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Brown Ale Turkey and Gravy
How to roast the Thanksgiving turkey has turned into an annual ordeal. The debate over brining alone is enough to make one consider going vegetarian. And of course there’s the finicky business of how to get the thigh and breast meat to cook to perfect—yet different—temperatures simultaneously. We knew we had been overthinking this for far too long. So we decided to skip the culinary gymnastics and instead perfected a tried-and-true method: basting. But better. We douse our bird twice—no need for constant babysitting—with a reduction of brown ale and fresh herbs, which combine to form a rich, malty base. We also use a secret ingredient in the baste: fish sauce. It adds savory depth that shows up in umami-rich gravy, made from pan drippings. And don’t worry, it doesn’t taste at all fishy. A foil wrap traps the moist heat needed to get succulent breast meat; it’s removed about halfway through to develop that crispy mahogany skin that we crave.
10
Servings
Don’t be skimpy when choosing herb sprigs. Big, leafy sprigs that are at least 4 inches long were ideal. And avoid hoppy beers, which turned unpleasantly bitter when reduced.
3½ hours
30 min active
Ingredients
-
2
medium yellow onions (1 to 1¼ pounds), peeled and cut into 8 wedges each
-
4
large sprigs fresh thyme
Directions
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01Heat the oven to 350°F with a rack in the lower middle position. In a 12-inch skillet, combine the onions, thyme, rosemary, sage, bay, garlic and beer. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to medium and simmer until reduced to ⅔ cup, about 20 minutes.
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GET DIGITAL & PRINTFirst, let me say this was a tasty and visually stunning way to make a turkey. The recipe was super easy and low stress, and the turkey was delicious. The only negative is the overwhelming fish sauce smell. My 9 year old (who loves fish) kept coming in and asking "Why does it smell like cat food?" He was not wrong, and eventually the other smells overwhelmed, but it did make for a good laugh. Had I been hosting a large group, I'm not sure everyone would be so open-minded. Next time I might try doctoring this up and subbing marmite for fish sauce.
I made this today for Thanksgiving. I wondered if the 1/4 cup of fish sauce was a mistake. I wish I had trusted my instincts. I can still taste the fish sauce hours later. The house smelled absolutely horrible while it was cooking and it didn’t taste good. I’m not sure I’ll make this again but if I do I certainly won’t use 1/4 cup fish sauce!
Hi!
I have a question, I've read through the recipe and only see 1/2 tsp of salt used for seasoning the basting liquid..could you clarify if the turkey should be seasoned all over and in the cavity?
Or is there a reason for not salting the turkey prior to cooking?
Thank you
I make this Turkey every year. I have since this recipe first came out. It’s easy. I do cook it in my electric cooker instead of the oven. I use my oven for the stuffing recipe that came out in the same issue as this Turkey recipe. Together they are amazing. I save all the juices from the turkey and use it to make the gravy. Oh my gosh! Then I use the left over turkey to make turkey pot pie the next day. I use the gravy as the filler.
I just roasted a turkey this weekend using this recipe and it was DE-LICIOUS! Our turkey was nearly 20 lbs, so I thought that I needed to slightly increase the ingredients. So, I think that affected the taste of the gravy in the end (a bit too salty and a strange aftertaste) and the family wasn't a fan. Next time I will follow the recipe exactly. I have always been terrified of ending up with a raw turkey, but a digital thermometer in the breast takes the guess work out of it. I was surprised that the turkey was done in 2:30 hours, considering how big it was. It had beautiful brown skin and even the breast was so juicy!
Can you do the beer reduction in advance? If yes, how early?