- Chicken Liver Pate
- Turkey
- Cornbread Stuffing
- Baked Whole Sweet Potatoes
- Broccoli
- Squash Pies
- Poached Pears
Chicken Liver Pate
This pate. It is amazing. You should try it. My husband prepared it the day before and put it in the fridge until go time.
The Turkey
In my husband's own words:
Brining or salting is the trick. Brining plumps the meat, but salting gives more intense turkey flavor. Both make for moist meat. I brined this year, but salting is also great.
I bought the turkey from a local farm, so it was fresh, never frozen. There's absolutely nothing wrong with a frozen turkey, but I endeavored to use mostly local ingredients.
24 hours before cooking, I submersed it in brine. I used a 4% salt brine. I boiled fennel, Sichuan peppercorn, and black peppercorn in a small amount of water to add a little flavor to the brine. Truth be told, the flavor proteins can't penetrate the meat, so the spices don't do a lot. Plain saltwater would be fine. Keep the turkey and brine cold. I kept it outside and added more ice and salt occasionally.
An hour before cooking, I pulled the turkey out, patted it dry, and trussed it. I then roasted it without stuffing at 350F. It took around 13 minutes per pound. I think it's best to pull it out around 155-160F at the center. The USDA recommends 165F, but really, 12 minutes at 150F is enough time to drive salmonella down to undetectable levels. This year's turkey hit 165, but that was an accident because I wasn't watching the time.
The same technique works well with any poultry, but you can cut down the brining times for smaller birds. A hour or two is enough to make a delicious duck or chicken.
Ingredients
- Turkey, 1.5 lbs * number of guests (we had a ~20lb bird)
- Salt
- Water
- Whatever spices you like, e.g. fennel and Sichuan peppercorns
Preparation: 1 day advanced prep + 13min per pound day-of (~4.5 hours for 20lb bird)
Advanced Prep
Submerge the turkey in a giant vat of 4% by weight salt brine and store in a chilly place. Boil the spices in a small amount of water, and add it to the brine. Brine for a day or two.
Final Prep
Pat dry and truss. Roast at 350F for ~13min per pound. Aim for an internal temperature of 155-160F. Carve and enjoy.
Cornbread Stuffing
Ingredients
- 5lb Duck
- Wild rice
- Chicken broth
- 3 bulbs Celery root
- Cornbread, Southern style
- 8 tsp duck fat
- 2 cups corn meal, stone ground
- 4 tsp sugar
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp salt
- 2/3 cup boiling water
- 1 1/2 cups buttermilk
- 2 large eggs, lightly beaten
- 5 small Onions
- 1/2 lb Shiitake mushrooms, fresh
- Rubbed sage
- Salt
Preparation: 1-2 days advanced prep + 2 hours day-of
Advanced Prep
Brine the duck in 4% by weight salt water for ~1hr. Roast at 350F until cooked (150-160F internal temperature). Save the fat and drippings. Allow the fat to cool and separate. Carve the duck and shred the meat for use in the stuffing. Save the carcass for broth.
Use the Cook's Illlustrated baking book's Southern style corn bread. Make a double recipe. Since we had duck fat, we used that instead of bacon drippings. Grease a 10 inch skillet with duck fat, warm in oven at 450F. Mix 2/3 of the cornmeal with all the sugar, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Mix the remaining 1/3 cornmeal with the boiling water, and stir to make a "stiff mush". Gradually whisk in buttermilk, eggs, and -- when oven and skillet are hot -- the dry mix until "just moistened". Stir in the molten duck fat from the skillet into the mixture, then pour the whole thing back in the skillet. Bake until golden brown, ~20min. Pop it out onto a wire rack and let it sit and dry out overnight.
Cook the wild rice in chicken broth until tender. If you're very patient and planned ahead, boil the carcass down into duck broth and use that instead of store-bought broth.
Cut the celery root into small cubes and slowly fry them on low in the duck fat. They should be tender and golden when done.
Final Prep
By this point, it should be ~24 hours later, and you should have the following ingredients:
- 1 1/2 quarts wild rice cooked in chicken broth (cooked volume)
- 1 1/2 quarts cooked diced celery root (cooked volume)
- 1 10" skillet of southern style corn bread, let stale overnight and chopped small
- 5 small fried chopped onions
- Meat of 3/4 of a roasted duck, chopped small (we ate some of the duck)
- 1/2 lb of shiitake caps, chopped and fried
- rubbed sage and salt to taste
Chop up the onions and shiitake mushrooms into small pieces, roughly the size of a fingernail, and fry them in duck fat. This can also be done in advance, but it's fairly quick to do day-of.
Chop the cornbread into small cubes.
This produces an exceptionally moist and flavorful gluten-free stuffing.
Baked Whole Sweet Potatoes
Ingredients
- Sweet potatoes
Preparation: ~1-2 hours
Trim off the bad bits of the sweet potatoes. Wrap in aluminum foil. Bake at 325F until soft, about 1-2 hours. Overcooking them doesn't matter very much -- they just caramelize more.
Broccoli
Ingredients
- Broccoli
- Salt
Preparation: ~30 minutes
Chop the broccoli into bite-size pieces. Stir fry in hot oil until tender. Salt to taste.
Squash Pies
My husband used the Joy of Cooking pumpkin (or squash) pie recipe. He used red kuri squash, and eyeballed the spices, but the JoC recipe is solid even without these modifications.
Ingredients
- 2 cups cooked squash
- 1 1/2 cups cream
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1/2 cup white sugar
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 tsp cinnamon
- 1/2 tsp ginger
- 1/4 tsp nutmeg
- 1/8 tsp cloves
- 2 eggs, slightly beaten
- 1 pie crust of your choice (husband made a gluten free crust this year)
Preparation: ~90min
Mix all ingredients (except the pie crust) until blended smooth. Pour into the pie shell. Bake at 425F for 15 minutes, then reduce to 350F for 45 minutes.
Poached Pears
These poached pears. Good lord, they are delicious. The poaching liquid indicated in the recipe is good for many more pears than the recipe indicates. My husband did 8 pears in that volume of liquid, and could have done more. He also used a more acidic wine base, which helps keep the pears from oxidizing and turning funny colors. No need to increase the amount of sugar in the recipe though. My husband prepared it the day before and put it in the fridge until go time.
Oooh, kuri squash for the pie sounds amazing! I am unreasonably excited about trying that out. What kind of gluten-free crust did he make? Can you post the recipe? There are a couple of people I bake for on occasion who can't eat gluten, so I'm always eager to get gluten-free baking recipes from people whose taste I know and trust. :D
ReplyDeleteHe uses a normal pie crust recipe, but replaces the flour with Cup 4 Cup gluten free flour.
Delete1 cup flour
1 stick butter
1/4 -- 1/2 tsp salt
Cut together until its texture is between coarse cornmeal and peas. Add cold water, just enough to bind it all together without it being sticky. Roll it out.
Due to its lack of gluten to hold everything together, the crust will be very delicate, so handle with care. Otherwise, it's quite straightforward. ^_^ Hope this helps!