When is the Canadian Thanksgiving holiday?poodlek wrote:I have a turkey in the oven right now! Mr. K works Thursday evenings, so we're celebrating today. We always do both Canadian and American thanksgivings, they're the best meals of the year! And we have much to be thankful for
Second Monday in October, more on par with when the harvest comes in in the great white north.Asian_Geekette wrote:When is the Canadian Thanksgiving holiday?poodlek wrote:I have a turkey in the oven right now! Mr. K works Thursday evenings, so we're celebrating today. We always do both Canadian and American thanksgivings, they're the best meals of the year! And we have much to be thankful for
It looks like you boiled your turkey in fence creosote!sundaymorningstaple wrote:I'm taking off half a day tomorrow and will be cooking "big bird" as well (used to kid my daughter about that - we made the mistake of kidding her one year when she was young about cooking "big bird" and that year just happened to be an 10kg turkey. RONG!
Fortunately, I cook the birds and ours is around 14lbs and will only take about 30~35 minutes to cook!
We do two or three a year, Thanksgiving, Xmas and again in Feb/Mar if we can pick up one on Xmas day real cheap and throw it in the freezer.
I love turkey!
Happy Thanksgiving all, whether you are Yank, Canadian or whatever, there's always something to be thankful for!
This one done last March for my daughter's birthday.....
Fascinating. I'll give it a try when I get back to Canada/a place with a normal sized kitchen or patio. How do you know how much oil to put in so you don't over flow when you put the bird in?sundaymorningstaple wrote:Billy, it's not boiled, it's deep fried! 16ltr of Canola or peanut oil heated to 350°F. (I use Canola as you can use it 4 or 5 times and it doesn't go "off" like peanut oil does.)
For a bird under 12 lbs (5.5kg) it only take around 3 minutes per lb or 6 minutes/kg. For over 12 lbs, around 3.5 minutes lb. My stainless steel vat will only take up to around a 14lb bird.
Deep Frying surprising has just the opposite effect that you think. The bird has NO oil soaking like you might think. You deep inject your marinade the day before and dry the bird completely at room temperature before putting the bird in the oil. As the bird goes in, the high heat seals the skin surface and as the heat draws the moisture of the marinate out of the bird, it prevents oil from entering. It takes around 2.5~3 minutes to lower the bird fully into the vat of oil - to prevent a massive over-boil of the oil and create a fire (there is always a fire extinguisher nearby!) That way you have an absolutely moist bird with an nice brown crispy skin. Better and more even that you could ever hope to achieve with a normal oven. I'm a convert. And I've cooked my fair share of turkeys. Can also do ducks & chickens the same way. (I've cooked three whole chickens at a time as well in that pot.
If you see the stainless basket in the background, it does fantastic Maryland style Steamed Crabs as well!
poodlek wrote:...the bird I have is the biggest possible I could fit in my oven and even then the top of it is getting brown way too fast.
Very true. I let the bird rest on the table under foil for 20-30 minutes then unwrap and let it set for a couple of minutes so everyone can ooh & ahh. Then I proceed to dismantle the bird as well. It also feeds a lot more as the slices are a more manageable size by cross grain cutting.JR8 wrote:
tip #2, Don't 'presentation carve' at the table straight off the bird. Take the cooked bird apart, and slice the breasts across the grain.
You can look on Youtube and see vids of the above being done. It really makes a big difference!
Enjoy!
Yep, agree with all of that. Once out of the oven you can take it out on a platter, if needs be the chef can pose with carving knife/fork for pix, and then back in to the kitchen to dismantle it. Once you've done it like that you'll wonder what all the 'carving at the table' malarkey is all about.sundaymorningstaple wrote: Very true. I let the bird rest on the table under foil for 20-30 minutes then unwrap and let it set for a couple of minutes so everyone can ooh & ahh. Then I proceed to dismantle the bird as well. It also feeds a lot more as the slices are a more manageable size by cross grain cutting.
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