It is awesome.
We cooked one for our tailgate last year.
Yeah, it is fun and tastes great. I think it took about 1:10 for a 17lb turkey.
Read the instruction manual and then read it again. Really the only thing you have to worry about is putting too much oil in and causing a huge grease fire (which we didnt btw).
The huge thing of peanut oil is kind of expensive (I think like $30).
I find most turkey to be seriously dry. Gravy helps.And make SURE your turkey is completely thawed and DRY. Water will cause a monster grease fire.
Ooh, sounds really good. I conceed that turkeys prepared properly could be really good.so does frying - locks everything in
last year i brined and smoked and I think that put too much of an apple taste into the bird
my buddy just shot a wild turkey and knowing that those can be even more dry i did a cajun injection and a kind of cajun spice rub on it then smoked it over a mix of cherry & alder ..... turned out great
will probably try the same technique with a store bough bird this year
so does frying - locks everything in
last year i brined and smoked and I think that put too much of an apple taste into the bird
my buddy just shot a wild turkey and knowing that those can be even more dry i did a cajun injection and a kind of cajun spice rub on it then smoked it over a mix of cherry & alder ..... turned out great
will probably try the same technique with a store bough bird this year
mmm, butter.Yeah, I forgot to mention that we injected it with a cajun (I think) marinade. Lots of butter too. Makes a difference from what I have heard.
Yeah, I forgot to mention that we injected it with a cajun (I think) marinade. Lots of butter too. Makes a difference from what I have heard.
Did you inject on your deep fried turkey? I was thinking of flavoring the oil (put a few heads of garlic in at very low temperature for an hour, then remove before frying), but I haven't seen any recipes for it, and I don't want to try something for the first time with 20 guests at Thanksgiving.
I roast a pretty good turkey--get a couple pounds of butter (seriously) at room temperature, mix w/ roasted garlic and a few cups of chopped herbs (sage, parsley, etc...), loosen the skin on the bird and shove huge quantities of herbed butter between the skin and meat, tighten the skin down at the seams w/ butcher's twine or toothpicks so the butter doesn't escape. That makes for a damn tasty bird, but I think I'll try deep frying it.
Did you inject on your deep fried turkey? I was thinking of flavoring the oil (put a few heads of garlic in at very low temperature for an hour, then remove before frying), but I haven't seen any recipes for it, and I don't want to try something for the first time with 20 guests at Thanksgiving.
I roast a pretty good turkey--get a couple pounds of butter (seriously) at room temperature, mix w/ roasted garlic and a few cups of chopped herbs (sage, parsley, etc...), loosen the skin on the bird and shove huge quantities of herbed butter between the skin and meat, tighten the skin down at the seams w/ butcher's twine or toothpicks so the butter doesn't escape. That makes for a damn tasty bird, but I think I'll try deep frying it.