wishesuponastar
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2011
- Messages
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We fried it. It was nice & juicy too!
That's amazing how quickly it cooks. Never had a fried turkey. Glad yours was tasty.
We fried it. It was nice & juicy too!
If it's electrical, it can fail. The food won't start on fire but the electrical can fail.
Me too. I take naps and baths at the same time too LOL.
It's the second time we've done it. I've had it before we got our fryer, and it's always been the juiciest turkey I've ever had. It's actually pretty easy.That's amazing how quickly it cooks. Never had a fried turkey. Glad yours was tasty.
Now, THAT sounds dangerous. I'd probably drown if I tried that.Sounds quite relaxing though.
According to the Butterball website. Stuffed added about an hour.
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You're not being rudeYes, but again, that is an estimate. My butterball said on the bag 4 1/2 hours... it definitely took longer!I don't care how long you're "supposed" to cook it for, I'm cooking it until the thermometer reads 160deg or higher and at a low temp so it doesn't burn, your meat can dry out. (PS I sound like I'm being rude, I'm not intending to be...this is just my opinion...)
2 words - Turkey Bag! It greatly accelerates the cooking time; 5 hours would be more than enough (including stuffing). I haven't cooked a turkey "naked" in years; I love turkey bags. I can get up early, get 5 pies in and out of the oven in the morning, put the turkey in at 11:00'ish and have dinner on the table around 4:00.Um... in what world does a 25lb turkey take only 5 hours! I just cooked a 21lb yesterday, at 325deg it took 6 hours... plus an hour to set... we eat at 2pm not dinner time... please don't lump us 5am-ers into this category...
The fire department usually comes on our show to demonstrate the safe way to use a deep fryer, and they usually cook 2 small turkey's over a 2 hour show. I swear....probably because they were small turkeys......that they were cooked in less than 30 minutes each. We didn't have them on this year for some reason, but that is darn tasty turkey cooked that way. The cost of the peanut oil though is pretty steep unless you are cooking more than one turkey.We fried it. It was nice & juicy too!
I think you might need to get your oven calibrated? I cooked a 22.5 lb, stuffed turkey in 4 hours Sunday. Five hours is easily doable for a 25lb turkey.Um... in what world does a 25lb turkey take only 5 hours! I just cooked a 21lb yesterday, at 325deg it took 6 hours... plus an hour to set... we eat at 2pm not dinner time... please don't lump us 5am-ers into this category...
I was thinking about this after I posted. We put ours in a paper bag and leave it alone, no basting, no opening the oven and it browns itself too.2 words - Turkey Bag! It greatly accelerates the cooking time; 5 hours would be more than enough (including stuffing). I haven't cooked a turkey "naked" in years; I love turkey bags. I can get up early, get 5 pies in and out of the oven in the morning, put the turkey in at 11:00'ish and have dinner on the table around 4:00.
....yikes!Someone I know bakes their turkey while they sleep. I would be so nervous of a fire.
I'm a vegan and even I know it takes more then overnight to thaw out a whole turkey.First time out we had a cold turkey. Put it in the fridge to thaw the night before. Popped it into the oven for the required time. It wasn't done. Figure that one out. Well examining the bird I discovered it was still frozen in the center. To look at it you would never know it was frozen. Turns out there was a supper cold spot in the back of the fridge that would not allow the bird to thaw completely. Needless to say dinner was late that day.
You may want to consider a fresh turkey.First time out we had a cold turkey. Put it in the fridge to thaw the night before. Popped it into the oven for the required time. It wasn't done. Figure that one out. Well examining the bird I discovered it was still frozen in the center. To look at it you would never know it was frozen. Turns out there was a supper cold spot in the back of the fridge that would not allow the bird to thaw completely. Needless to say dinner was late that day.
3 to 3 1/2 minutes per pound. Add some time to get the oil up to temperature.I swear....probably because they were small turkeys......that they were cooked in less than 30 minutes each.
It's not that hard to figure out... you need more than a day to thaw a turkey. We got our 14 pound (frozen) bird on Sunday afternoon and put it in the fridge. On Wednesday evening (three full days) we took it out to brine and there was still some (not much) frozen areas. Butterball even recommends 24 hours in the fridge for every four pounds... http://www.butterball.com/how-tos/thaw-a-turkeyFirst time out we had a cold turkey. Put it in the fridge to thaw the night before. Popped it into the oven for the required time. It wasn't done. Figure that one out. Well examining the bird I discovered it was still frozen in the center. To look at it you would never know it was frozen. Turns out there was a supper cold spot in the back of the fridge that would not allow the bird to thaw completely. Needless to say dinner was late that day.