.

    Stuffing is fairly standard, although our family recipe features lots of fresh rosemary and marjoram and browned ground pork. Pour a glass of wine over the bird about half way through the cooking, it makes the gravy awesome.

    My wife is Southern, so we'll have three pies for five adults and four children:
    Pecan Pie, Apple Pie, Pumpkin Chiffon Pie


  • My immediate family dipped to Rome to visit my sister who's studying abroad for the semester. I'll be working my normal bar shift. Staff meal includes, but is not limited too:

    COURSE 1: Butternut Squash Soup
    and
    Roasted Crimson Beet Salad

    COURSE 2: Roasted Turkey, cornbread & sausage stuffing, whipped yukon gold potatoes, gravy,
    glazed yams, haricot verts, cranberry-orange relish

    COURSE 3 Pumpkin Pie with fresh whip cream
    and
    Orange Cream-Chocolate Tart ganache, pistachio ice cream

    COURSE 4
    Booze

    That's the chef's write up anyway. Dude is not touching mom's cooking, but it'll have to do this year.
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