Nothing beats that good ol traditional style! PLUM you say… interesting. Do it and tell us all about it. YUM!
I KNOW, doesn't that sound so good? I think you'd have to dry out your preferred Plums for several days, not completely dehydrated- (im not going to use Sunsweet prunes, for example) you could macerate them in whiskey, combine with green apples? oh yum
So who has a great recipe for a roasted turkey? I will start refrigerator defrosting the 14 pounder on Sunday... to be ready by Thursday for the oven. To brine, dry brine or not is the question so far! Still have not decided on stuffing... but wish there were chestnuts about. Mom used to stuff them with chestnuts back in New York in the 50s... but I haven't seen them since then. In New York City every winter there would be chestnut roasters with carts on the streets back then, it was a great treat for a kid.
Well, there used to be Chestnut trees then....a blight wiped many of them out in the 60's. I've wanted to try brining, but I could not get that across the kitchen board, so we will have to stay with the butterball with whatever injections they lace it with. One tip I do have for keeping it moist is used a baking bag. Everything stays inside, it's very moist and there's a lot to make gravy with.
I brine, and add a few 1/2 cut juicy oranges in the brine as well. Squeeze the juice first and then toss them in. After the Turkey is brined and rinsed I peal back the skin a little and rub right on the meat salt/pepper, rosemary, basil and plenty of 1/4” sliced up butter. Then pull the skin back over. BUT the real trick is to SPATCHCOCK the Turkey! It cooks more evenly and cooks faster. Gobble Gobble!