TURKEY

Author: The Caldwells // Category:
Yummy, juicy turkey. This is the 3rd year I have done this turkey and it always turns out so juicy and yummy!! My parents bought us a roaster oven and we always cook the turkey in this. The vegetables help add some water to the turkey and cooking it breast side down helps the juices run into the breast instead of away from the breast making it really moist and yummy!!! If you buy a larger or smaller turkey adjust cooking time by 15 min./pound.

1 turkey, approx. 15 lbs.
Juice of a lemon
Salt and pepper
melted butter
1/2 yellow onion, peeled and quartered
Tops and bottoms of a bunch of celery
2 carrots

1- To start, if the turkey has been refrigerated, bring it to room temperature before cooking. Keep it in its plastic wrapping until you are ready to cook it. While in the refrigerator, and or while you are bringing it to room temp, have the bird resting in a pan, so that if the plastic covering leaks for any reason, you are confining the juices to the pan. If you get a frozen turkey, you will need to defrost it in the refrigerator for several days first. Allow approximately 5 hours of defrosting for every pound. So, if you have a 15 pound turkey, it will take about 75 hours to defrost it in the refrigerator, or around 3 days.
2- Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
3- Remove the neck and gilbets. Wash out the turkey with water. Pull out any remaining feather stubs in the turkey skin. Pat the turkey dry with paper towels. Lather the inside of the cavity with the juice of half a lemon. Take a small handful of salt and rub all over the inside of the turkey.
4- In this method of cooking a turkey, we don't make the stuffing in the turkey because doing so adds too much to the cooking time. For flavor, put in the inside of the turkey a half a yellow onion, peeled and quartered, a bunch of parsley, a couple of carrots, and some tops and bottoms of celery. You may need to cap the body cavity with some aluminum foil so that the stuffing doesn't easily fall out. Close up the turkey cavity with either string (not nylon string!) or metal skewers. Make sure that the turkey's legs are tied together, held close to the body, and tie a string around the turkey body to hold the wings in close.
5- Rub melted butter all over the outside of the turkey. Sprinkle salt generously all over the outside of the turkey (or have had it soaking in salt-water brine before starting this process). Sprinkle pepper over the turkey.
6- Place turkey BREAST DOWN on the bottom of a rack over a sturdy roasting pan big enough to catch all the drippings.
7- Put the turkey in the oven. Check the cooking directions on the turkey packaging. Gourmet turkeys often don't take as long to cook. For the 15 lb butterball turkey, start the cooking at 400 F for the first 1/2 hour. Then reduce the heat to 350 F for the next 2 hours. Then reduce the heat further to 225 F for the next hour to hour and a half. (If you buy a 12 pound turkey you would take 15 min. off of all 3 cooking times reducing the cooking time by 45 min. Same goes for if you buy a 18 pound turkey except you would add 15 min. to all 3 cooking times cooking the turkey for an additional 45 min.)
8- Start taking temperature readings with a meat thermometer, inserted deep into the thickest part of the turkey breast and thigh, a half hour before the turkey should be done. The dark meat in the thigh should be about 175 F. The white meat in the breast should be 160 F to 165 F. 9- Once you remove the turkey from the oven, let it rest for 15-20 minutes. Turn the turkey breast side up to carve it.

Yield: 12-14 servings (if using the 15 lb turkey)

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