Injecting A Turkey

Saphire

DIS Veteran
Joined
Feb 28, 2000
Messages
4,035
I am always experimenting with ways to cook the Thanksgiving turkey. Last year I cooked it upside down, but I didn't think it made a difference. Some day I want to try a deep fried turkey and a brined turkey.
This year I have decided to inject it. It makes sense that by injecting liquids, it will come out moister. But there are so many recipes for the liquid. Has anyone ever done this? Any tips or recipes for what to inject? So far, a butter and chicken broth base sounds good. Thanks!
 
Have not injected one but wanted to say try the BRINE one this year! It'll make you never want to go another way. At least ours did. It's difficult to handle if you have a big bird- but 2 people can easily handle it. It was the juiciest turkey we've ever had. Doing it again this year as per requests.
 
This Louisiana girl fries up a turkey every year for Thanksgiving. We like to inject it the night before and let it sit. If you do this, remember you want to pucture the bird as few times as possible to help keep the moisture in. So, load up the injector, stick the bird, inject a little, pull the needle out maybe half way, change directions, and go back in and inject some more seasoning. That way you can get a lot of flavor in there w/o too many punctures. I hope that made sense.

BTW, our favorite marinade is the Creole Butter. Yum!!!!
 

MiniGirl, thanks for the instruction on how to inject. Letting it sit overnight makes sense.
Brining looks a little complicated and messy, and I think I will save it for a time in the future when I won't be expecting a house full of guests. There are just too many other things to do.
I think I am going to get a turkey breast this weekend and test it to see how it comes out. Any recipes from those who have tried this method?
 
I use Cajun Injector brand in my turkeys. I think I've tried the Creole Butter and Creole Garlic flavors, but there are a bunch to choose from! Here is the link to Cajun Injector:

http://www.cajuninjector.com/

I also think that QVC may carry it. Deep fried turkeys are great, too! I have to say I've never heard of a brined turkey. :)
 
I saw this recipe in my Food Network Magazine and thought of you. It looks delicious and uses a butter sage injection- mmmm.
here's the recipe if you want to try it.


Ingredients
1 20-pound turkey
Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper
2 heads garlic
1 small onion, cut into 6 wedges
2 cooking apples, quartered
1 large bunch fresh sage
1 small bulb fennel, cut into 6 wedges
1 small carrot, cut into 3-inch pieces
4 sticks unsalted butter
8 cups low-sodium chicken or turkey broth
4 bay leaves
1/4 cup instant flour (such as Wondra)
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
Directions
Bring the turkey to room temperature 1 hour before roasting. Place a rack in the lowest position of the oven and remove the other racks; preheat to 350. Remove the neck and giblets from the turkey; discard the liver and reserve the neck and the rest of the giblets. Dry the turkey inside and out with paper towels and season the cavity with salt and pepper. Halve 1 head garlic crosswise and stuff into the cavity along with 3 onion wedges, the apples and 1/2 bunch sage.

Place the remaining 3 onion wedges, the fennel and carrot in the center of a large roasting pan with 1 cup water. Set a rack above the vegetables and place the turkey breast-side up on the rack. Season all over with salt and pepper. Chop 3 tablespoons sage, then melt 3 sticks butter with the sage and salt and pepper to taste in a saucepan over medium heat. Fill a meat syringe with the sage butter and inject it into the breasts, legs and thighs; continue until you have used about half of the sage butter. Brush the bird with the rest of the butter and tie the legs together with twine.

Roast the turkey, uncovered, about 1 hour 30 minutes. Rotate the pan and continue roasting until a thermometer inserted into the thigh registers 165, 1 hour 30 minutes to 1 hour 45 minutes. Turn off the oven but leave the turkey inside until the thermometer registers 170, 15 to 20 more minutes.

While the turkey roasts, make the gravy: Melt the remaining 1 stick butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Add the reserved neck and giblets, season with salt and pepper and cook, stirring occasionally, until brown, about 10 minutes. Peel and smash the remaining head of garlic, add it to the pan and cook until golden, about 2 minutes. Add the broth and bay leaves, cover and simmer over medium-low heat, about 2 hours. Discard the bay leaves, neck and giblets.

