Is a turkey ever too old to butcher? What is the best age to butcher?

When I'm cooking a whole turkey in the oven I start at 325 covered and go until I get clear juice 1/2 way thru the breast, then uncover and raise the heat to 450 to brown it.

Try it the oposite way. A high heat (500 degrees) at the begining seals in the juices. Alot of meats are cooked this way. I make prime rib this way too. Heritage turkeys are like cooking wild game since they are also lean. High heat really helps. Even Alton Brown cooks his turkeys at a high temperature in the begining.

2,507 people rating it 5 stars can't be wrong. http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/good-eats-roast-turkey-recipe/index.html

Good Eats Roast Turkey
Recipe courtesy Alton Brown
Prep Time: 15 min Inactive Prep Time: 7 hr 0 min Cook Time: 2 hr 30 min Level:
Easy Serves:
10 to 12 servings Ingredients
1 (14 to 16 pound) frozen young turkey

For the brine:
1 cup kosher salt
1/2 cup light brown sugar
1 gallon vegetable stock
1 tablespoon black peppercorns
1 1/2 teaspoons allspice berries
1 1/2 teaspoons chopped candied ginger
1 gallon heavily iced water

For the aromatics:
1 red apple, sliced
1/2 onion, sliced
1 cinnamon stick
1 cup water
4 sprigs rosemary
6 leaves sage
Canola oil
Directions
Click here to see how it's done.


2 to 3 days before roasting:


Begin thawing the turkey in the refrigerator or in a cooler kept at 38 degrees F.


Combine the vegetable stock, salt, brown sugar, peppercorns, allspice berries, and candied ginger in a large stockpot over medium-high heat. Stir occasionally to dissolve solids and bring to a boil. Then remove the brine from the heat, cool to room temperature, and refrigerate.


Early on the day or the night before you'd like to eat:


Combine the brine, water and ice in the 5-gallon bucket. Place the thawed turkey (with innards removed) breast side down in brine. If necessary, weigh down the bird to ensure it is fully immersed, cover, and refrigerate or set in cool area for 8 to 16 hours, turning the bird once half way through brining.


Preheat the oven to 500 degrees F. Remove the bird from brine and rinse inside and out with cold water. Discard the brine.


Place the bird on roasting rack inside a half sheet pan and pat dry with paper towels.


Combine the apple, onion, cinnamon stick, and 1 cup of water in a microwave safe dish and microwave on high for 5 minutes. Add steeped aromatics to the turkey's cavity along with the rosemary and sage. Tuck the wings underneath the bird and coat the skin liberally with canola oil.


Roast the turkey on lowest level of the oven at 500 degrees F for 30 minutes. Insert a probe thermometer into thickest part of the breast and reduce the oven temperature to 350 degrees F. Set the thermometer alarm (if available) to 161 degrees F. A 14 to 16 pound bird should require a total of 2 to 2 1/2 hours of roasting. Let the turkey rest, loosely covered with foil or a large mixing bowl for 15 minutes before carving.​
 
Since everyone here seems to be talking about cooking turkeys, I have a question. How do heritage turkeys compare to BB turkeys when they are deep fried? That is one of our favorite ways to cook a turkey and it never dawned on me that the heritage birds might cook differently. Has anyone cooked one this way?
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Heritage turkeys fry up great. Have only fried 6 month old birds so a fully mature one might not come out as tender. Also most mature toms will be too big for most fryers.
 
Quote:
Thanks for the additional cooking advice, Steve.

I'll sort out a recipe or two tomorrow to kick off a thread but it will be from the internet from me. I know only roast, sandwiches, salad and curry and those wouldn't be new to anyone here.

That would be great Thai, but one request for the cooking thread. Post what you cook and how you cook it, people just cut and paste over and over again and it gets soooooo old. Lets do day to day meals with a local spin, how you cook it, what spices and what you serve it with.

Steve
 
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Quote:
Thanks for the additional cooking advice, Steve.

I'll sort out a recipe or two tomorrow to kick off a thread but it will be from the internet from me. I know only roast, sandwiches, salad and curry and those wouldn't be new to anyone here.

That would be great Thai, but one request for the cooking thread. Post what you cook and how you cook it, people just cut and paste over and over again and it gets soooooo old and flat out annoying. Lets do day to day meals with a local spin, how you cook it, what spices and what you serve it with.

Steve

I'd better start practicing, then!
 

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