by victoriavictrix » Thu Nov 27, 2014 10:25 pm
Dry brined turkey. 21.5 lb bird, which is now all GONE. One of the housemates carried off all the leftovers.
On the Saturday before, start your bird.
1 ice chest
1 turkey
1 cup of salt
1/4 cup spice mix (depends on what you want your bird to taste like. Traditional: poutry spice. Cajun: Cajun spice mix. Mexican: taco spice. Moroccan/Indian: curry mix)
1 giant zip-seal baggy, big enough to hold said bird.
Mix spices and salt. Strip protection from bird. Wet bird so spice/salt mix will stick. Put bird in giant baggy (no, do not try and remove the neck and the giblets yet). Pat spice/salt mix all over bird, turn, repeat until all is gone (don't worry about what falls into the baggy). Put bird in ice chest. Turn once in the morning and once at night until Thanksgiving. If you think it might be getting too warm, or the bird thaws faster than you thought it would, shove some more ice in the chest (I generally end up doing that about Tuesday night or Weds morning).
On Thursday, take bird out. Remove neck and organs from inside. Do NOT rinse. Roast as usual (I use a roasting bag) according to your time-honored roasting technique, or, if you don't have one, look up roasting times on the Butterball site. I do not stuff my birds, I make stuffing separate. You will end up with a bird so tender the meat falls apart, and so juicy and full of flavor NO ONE will complain, you will probably have to fight off people wanting to take some home, and all of it will be gone by Friday night. (I accidentally overcooked mine this time around, and aside from some bits on the legs, nothing dried out).
The science: as the bird thaws, the salt pulls all the water out of it, because, osmosis!, the outside is saltier than the inside. However, once it has thawed, the INSIDE is now saltier than the OUTSIDE, all that water gets pulled back into the bird taking the spice flavors with it. By the time you are ready to cook, there might be a bit less than a cup of spice/salt water in the bottom of the bag, don't worry about that, since most commercial turkeys are injected with solution before freezing; that's all it is.
All you damn kids get offa my lawn!