have you ever Brined a turkey?

binny

do something that MATTERS!
Joined
Mar 14, 2001
Messages
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my brother swears by this so I thought Id give it a shot this year.

I put it in the solution in a 10 gallon rubbermaid tote ( new and clean LOL) and its sitting on my patio right now LOL.

Then I will roast as usual.

Have you ever done this?

I would love to hear your experiences!
Thanks!
 
goofy! said:
You will LOVE it. It is the best way to fix turkey!

Wow they even fix turkeys now. And I thought it was just my pets that I need to have fixed.

What will they think of next?
 
We brine our turkey every year. We got the reciepe from Alton Brown, good eats on the food network. They replay it every year. Mostly it is veg stock, water and salt and some spices. Put it in a 10 gallon clean bucket too. I belive you can find it by looking on the foodnetwork website.

This makes the best turkey ever, you can do no wrong when you do it this way. :goodvibes
 

DisneyPhD said:
We brine our turkey every year. We got the reciepe from Alton Brown, good eats on the food network. They replay it every year. Mostly it is veg stock, water and salt and some spices. Put it in a 10 gallon clean bucket too. I belive you can find it by looking on the foodnetwork website.

This makes the best turkey ever, you can do no wrong when you do it this way. :goodvibes

thats the recipe I used too. :)


I saw that show 2 weeks ago and it looked So good!

The funny thing is I have always cooked my turkey with apples and onion stuffed inside and my MIL thought I was crazy! Now I can say " Well its good enough for Alton Brown!" ;) LOL


I never cooked then ahead of time though so we will see. I love the flavour the apples give off. Makes the turkey really yummy :)
 
Ours in sitting in it's brine right now. We also use AB's "Romancing the Bird" episode.

DH is also cooking ours on the grill as long as the snow's not flying tomorrow. We have applewood chips in the smoker box, so it comes out super yummy.

Binny--you're going to LOVE it.

PS--I just scored GBS tix for April here in Boston!!!! :cool1:
 
debster812 said:
PS--I just scored GBS tix for April here in Boston!!!! :cool1:


Oh man I am SO jealous!! Youre going to love the show!!


They arent coming here this year WAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHhh Im going to have to go to Seattle in February ( not my favourite thing to do I can guarantee you!) why couldnt they go somewhere warm in Feb????



Im looking forward to the turkey :)



DO you all leave it outside overnight? ( it will be below freezing here tonight) or do you bring it in and just change out the water?

I notice AB says that it only needs to brine for 6 hours but that just doesnt seem right at all.
 
I just spoke to my mother and she is getting one ready for its long bath right now. We like to use Emeril's Funky Turkey brine.
 
jfulcer said:
Wow they even fix turkeys now. And I thought it was just my pets that I need to have fixed.

What will they think of next?
::yes:: and it is much more difficult (and *gasp* expensive) to fix turkeys, because like other birds, the turkey's organs are inside them, instead of outside, like most mammels. (most because one of the obvious exceptions is the duckbilled platypus. )
 
Bin--ours in in the fridge, in a 5 gal "Homer" bucket from Home Depot. We don't change the water/brine at all.
 
Yes, brining creates my favorite turkey. I think it blows away fried turkey.
 
Yes, and brining makes the turkey delicious! One word of caution...it also tends to make the turkey cook faster. One year, I brined my turkey then cooked it according to directions. When I went to check on it at the appointed time to uncover it and baste, the bird was practically falling apart, gasping for life (well, you know what I mean). DSis and I turned to each other and said, "We need more gravy." Surprisingly, the meat was still moist and good, but it was one ugly looking Thanksgiving turkey.
 
Yep, got turned onto brining turkey by Alton Brown about 6 years ago. I've done it 4 or 5 times and my DH absolutely LOVES it. He normally complains that turkey is dry. I have a brining bucket I got for a buck from the local apple orchard back then, and it never seems to do anything but that brin!

If I didn't brine, I'd be doing upside down turkey, that keeps the juices in the bird.

I'll be doing the brining thing in the next couple of weeks, but it'll be a 7-10 pound breast.

