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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I am cooking turkey and doing Thanksgiving for my parents, my best friend
and her husband, and my other best friend and her nephew. This is the first time I've cooked a turkey or hosted a holiday meal. I am not completely inexperienced in the kitchen, am working hard to "keep it real", and my friends are bringing the dessert (and mom is bringing gravy from the freezer :-). I also just took the "New Classic Thanksgiving" class that Fine Cooking has been doing around the country. So I'm feeling ok about this. I have the menu down in my mind, with allowances for the no-onions person, the fishitarian, and the dairy-sensitive. Actually, the class was worth the price of admission for the tips that mashed potatoes can be done up to 2 hours ahead and microwaved to warm up (don't put them in the fridge), and I can blanch the green beans the night before. Bye bye last minute anxiety! (Hey, I only have two burners on my stove, that is going to help.) But I have questions, and I imagine a number of first-timers do. I am getting a "natural" birdie from my favorite meat counter and plan to brine it. I know I should have asked this last night, but forgot. Recipe says 1 cup kosher salt. I have a big box of Diamond brand salt around. It's flakier and less dense than a lot of salt. Should I use more than one cup? I seem to recall reading (yeah, I could check google, but I'm fried) that brined birds work better if you brine them and then take them out of the brine and let them "dry out" in the fridge. I'm getting the bird on Tuesday, should I brine one day and let it "dry out" overnight, or just pat it REALLY REALLY dry? Is there a law of diminishing return for brining? (e.g. is the recommended 18-24 hours not to be exceeded) Also, if I am using a ricer for my potatoes, do I really need to bother to peel the potatoes when I boil them? Thanks, Charlotte -- |
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