It's that time of year! Roast and carve the perfect turkey!
With Chef Jean-Pierre! This guy's a hoot. I have made several of his recipes. His onyon soup is delicious! Now you can roast and carve the perfect turkey this year and Chef Jean-Pierre will show you how! Don't be afraid!
"Fixed fortifications are monuments to mans stupidity" - George S. Patton
November 16, 2021, 11:12 AM
old dino
Great video. Even though we are doing a 12 lb turkey will give this a try. Like the lower roasting temp.
November 16, 2021, 11:43 AM
Gustofer
Good that he recommends 155F. Too many people go by the government recommended 165F and it gets tough and dry. No better way to ruin poultry than overcooking it.
I typically go as low as 150 and if I'm doing sous vide breasts, I go to 145. Soft, juicy, flavorful, and perfectly safe as long as you keep it at that temp for long enough.
________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton.
November 16, 2021, 12:32 PM
old dino
I may of missed in the video ... but do recall the oven temperature.
However, I was able to go to his link in YouTube with the recipe information to his video :
There's nothing worse than watching someone carve off slices of the breast the wrong way. I die a little inside each time. Everyone should learn how to carve off the whole breast and cut against the grain.
Train how you intend to Fight
Remember - Training is not sparring. Sparring is not fighting. Fighting is not combat.
November 16, 2021, 01:57 PM
old dino
quote:
Originally posted by myrottiety: There's nothing worse than watching someone carve off slices of the breast the wrong way. I die a little inside each time. Everyone should learn how to carve off the whole breast and cut against the grain.
Did he carve the breast the wrong way ? I don't really know, but want to learn. I thought cutting the breast against the grain was across the width.
November 16, 2021, 02:11 PM
DaveL
I've done turkeys many different ways - spatchcock and dry brined is still the best.
November 16, 2021, 02:24 PM
doublesharp
quote:
Originally posted by old dino:
quote:
Originally posted by myrottiety: There's nothing worse than watching someone carve off slices of the breast the wrong way. I die a little inside each time. Everyone should learn how to carve off the whole breast and cut against the grain.
Did he carve the breast the wrong way ? I don't really know, but want to learn. I thought cutting the breast against the grain was across the width.
He's long winded but he knows how to cook and carve a turkey. He cut across the grain.
________________________ God spelled backwards is dog
November 16, 2021, 08:48 PM
old dino
quote:
Originally posted by doublesharp:
quote:
Originally posted by old dino:
quote:
Originally posted by myrottiety: There's nothing worse than watching someone carve off slices of the breast the wrong way. I die a little inside each time. Everyone should learn how to carve off the whole breast and cut against the grain.
Did he carve the breast the wrong way ? I don't really know, but want to learn. I thought cutting the breast against the grain was across the width.
He's long winded but he knows how to cook and carve a turkey. He cut across the grain.
What I thought too ... that he carved against the grains. Not sure what myrottiety was referring too.
November 16, 2021, 09:00 PM
p08
quote:
Originally posted by DaveL: I've done turkeys many different ways - spatchcock and dry brined is still the best.
I have smoked them, wet brined and yes dry brine is the best of all! Cut into the breast and juice flows to the surface!
------------------------------------- Always the pall bearer, never the corpse.
November 16, 2021, 09:07 PM
tatortodd
quote:
Originally posted by Gustofer: Good that he recommends 155F. Too many people go by the government recommended 165F and it gets tough and dry. No better way to ruin poultry than overcooking it.
One year when I lived in Canada, a bunch of us American expats got together for American Thanksgiving (the Canucks celebrate 6-weeks earlier). Anyway, the couple hosting have been married for 20-years and cook the turkey per the cookbook they received as a wedding gift. The problem is that about 10-years ago, the USDA lowered the recommended safe temperature of turkey from 180 deg down to 165 deg. I try to point this out politely and remain a good guest, but they blew me off. Dinner was served an hour late, and that hour was spent getting the turkey from 165 deg to 180 deg. If you think 165 deg turkey is dry, you'll die of thirst eating 180 deg turkey.
I've posted this several times over the years, but AmazingRibs.com has a good article on the science behind safe cooking temps. In a nutshell, safe cooking temps are determined by killing 9,999,999 out of 10,000,000 pathogens. For poultry, this happens instantly at 165F, but the more interesting point is that it happens in 5 minutes at 150F and in ~1 minute at 155 F. For me, this means that I can set my Thermoworks Smoke probe into the thickest part of the turkey, set the alarm for 150F, once the alarm goes off I set a timer for 10 minutes (i.e. a 5 min buffer just in case), and after the timer goes off I enjoy safe & juicy turkey.
Ego is the anesthesia that deadens the pain of stupidity
DISCLAIMER: These are the author's own personal views and do not represent the views of the author's employer.
November 16, 2021, 09:19 PM
myrottiety
quote:
Originally posted by old dino:
quote:
Originally posted by doublesharp:
quote:
Originally posted by old dino:
quote:
Originally posted by myrottiety: There's nothing worse than watching someone carve off slices of the breast the wrong way. I die a little inside each time. Everyone should learn how to carve off the whole breast and cut against the grain.
Did he carve the breast the wrong way ? I don't really know, but want to learn. I thought cutting the breast against the grain was across the width.
He's long winded but he knows how to cook and carve a turkey. He cut across the grain.
What I thought too ... that he carved against the grains. Not sure what myrottiety was referring too.
No he did it right. I just see people carve with the grain and it drives me nuts. Do what he did people!!
Train how you intend to Fight
Remember - Training is not sparring. Sparring is not fighting. Fighting is not combat.
November 16, 2021, 10:46 PM
1s1k
The reason you carve it like him is you get reasonable sized pieces because you don’t want one huge thin piece of turkey taking up valuable plate space and everyone gets a nice piece of skin instead of that typical little bologna strip going around the large thin piece.