Transfer the turkey to a cutting board and let rest 20 to 30 minutes before carving. Transfer the vegetables to a blender. Pour the drippings into a liquid measuring cup and skim off the fat. Add 1 cup drippings and the flour to the blender and puree until smooth. Whisk the remaining drippings and pureed vegetables into the broth mixture. Bring to a boil, then simmer until the gravy is smooth, about 10 minutes. Stir in the balsamic vinegar; season with salt and pepper.

Transfer the turkey to a platter and garnish with any remaining sage. Carve the turkey and serve with the gravy.

Photograph by Steve Giralt
 
I 2nd the brine suggestion. Here's a link to the world famous Food Network's Alton Brown turkey receipe. They also have that episode on line (titled "romancing the bird") if you want to see how it's done.

http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/good-eats-roast-turkey-recipe/index.html

That's the exact recipe I was just going to suggest!

....
Brining looks a little complicated and messy, and I think I will save it for a time in the future when I won't be expecting a house full of guests. There are just too many other things to do....

Honey, don't let it seem like its hard. Let me tell you how I do it (following Alton Brown's brine recipe).

I make the brine on Tuesday and let it cool down in the fridge.

On Wednesday, I clean my turkey (pull out the goodie bag and such) and put it in a Ziploc Big Bag that is inside the roasting pan (DON'T use a disposable pan - those things suck). Put the turkey in BREAST SIDE DOWN and pour the brine over the top (well, bottom). Smoosh the bag so that most of the air is out of the bag. Tuck the bag around the turkey so that you get as much turkey-to-brine contact as possible (think of what you do when you marinate something in a smaller ziploc). Put the whole shebang back into the fridge. BEFORE YOU GO TO BED, flip the bird over. I have learned how to finagle the bird around without opening the bag, but if you have to open the bag, just close it like you did the first time. Now, GO TO BED :goodvibes

On Thursday, take the turkey out of the bag and throw the bag and the brine away (no mess, no fuss). Rinse the bird and proceed to cook your turkey however you like.. Personally, I rub it with butter, garlic and a Ms Dash type seasoning and stuff the cavity with lemons and garlic.

I am NO cook, but trust me on this, BRINE THE BIRD. You will never go back! :love:
 
Let us not forget the wonders of the Turkey Cannon. Ever heard of it?

It can be used in your oven or on any BBQ. It cooks the bird in half the time and they are VERY moist. They cook from the inside as well as the outside that's why they cooks so fast.

The brine I use. In a large pot I line with a garbage bag I place the turkey in and cover with 8-10 cups of apple juice. 1 1/2 cups Jack Daniel's, 1 cup sea salt and water to cover bird. Let sit 24 hours and cook. A 15 pound turkey will be done in about 90 minutes.

The cannon has a tube that goes inside the bird that I fill with another cup of apple juice and 1/2 cup of Jack Daniel's.

They cost around $30 and last forever. Best turkey I've ever had.
 
I have been deep frying our turkeys for years. and like a previous poster, I use the creole butter marinade.

i have also picked up a few tricks along the way. because it takes so little time to deep fry (about 3 mins a pound) we get two turkeys (buy one, get one free deals!) and fry both. (we send the second one home with the kids)

another thing we learned is that after frying the turkeys, dice up two or three potatoes and put them in to fry. they "clean" the peanut oil by having the spices that you rub on the outside of the turkey stick to the potatoes when they fry, and make a great snack before dinner.

when you buy a fryer, don't get the cheap model sold at some outlet stores. they seem to be top heavy and could tip. not a good outcome.

Mmmmmm!
 
We always inject our turkey and fry it. I have never made my own marinade. We always purchase it. The Creole Butter is really good. We've also tried others, including garlic flavored ones. If you can find it in a jar, I'd recommend doing it. One less thing for you to have to make!
 












Save Up to 30% on Rooms at Walt Disney World!

Save up to 30% on rooms at select Disney Resorts Collection hotels when you stay 5 consecutive nights or longer in late summer and early fall. Plus, enjoy other savings for shorter stays.This offer is valid for stays most nights from August 1 to October 11, 2025.
CLICK HERE













DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest

Back
Top