Turducken
Moderator: Mikey
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- Eternal Scobode
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- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 10:34 pm
We had our first one this thanksgiving. It was purchased already assembled and stuffed with Dirty Rice.
It was freaking awesone.
3 1/2 to 4 hours on 350 and that sombitch was done to perfection. I just glazed with a creole butter sauce from time to time.
I watched Paula Dean make her own on FoodTv, and It doesn't look that hard as long as your butcher dones the de-boning, but therein lies the rub. That's a lot of work, and I'm not sure the butcher is just going to do that for free. At least not the grocery store type butcher.
My buddy paid around 70-80 bucks for the one we ate.
It was freaking awesone.
3 1/2 to 4 hours on 350 and that sombitch was done to perfection. I just glazed with a creole butter sauce from time to time.
I watched Paula Dean make her own on FoodTv, and It doesn't look that hard as long as your butcher dones the de-boning, but therein lies the rub. That's a lot of work, and I'm not sure the butcher is just going to do that for free. At least not the grocery store type butcher.
My buddy paid around 70-80 bucks for the one we ate.
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- Mississippi Neck
- I'm your Huckleberry
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- Joined: Sat Jan 15, 2005 7:13 pm
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As a Gulf Coast native, I would say that a Turducken is good, but, not the ultimate. I suggest purchasing deboned chickens from Hebert's in Maurice, LA. You can get them stuffed with alligator or crawfish or shrimp stuffing. For the weenies, you can even wash off some of the spices. I cook four of these on Thanksgiving or Christmas at family gatherings and they are always polished wayy before the dried out turkey is consumed. Cheers..
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- indyfrisco
- Pro Bonfire
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I always fry turkeys for T-day and X-mas. Ever heard of someone frying a turducken?
Oh, and if you have never taken a pork loin, rubbed it down with Tony's and fried it, you don't know what you're missing. Outside turns to bacon...inside as juicy as an 18 y/o twat.
Oh, and if you have never taken a pork loin, rubbed it down with Tony's and fried it, you don't know what you're missing. Outside turns to bacon...inside as juicy as an 18 y/o twat.
Goober McTuber wrote:One last post...
Don't own a fryer, and don't want to. But then that's just me.IndyFrisco wrote:I always fry turkeys for T-day and X-mas. Ever heard of someone frying a turducken?
Oh, and if you have never taken a pork loin, rubbed it down with Tony's and fried it, you don't know what you're missing. Outside turns to bacon...inside as juicy as an 18 y/o twat.
I got a rotisserie for my Weber a few months ago. Cooked a few pork loins that way (and chickens, sirloin tip roasts, boneless lamb legs, etc, etc) and it always comes out awesome.