26 November, 2016
Julie’s Perfect Roast Turkey with Mashed Potatoes & Gravy
Posted in : Get-Togethers, Main Dishes, My Holiday Table, Side Dishes on by : TetonTrekker Tags: Cooking, Pampered Chef, Thanksgiving, Turkey
Turkey and mashed potatoes go together like peas and carrots. When I roast a turkey I slow cook the potatoes and use the flavorful broth the potatoes were cooked in to make the gravy. Over the years I've read many techniques and recipes on how to cook a turkey. Taking the best parts of those reads, I've come up with this method. Many friends and family have asked for my recipe, so here it is.
- I do not like to brine, I think it adds too much salt to the bird.
- I do not use a bag, it boils the bird and gives it a different texture than roasting.
- I prefer to scrub the potatoes with a brush rather than peeling them, the skin adds flavor.
- I do not use an electric mixer for the potatoes, it gives them an odd texture.
Use a high quality, non stick roasting pan, I use the Pampered Chef Roasting Pan. I earned mine at 60% off by hosting a party with a several years ago, but even at full price it is worth every penny. Once you roast a turkey in a high quality pan you can never go back. They last, no scratches, no nicks, no peeling, and when the turkey is done I move the bird to the cutting board and put the roaster right on the stove to make the gravy. If you don't have a quality pan, any pan works with a few adjustments but be sure to keep the bird off the bottom of the pan with a rack or crumpled up foil.
Tip: Put a grocery bag in a mixing bowl to collect scraps and such, then tie bag and throw away.
Temperature is very important too, if you even suspect your oven t-stat is a little off get a thermometer designed to hang on rack inside oven. Last year my turkey did not roast correctly, dinner was late, and the turkey was not so perfect. I found that my oven was sensor was bad and it was cooking at 30+ degrees cooler than I had set it to.
Long before I started selling Pampered Chef I would tell anyone who would listen that if they buy one thing from pampered chef, buy the Mix 'N Chop. Not only is it handy in any meal with ground beef, turkey, game meat, pork, etc., I use it to mash up the roasted garlic for my potatoes and as a potato masher in large pots of mashed potatoes.
Julie’s Perfect Roast Turkey & Mashed Potatoes
Equipment
- High quality roasting pan.
- Quality Knifes
- Large Cutting Board
- Cheese Cloth
- Garlic & Brie Baker
- 3-qt. Covered Saucepan
- 4-qt. Slow Cooker
- Manual Food Processor
- Food Thermometer
Ingredients
- 1 Good Quality Whole Turkey I prefer Butterball
- 1 Cheese Cloth
- Stuffing - Recipe of your Choice
Pantry
- 6 cans Chicken Broth or Chicken Stock (2 Cartons)
Dairy
- 2 Lbs UNSALTED Butter
- 1 lb sour cream
Produce:
- 2 Leeks
- 1 Onion
- 1 Bag or Bunch Carrots
- 1 Bunch Celery
- Fresh Thyme
- Fresh Sage
- Fresh Rosemary
- Fresh Parsley
- 2 or 3 Heads Garlic
- 1 Bag Potatoes
Dried Herbs and Spices
- Bay Leaves
- Sea Salt
- Ground Pepper Corns
- White Pepper
- 2 Bottles good quality Sauvignon Blanc. Buy a brand you would serve to guests.
Instructions
9:00am:
- Remove turkey from refrigerator, let stand at room temperature for a couple hours.
9:45am:
- Preheat oven to 350º.
10:00 am:
Roast 1 or 2 bulbs garlic for potatoes:
- Cut off top of bulb, put in a small covered baker or casserole, (I use the Pampered Chef Garlic & Brie Baker), drizzle with extra virgin olive oil, sprinkle with sea salt, bake at 350º until cloves are soft, about 45 minutes to 1 hour. No covered baker? Another method is wrapping each bulb in foil and place in a muffin pan.
- Read over recipes and prepare a stuffing of your choice as directed.
10:45 am:
- In a 3-qt. Covered Saucepan combine 1½ cups each chicken broth and Sauvignon Blanc, 1 stick unsalted butter, the giblets, a bunch each of fresh sage, rosemary, and thyme. Bring to simmer. Keep on lowest flame/setting possible. If your more of a ‘little of this and a little of that’ cook, the ratios are 1 can broth, 1 stick butter, and a half bottle wine.
- Prepare roasting pan by setting the rack in the pan and adding one onion cut in large pieces, 3 large carrots cut in large pieces, 3 or 4 stalks of celery cut in large pieces, the white and little bit of the greenish white part of 1 medium leek cut into large pieces. Add the neck, 2 large or 3 medium bay leaves and a small handful of fresh parsley. If you are a garlic lover you can optionally add 4 or 5 garlic cloves. Add ¼ to ½ cup of cold water to pan, just enough to barely cover bottom so the vegetables don’t burn in first half hour.