Suzanne
 
:cool1: hey Deb- I just looked at their dates and theyre going to be in Park City, UT the day before my anniversary... guess who just guilted her husband into an anniversary trip??? GBS here is come!!! :) WOHOOOOOOOOOOO :cool1:

I looked up prices and right near them is $50. dh said " You can sit near them, Ill be in the back" :rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl: silly silly man!



Ok back to the turkey, So can I bring this thing in or do I leave it outside in the cold all night? If I bring it in do I need to load it up with ice? HELP!

I dont have a basement so my choices are, back patio ( with a lid of course), garage, or kitchen counter. Its in a 10 gallon bucket and will NOT fit in my fridge :eek:

Thank you!!!
 
I've never heard of brining a turkey. What does that do? Does it change the taste?
 
GOOD GIRL BIN!!!! When are they in UT? We'll have to compare notes.

I would put some more ice (and maybe a light handful of kosher salt) in the bucket, and stash it in the garage. Or, is your bucket sealed? Got a cooler it will fit it? Put the whole deal in the cooler, and pack the ice around it.

Eliz--the brine essentially saturates the turkey with moist, salty water, so it stays SUPER moist and tender when it's cooked. The recipe several of us on this thread uses vegetable stock, whole peppercorns, allspice berries, ginger, and a few other spices. Sooooo YUMMY.
 
Feb 18th :)
My anniversary is the 19th so its perfect! My mom was planning on coming anyway to watch the kids so now we know where were going! LOL




Its too big to fit in any cooler I have so I guess I will just put it in the garage with some extra ice and salt.


Thanks!
 
binny said:
Feb 18th :)
My anniversary is the 19th so its perfect! My mom was planning on coming anyway to watch the kids so now we know where were going! LOL
Thanks!

My parents anniversary is the 19th!!!!

Cool, so you'll fill me in, since my show's not til April.
 
I'm brining a turkey breast too! My first time. Hope it comes out good!
 
Ok, I found the website with the good eats recipe.

Here is the link.....
http://www.foodnetwork.com/food/recipes/recipe/0,1977,FOOD_9936_8389,00.html

Here is the receipe

1 (14 to 16 pound) frozen young turkey
For the brine:
1 cup kosher salt
1/2 cup light brown sugar
1 gallon vegetable stock
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
1/2 tablespoon allspice berries
1/2 tablespoon candied ginger
1 gallon iced water
For the aromatics:
1 red apple, sliced
1/2 onion, sliced
1 cinnamon stick
1 cup water
4 sprigs rosemary
6 leaves sage
Canola oil

Combine all brine ingredients, except ice water, in a stockpot, and bring to a boil. Stir to dissolve solids, then remove from heat, cool to room temperature, and refrigerate until thoroughly chilled.
Early on the day of cooking, (or late the night before) combine the brine and ice water in a clean 5-gallon bucket. Place thawed turkey breast side down in brine, cover, and refrigerate or set in cool area (like a basement) for 6 hours. Turn turkey over once, half way through brining.
A few minutes before roasting, heat oven to 500 degrees. Combine the apple, onion, cinnamon stick, and cup of water in a microwave safe dish and microwave on high for 5 minutes.
Remove bird from brine and rinse inside and out with cold water. Discard brine.
Place bird on roasting rack inside wide, low pan and pat dry with paper towels. Add steeped aromatics to cavity along with rosemary and sage. Tuck back wings and coat whole bird liberally with canola (or other neutral) oil.
Roast on lowest level of the oven at 500 degrees F. for 30 minutes. Remove from oven and cover breast with double layer of aluminum foil, insert probe thermometer into thickest part of the breast and return to oven, reducing temperature to 350 degrees F. Set thermometer alarm (if available) to 161 degrees. A 14 to 16 pound bird should require a total of 2 to 2 1/2 hours of roasting. Let turkey rest, loosely covered for 15 minutes before carving.

We do ours longer then 6 hours, normally 24 or longer. We put it in the basement and just use ice on it. Really good bird.
 


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