By Michael Powers
For me, the conversation around the Thanksgiving table is about as dry as the turkey. So, I was delighted last year when we were graced with some much-needed multiculturalism as a friend chimed in “I learned to cook a turkey differently. The first step is to feed the turkey wine. You know, get it drunk.”
Eyes met all around the dinner table with the same look of bewilderment. “You see, we had live turkeys where I grew up,” she said. She was a friend of the family that decided to spend the holiday with us instead of in her homeland Ecuador. After dinner, while we sat stuffed with toothpicks working, she told us about her childhood and how everything they ate came from their farm.
“Then, after it is butchered, you soak the turkey in more wine and some spices –rosemary, garlic, pepper, for two days or longer if you can. Then you cook it like you normally would. ” She described the recipe in painstaking detail, giving us the feeling that we were hearing a something that’s been handed down, generation to generation, for so long that it was in her blood as much as the wine was in the turkey’s.
“The recipe is a part of us –that’s how my mother liked to think about it,” she said, taking another sip of wine. Since telling us about this secret marinade, we begged her to recreate the ‘drunken turkey’ experience, using a store-bought turkey. The bird comes out of the marinade purple, but cooks to a golden crisp and is juicier and more flavorful than any poultry I’ve ever had.
The recipe below, compliments of www.divinecaroline.com, is close to the one I heard a year ago.
Ingredients:
One fresh turkey
Thirty bay leaves, fresh is preferable
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
Ten garlic cloves
One bunch flat leaf parsley sprigs
2 tablespoons dried thyme
2 tablespoons dried sage
Two bottles Tulocay Zinfandel
1 cup red wine vinegar
1/2 cup cognac
Red Wine Reduction Sauce
Neck, gizzard, and turkey scraps
1–2 tablespoons olive oil
One large yellow onion, coarsely chopped
Two carrots, sliced
One celery stalk, sliced
2-1/2 cups reserved marinade
1/2 cup red wine vinegar
5 cups chicken stock, plus more for deglazing
1/4 cup cream sherry
1/2 cup orange juice
Directions:
Rinse a clean, large towel or piece of bed sheet in hot water. Spread out and place turkey on it. Strew peppercorns, herbs, and garlic around and in cavities.
Tightly wrap the cloth around turkey and place it in a large heavy plastic bag (black garbage bags work great). Pour wine, vinegar, and cognac over turkey and into the cavity. Bring the bag up tightly around the turkey until meat is partially immersed in marinade. Tie the bag tightly, making sure there are no leaks. Marinate in refrigerator four to five days, turning the turkey a couple times a day.
Remove turkey from marinade and drain two hours before roasting; reserve marinade—including herbs, garlic, and peppercorns—to use in reduction sauce.
Pat turkey dry. Stuff bird with stuffing of your choice and truss or sew turkey cavity. Rub skin with a pat or two of butter. Preheat oven to 450° F. Place turkey breast side up on a roasting rack and cook for fifteen minutes to sear it. Turn the bird breast side down and reduce oven to 325° F for the rest of the roasting time (a fifteen pound turkey will take about three hours; use a meat thermometer to check for doneness). Turn it breast up for the last ten minutes to crisp breast skin.
While turkey is cooking, make the red-wine reduction marinade. This sauce is a wonderful variation on traditional gravy, and adds a great flavor to the turkey.
In a large pot, brown turkey parts in a tablespoon of olive oil. Add vegetables, a couple bay leaves, peppercorns, garlic cloves, and parsley sprigs from inside the turkey. Add two cups marinade, red wine vinegar, and chicken stock. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer at least three hours. Strain out the solids. Add salt and pepper to taste. Reduce over low heat if it is necessary to concentrate flavor.
Add cream sherry and orange juice and simmer five to ten more minutes to cook away alcohol. Taste and add salt and pepper as needed. If the sauce seems too watery, add cornstarch to thicken. When turkey is done cooking, pour off fat from roasting pan but reserve juices. Add some chicken stock to roasting pan, place over high heat, and deglaze pan. Reduce to a dark brown glaze and add to marinade. Marinade should be a beautiful reddish brown. Drizzle over carved turkey pieces.
Enjoy!
(direct link to article: http://www.divinecaroline.com/33616/38140-drunken-turkey/2)