Your turkey timeline: what to do and when for the perfect holiday roast
No need for turkey terror
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(At least) two weeks before the feast: order your bird
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If you’re ordering a fresh turkey from your butcher or the supermarket, do it well in advance. As a guide, look for approximately 450g (15.8oz) of (whole, uncooked) turkey per person so, for example, a 4–5kg (8.8–11lb) bird will feed six to eight people. Buy the best you can afford and look for free-range, high welfare birds which are more ethical and will taste better too as they’ve had time and space to reach maturity.
(At least) two weeks before the feast: order your bird
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In the meantime: check you’ve got the right kit
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Sharpen your knives
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Invest in a thermometer
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An instant-read digital thermometer with a wide temperature range is hands down the one thing that will make a big difference between a perfectly juicy turkey and a sad, dry bird. Alternatively get a meat probe with a dial that’s easily readable through the oven door. A lot of turkeys come out dry is because recommendations are to cook poultry to at least 70°C (158°F). Leg meat is great at this temperature (it's best cooked to 74°C/165°F) but breast meat will be overdone (ideally it shouldn't get beyond 66°C/151°F). The best and most accurate way to tell when your turkey is ready is by internal temperature.
1–3 days before the feast: pick up or defrost
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Make a list (and check it twice)
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Untruss the bird
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2 days before: brine...
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...or dry brine
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However (and this is a big however), brining might banish the dreaded dryness, but the extra water absorbed can dilute the turkey’s flavour which is a shame if you’ve paid for a top-of-the-range gobbler. An alternative is dry brining which sounds technical but really just means salting. The meat will come out slightly less juicy but still tender and far more flavourful. To dry brine, use 1tsp of coarse salt per 500g (1.1lb) meat. You can rub it over the skin but for best results, carefully tease up the skin over the breast meat and rub the salt between skin and flesh.
The day before: let it dry
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Make stuffing but don’t stuff
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Stuffing the turkey cavity is another route straight to cardboard-y breast meat. By the time it’s cooked through, the bird will be overdone. Instead, make your stuffing into balls and add them to the roasting tray for the last half hour of cooking or make a whole, breadcrumb-topped dish and serve it separately. Inside the turkey, just put a few lemon slices, whole garlic cloves and sprigs of woody herbs, making sure there’s plenty of room for air to circulate.
Consider jointing...
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...or spatchcocking
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Alternatively spatchcocking (removing the turkey’s backbone and spreading it flat) means that the legs – the part that needs the most cooking – are more exposed than in a whole bird. They will therefore cook quicker without needing the extra time that dries out the breast. Two bonuses are more crispy skin as none of it is hidden underneath and a faster cooking time meaning no one has to get up super early. You can ask your butcher to spatchcock the bird for you.
On the day: preheat the oven
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Ice, ice, maybe?
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If you are absolutely determined to cook a whole turkey (and who can blame you) you could try this one, weird trick to prevent overcooked breast meat. Renowned food scientist Harold McGee recommends putting ice packs on your turkey’s breast for about 15 minutes before putting it in the oven (use a pack of frozen peas if you don't have an ice pack). This means you begin cooking the leg and breast meat from different temperatures, allowing the breast to come up to temperature slower and ensuring it’s not overcooked.
Add fat and flavour
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Or wrap it up...
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Alternatively, soak a muslin cloth in melted butter and wrap it tightly round the whole bird. This method (as recommended by the experts at the UK's Leiths School of Food and Wine) gives a beautifully even browning.
...in bacon?
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A good blast of heat to get things going
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Keep basting
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We recommend basting the bird every half hour or so. Basting doesn't actually keep things moist but it does help even browning. Use room temperature oil rather than the juices in the roasting tin which will only hasten the cooking.
Boil the giblets
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Take it out and let it rest
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Start checking about 45 minutes before your turkey is due to be done. It's ready when you can piece the thickest part of the thigh with a skewer and the juices run clear, or when the thermometer reads 74°C (165°F) in the thickest part of the leg. Take it out of the oven, cover loosely with foil (too tight and you'll loose the crisp skin) and let it rest. It needs at least 30 minutes so the juices can redistribute themselves but can sit tight for up to an hour while you finish off your vegetables and accompaniments.
Make gravy
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To make the best-ever gravy, remove everything (juices and little browned bit of meat included) from the roasting tray, except for a couple of tablespoons of fat. Add to a saucepan on the hob, pour in a glass of wine and let it bubble gently, scraping at all those delicious roasted bits to get the flavour. In a separate saucepan, melt a knob of butter and add a tablespoon of flour. Cook for a minute then add the roasting tray juices and stir vigorously to avoid lumps. Add some giblet stock, simmer until thickened slightly and season to taste.
Finish the sides
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Time to shine
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Carve like a pro
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The secret to an elegant plateful of meat is to break the turkey down into its constituent parts. Remove the legs and wings – cut to the bone, twist slightly until you feel the joint pop out and slice the skin. Then cut downwards through the centre of the breast to the breastbone. Keep going, angling the knife slightly so it stays as close to the bone as possible until you have removed the breast. Repeat on the other side. Collect any juices that escape and add them to the gravy.
Plate up
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Take stock
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After the main feast has been enjoyed, there will probably be a generous amount of leftovers. You can make stock with the turkey bones and carcass which freezes beautifully if you don’t want to use it immediately. Simmer them with onion, carrot, celery, bay leaf, peppercorns and herbs for a couple of hours then strain and reduce.
Discover more make-ahead meals perfect for your freezer here
Enjoy the leftovers
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A sandwich of leftover turkey meat is one of the great pleasures of any festive occasion (try this version with gravy mayo). But for something a bit different, you could use any extra meat in a casserole, noodle soup or, one of our favourites, a pie which also makes use of surplus vegetables.
Get the recipe for turkey pie with a roast potato topping here
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