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Food and Drink Essential to sustain life; near the top of the hierarchy of needs

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Old 12-24-2006, 11:15 PM   #1
footfootfoot
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religious experience OMFG

just gotta say I am a changed man.
I will never cook a turkey in an oven again.

I just had the best friggin turkey of my life.

I brined it for two days, fired up the webber and put my water pan in the middle, surrounded by coals (the indirect method) popped the turkey on the grilland every 40 minutes I checked the coals, added more maple shavings* a,d gave it a little basteroo.

Temp was 170 and that was the best tasting turkey ever.

It was insanely good. plus I got to yank homegirl's chain a bit. Her mom and aunt are over for xmas dinner, etc. and I was trying this highly experimental cooking procedure for the first time. Despite my madskilz in the kitchen, she has little faith in me and panics a lot.

I cut a piece of the turkey off and make this face and say "I'm not sure, waht do you think?" She was about ready to freak that the dinner was pooched. The flavor blew her socks off.


I took a piece of rock maple I had in the shop and ran it across the jointer a few times and gathered the shavings. I boiled some water and poured it over a handful each of rosemary and thyme, let it steep for a while and then soaked my maple in this "tea".

The basting sauce was olive oil, crushed garlic, thinly sliced ginger pressed through a garlic press, maple syrup, and balsamic vinegar. (good bread dipping sauce too) I added a bit of the herb tea as well. this got painted on every 40 minutes, and sloshed in the cavity.

Just OMG. It was so damn good. I'll never cook turkey in an oven again. It is just damn great, and easy as could be. A 15# bird took just under three hours.

smashed taters, carrots sauteed in butter w/ dill and honey, steamed broccoli. a "teller" mit the nuts,orange,apple, chocolate.

I'm an evangelical smoker.
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Old 12-24-2006, 11:36 PM   #2
zippyt
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Oh hell yes !!!!!

Congrats on freaking the wife a bit !!!! Was Mom-in-law impressed ??

We did a Beer can turkey last year , Cajon butter injected , a little sage in the beer can , it cooked for , well i forget just how long , but it was KILLER !!!
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Old 12-25-2006, 04:40 AM   #3
DanaC
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Ooooo....that sounds good!
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Old 12-25-2006, 06:33 AM   #4
Griff
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I like the way you worked the jointer into your process.... skilllzzz
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Old 12-25-2006, 08:46 AM   #5
footfootfoot
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Griff
I like the way you worked the jointer into your process.... skilllzzz
I also trimmed the beeswax candles with my chopsaw, but that's a different story for a different thread.
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Old 12-25-2006, 10:50 PM   #6
steambender
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Turkeys, Charcoal and Fire extinguishers

this trajectory ends here:

http://www.biggreenegg.com/

It's a cult, don't ask me how I know. But it's been many years since the neighbors pissed themselves, laughing at me as I extinguished the holiday turkey on the weber. CO2, didn't spoil the flavor a bit. Drippings in the water pan caught fire, then the bird.

Now I use a slow smoky fire, fire bricks under the pan, fresh rosemary from outside the door.

If you're really interested, check out the primo grill - why not be obsessed with something as important as food?
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Old 12-25-2006, 11:44 PM   #7
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Oh dear. Spam or not spam. This one is a toughie. I'm going for not, as the post is relevant, and funny.

Hi and welcome steambender. Don't prove me wrong by making your post #2 a list of porn sites and work-from-home business opportunities.

Unless it's really good porn, and the get-rich-quick scheme really works.
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Old 12-25-2006, 11:51 PM   #8
Beestie
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The Big Green Egg is where the buck stops. There is no better Bar-B-Que in the known universe. We aren't sure what the dark mysteries of dark matter have to offer but until then, the BGE is the captain Kirk of the galaxy.

I've been preaching the virtues of brine curing since I came across it years ago. Another soul for the Big Green Egg, I see.

Welcome, brother, we've been expecting you.
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Old 01-03-2007, 12:09 PM   #9
steambender
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Glad to de-lurk after enjoying the show for so long.

Our BGE (big green egg) turkey ritual involves brine - 5gal bucket overnight, apple juice or cider, or OJ, water, kosher salt, secret spices (so secret I can't remember what I did last time, so it's never the same, twice) smoldering cherry or apple wood (woodshop scraps) turkey vertical on a poultry rack with beer, rosemary and vinegar in the drip pan below.

