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Karen/NoCA wrote:We've been doing our turkey like this for years. Perfect every time. I use a zucchini dressing, baked in the oven. When the turkey comes off the grill, I add some of the juices to the dressing casserole.
Here is the method copied from an article on Pandora's Turkey.
Bird specifications: Squatty. You've got to keep that lid closed. A big fat turkey known among chefs as "The Limbaugh" will make this difficult.
Stuffing: Fake stuffing recipe below. Not meant to be eaten. Real stuffing should be cooked separately.
Basting: Don't even think about it. Pandora's Turkey needs to be ignored. One baste, and the deal's off.
Pandora's Turkey
1 turkey (preferably dead) 18 to 22 pounds
2 yellow onions
5 ribs o' celery
2 tablespoons poultry seasoning or dried sage (Do not substitute Hershey's chocolate sauce)
1/2 cup veg oil or melted butter
Salt `n' Peppa (current album)
Did I mention you need a covered kettle-type grill? If you only have a hibachi, just snip off the wings and grill them.
Start with a "clean" grill (this is what the recipe says, but the author could not have foreseen the televised Redskins-Dallas clash, so cleanliness is optional).
Ignite five pounds -- or 5 lbs. (whichever is easier) of charcoal. While you're waiting for the coals to "catch," drive to Vegas to get a bet down on the Redskins-Dallas clash or clean the turkey (whichever is easier).
Cleaning the turkey: Remove neck and giblets from inside bird. Wash bird with cold water. Pat dry with paper towels. Place turkey in heavy-duty, bullet-proof aluminum roasting pan.
Because the coals are still "catching," chop the celery and onions coarsely (this means you may use bad words when you start to cry).
Dump in large bowl, mix with 1/2 cup melted butter and the poultry seasoning or sage. This is called "aromatic stuffing," i.e., to be smelled, not eaten. Stuff it in the neck cavity. Stuff rest in body cavity. No warrant required.
Tie the legs together (most turkeys are born with a "metal fastener"; RPD may use cuffs). Sensuously rub turkey with butter or vegetable oil. Sprinkle with salt `n' peppa.
Turkey should be sitting in roast pan, breast side up.
Guess what? Coals have "caught"! Or you're going to Coco's. Coals should be at that "fine gray ash" stage. Make two piles and shove them to either side (Red Sea effect). Put the grill in place. Put the turkey (in roasting pan) right in the middle. Put the lid on. DON'T TAKE IT OFF. All vents should be open, as required by law.
Without actually singeing your ear, listen for "cooking noises." Soon you will start to smell a "delightful aroma." (This comes from the "metal fastener" that binds the legs together.) In 2 ? to 3 hours, when the turkey has stopped making "cooking noises" and no more smoke is rising from the vents, we will have a new pope. Also, the turkey is done.
Remove the turkey from the grill, lift it out of the pan, let it rest for 15 to 20 minutes. If you'd been sitting in a hot, dark grill with your legs bound together and onions in your neck, you'd need to rest, too.
After you've said, "I told you so" to your closest relatives, especially your mother-in-law, sit down and eat.
Happy Thanksgiving.
Bob Henrick
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Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
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Carrie L. wrote:Karen, that is the funniest thing I have ever read.
What is it excerpted from? I'm not familiar with Pandora's Turkey...
Bob Henrick wrote:Karen, I will be doing from one to three turkeys on my Kamado grill this Thanksgiving. and I am definitely going to do one or more of them your way. I am not so sure about that zucchini dressing though. Thanks for posting.
Jenise
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Robert Reynolds
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Carrie L. wrote:Robert, sometimes there are just four of us, and I never consider scaling back. Thanksgiving leftovers are one of life's greatest pleasures. The more the better.
Carl Eppig
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Tue Jun 13, 2006 1:38 pm
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MikeH wrote:We have been brining our turkeys for several years now. Usually get it all ready the night before, stick the turkey and brine in a bag, put the bag in a cooler with ice, and put the cooler out on the deck overnight.
Stuffing is made outside the bird, usually by my MIL. We do put things like onions and apples in the body cavity.
Normally we cook the bird on the Weber.
TimMc wrote:MikeH wrote:We have been brining our turkeys for several years now. ......................
Normally we cook the bird on the Weber.
Cool.
BBQ is always best
What is your recipe, that is, brine to H2O?
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