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Roasted Stuffed Turkey with Gravy
Turkey:
10 - 12 pound turkey,
fresh or thawed
olive oil or melted butter
coarse Kosher salt and
black pepper
6 cups of your favorite stuffing
(e.g., Oyster Stuffing or Apple-Cranberry Stuffing)
Gravy:
3 tbsp. rendered turkey fat,
from roasting pan (make sure you're getting the fat and not the juices--it's
easy to tell if you remove all the liquid to a Pyrex glass first; the fat
floats to the top)
2 cups chicken stock or giblet
broth (instructions in Step 5)
if making giblet broth, you'll also need:
1 carrot, 1/2 onion,
and the stems from 1 bunch of parsley
3 tbsp. flour
salt and pepper
a pinch of nutmeg
- Preheat oven to 325°. Remove giblets from body
or neck cavity (leaving them in is a common first-timer mistake). Rinse turkey
in plenty of cold running water. Pat dry with towels.
- Fold the wings behind the turkey's shoulders so that
it looks like it's sunbathing with its hands behind its head. This makes the
turkey easier to handle and keeps the wings from drying out as quickly.
- Most commercially-available turkeys include a little
metal holder that lets you lock the feet in place. Unlock the legs one at
a time to access the body cavity. Sprinkle the inside with salt and pepper,
then spoon stuffing loosely into body. Pop legs back into holder, which will
hold the stuffing in place. If your turkey doesn't have a holder, you can
truss the turkey and/or tie up the legs (see sidebar).At the breast end of
the turkey, you'll find a flap of skin. Lift it up and fill neck cavity with
stuffing. Secure skin with toothpicks or truss.
- Generously spread entire turkey with olive oil. Salt
and pepper. Oil rack or bottom of pan, and place turkey breast
down into pan. This makes the juices flow into the breast instead of
out of it while the bird cooks. Make sure breast is well oiled--you don't
want the yummy skin to stick. If you're using a larger turkey, roast breast
up and shield breast with tinfoil (larger turkeys are too difficult to handle
and flip).
- If you're using giblet broth for the gravy, start
it now. Put giblets minus liver in a saucepan with 1/4 chopped onion and some
parsley. Add water to cover. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to low and
simmer for about an hour, adding water as necessary to cover. Strain and set
aside or refrigerate until ready to use.
- Roast for 3 1/2 - 4 hours, basting with olive oil
every 30 to 45 minutes. Remove turkey from oven (close oven door). Check temperature
by inserting meat thermometer into thickest part of the thigh meat, avoiding
the bone. It should read close to 165°. If it's way lower (say, under
145°), put the turkey in for another 30 minutes, then check temperature
again. If you're at or approaching 165°, then crank the oven up to 400°,
flip that baby over so it's breast side up, spread with plenty of olive oil
or melted butter, and roast for another 20 - 30 minutes, until the skin is
nice and brown.
- Let turkey rest for 20 - 30 minutes before carving.
This gives the juices time to settle back into the meat. Carving too early
will give you a dry bird. While the turkey is resting, make your gravy.
- Pour off the liquid from the roasting pan into a Pyrex
glass; the fat will float to the top. Skim off 3 tablespoons of fat. Discard
extra fat and reserve remaining liquid. Heat 3 tablespoons of the fat in a
large saucepan. Sprinkle in flour and combine well. Cook roux for a few moments,
stirring constantly. Pour in chicken stock or giblet broth, stirring constantly.
Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer and cook, stirring or whisking constantly,
for a few minutes, adding reserved pan juices as necessary to achieve your
desired consistency. Remember: gravy will thicken as it cools; so don't reduce
it too much.
- Remove laces if necessary; scoop stuffing onto perimeter
of serving platter. Place bird in center of platter. If you want to make a
big to-do, then go parade it out in front of everyone. If you're confident,
carve it at the table. If not, take it back into the kitchen so you can carve
it without a million eyes on you.
To carve turkey:
Legs and wings: Using a carving fork to hold turkey
steady, remove legs by cutting straight down between the leg and the body. You
might need to wiggle the knife around a bit to separate the joint. Cut through
skin at knee joint, then, gently separate drumstick, again wiggling your knife
around to separate the joint. Slice thigh meat and leave drumsticks whole. Cut
the wings from body and leave whole.
Breast: Holding breast steady with carving fork, cut
thick, angled slices from breast, running parallel to breast bone. Repeat on
other side. Alternately, you can remove each whole breast from the carcass and
slice it like a roast, which you may find easier overall.
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