11:00 am
- Preheat oven to 425º
- Clean, pat dry with paper towel, stuff, and truss the turkey. Generously season with fresh ground sea salt and fresh ground pepper.
- I either buy a butter ball turkey or I use my Grandma Krejci’s method of slitting a hole in the skin over each breast, separate some of the skin from the meat with the back of a wooden spoon, and inserting several pats of unsalted butter under the skin. About 1 full stick total for a 18 lb turkey.
- Place turkey in roasting pan, you may have to move around the vegies to get it to set correctly. Place a bunch each of fresh sage, rosemary, and thyme on the breast. Cut a piece of cheesecloth big enough to cover the breast and legs of the turkey. Soak the cheesecloth in the simmering broth mixture. Use tongs and a fork to take the cheese cloth out of the hot simmering mixture and position over the bird, covering the fresh herbs, breast and drumsticks, but not the sides.
- If you have two slow cookers you can use one for the extra stuffing. Coat the sides with butter, add stuffing, cook on low for 4 hours stirring every hour so it does not burn. (Thanks for the tip Dianne M.)
11:30 am:
- Place turkey in 425º oven.
Prepare mashed potatoes
- Finely chop the white part of a leek in a manual food processor.
- Squeeze the up soft part of the roasted garlic into a small mixing bowl, mush up with a Mix 'N Chop.
- In a slow cooker, add one can (1½ cups) chicken broth, the chopped leek f, the mushed up roasted garlic, and 6 – 8 large Idaho Potatoes cut into medium pieces. Do not overfill crock pot. Add more broth if needed, but do not cover with broth, the level should be about 1 to 2 inches from top of potatoes. Set slow cooker on low for 6 hours or high for 4 hours. – I used the Pampered Chef Rockcrok® Slow Cooker Stand and Rockcrok® Dutch Oven. It was perfect for 8 Idaho potatoes oh high for 4 hours.
12:00 Noon:
- Generously baste turkey using a ladle, be sure to moisten all of the cheese cloth. Close oven door and reduce temperature to 350º. Generously baste every 30 minutes (use a timer) with the broth mixture, NOT using the drippings for basting.
- Add 1½ cups each chicken broth and Sauvignon Blanc and 1 stick unsalted butter to simmering mixture as needed through out day, removing the giblets when they are done cooking. If your stove does not have a low enough setting, after simmering a bit I turn off the burner and set the pan next to the oven vent on top my stove, turning back on each time I add more stuff to the mixture.
3:30 pm: (1 Hour before Turkey is due to be done)
- Remove the cheese cloth from the turkey before basting.
- Check the potatoes, they should be soft. Drain and reserve the liquid from the slow cooker. Add 1 stick unsalted butter and one lb of sour cream. Mash and stir well, adding salt and white pepper to taste. The mashed potatoes will seem a little loose but will set up while cooing on low until dinner is served.
4:00 pm:
- Use remainder of broth mixture to baste the turkey, the roaster should have lots of liquid by now.
4:30 pm:
- Pull turkey from oven, insert meat thermometer into thickest part of Turkey thigh. It should read 180º when turkey is fully cooked. (If not done, place back in oven, baste with drippings and check again in 30 minutes.)
- Remove the turkey from pan and let sit at room temp for 30 minutes. It will continue to cook a bit as it sets.
For perfect gravy:
- Use tongs to remove all the vegies and neck from the roaster, putting them into a glass bowl to cool before trashing. Pour/strain the drippings into a gravy separator, you should have plenty of drippings for gravy. Let separate. If you do not have a separator strain into a large measuring cup or bowl and let sit until separated, then using a large spoon to scoop off the fat into another bowl.
- Put the roaster directly on stove, add several tablespoons of the fat back into the roaster, (or sauce pan if roaster is not suitable for direct cooking), and add flour to make a roux, about equal to the fat, and mix with a whisk. Simmer, whisking the roux constantly while it cooks, the mixture will begin to thin and darken after several minutes. Slowly pour the separated drippings back into the roaster, less the fat, whisking the whole time. Also add the reserved liquid from the potatoes. If you need more liquid use more chicken broth. Simmer stirring with a whisk until the gravy is at the consistency you want. Taste before seasoning, you should not need much salt and pepper if any, it picks up the salts and seasonings from the roasted bird.
- If you like giblets in the gravy chop them into small pieces and add them with the liquids.
5:00 pm:
- Enjoy!
Notes
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Iron Pan #100593
Mom, wife, computer geek, web designer, musician, board member, ski bum, bicyclist, camper, glamper, fishing woman, treasure hunter, bookkeeper, office wizard, blogger, vlogger, foodie, and Pampered Chef Independent Consultant, trekking through life in Jackson Hole, Wyoming
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