It a satisfyingly pagan rite - enjoyed in all phases with great gusto!

to be honest though, if I had it to do over I might go with the primo grills, they appear to be BGE generation 2, and they have the truly manly oval unit that can cook for an army.

Nothing smells better than the wisps of smoke coming out of the egg while slow smoking (brined) ribs for few hours of anticipation accompanied by beer consumption...

Wolf, sorry to set off the spam radar...no worries, I keep my porn preferences private! BTW, how's the Neos? haven't been out to shoot in a too long myself.

steambender
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Old 01-03-2007, 12:17 PM   #10
orthodoc
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Sounds fantastic! The one time I brined a turkey it turned out too salty. Very moist etc., but salty. I followed a recipe from the newspaper ... clearly not a winner. I've stayed away from brining since then but maybe I should give it another try.

The biggest source of calls to the local volunteer fire dept in this area on Dec. 25 is fires from turkey fryers. I've never had deep-fried turkey, though if we live here long enough I guess I'll taste some at some point. Has anyone had turkey done this way? Is it worth the fire hazard?
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Old 01-03-2007, 01:20 PM   #11
wolf
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Absolutely worth the risk, which is fairly easy to minimize by actually reading and following all the directions. Understanding the concept of displacement helps too. The thing runs off a propane cylinder. It's not too difficult to keep it far away from the house and the cars. Don't attempt to cheat the distance rule, even if it's raining. Find something else to eat and wait for a dry day. Even if you have successfully fried turkeys a dozen times before, some critical thing will go wrong on the day you move the fryer into the garage for your convenience.

Oh, and make sure that you deep fry some Pop 'n Fresh biscuits as the oil heats up, and do fries (reg. potato or sweet potato) after the bird is done.
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Old 01-03-2007, 01:20 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orthodoc View Post
Sounds fantastic! The one time I brined a turkey it turned out too salty. Very moist etc., but salty. I followed a recipe from the newspaper ... clearly not a winner. I've stayed away from brining since then but maybe I should give it another try.

The biggest source of calls to the local volunteer fire dept in this area on Dec. 25 is fires from turkey fryers. I've never had deep-fried turkey, though if we live here long enough I guess I'll taste some at some point. Has anyone had turkey done this way? Is it worth the fire hazard?
It is worth it.

However.

Please, please, please, please, follow the instructions. This is the life and death part...

Outdoors. Duh, but REQUIRED.

On concrete or dirt. Also duh, but easily overlooked. DO NOT under any circumstances put it on the deck, unless your deck is plate steel or bricks, or some such.

Have the fire extinguisher handy. Seriously.

Do not overfill the fryer. It would be prudent to fill it with water and then put the turkey in and see how much it displaces. Do this test cold. You won’t hurt the turkey, of course. You’ll get a much better idea of how much liquid (cold water in this case) will do the job instead of 400 degree oil tsunami-ing across the floor, igniting your shoes. Go on. Laugh now and get it out of your system. Rehearse with water so you don’t have to hearse with oil.

Ok, life and death part is over. Enjoy.

And if you think I’m kidding, google around for turkey fryer fires, there have been other cellar threads on this. Can be tasty or can be deadly.
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Old 01-03-2007, 04:11 PM   #13
Elspode
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Somebody here in KC burned their frigging house *to the ground* with a turkey fryer on Thanksgiving Day. For real. *And*...he had the fryer outside. Still burned the place to the ground.
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Old 01-03-2007, 04:20 PM   #14
BigV
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Originally Posted by Elspode View Post
Somebody here in KC burned their frigging house *to the ground* with a turkey fryer on Thanksgiving Day. For real. *And*...he had the fryer outside. Still burned the place to the ground.
I bet.

I probably should have said FLAMING tsunami....
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Last edited by BigV; 01-03-2007 at 06:30 PM. Reason: spelling correction
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Old 01-03-2007, 06:27 PM   #15
footfootfoot
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Elspode View Post
Somebody here in KC burned their frigging house *to the ground* with a turkey fryer on Thanksgiving Day. For real. *And*...he had the fryer outside. Still burned the place to the ground.
That's because he was committed. Remember! "Winners never quit and quitters never win."

Quote:
Originally Posted by wolf
...actually reading and following all the directions...
I love that about you wolf, you can type that with a straight face.
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