Food

Sam Hayward’s Roast Brined Turkey

Following this roast brined turkey recipe will yield a flavorful, moist, and succulent bird. Try it this Thanksgiving!

A roasted turkey is placed on a white platter, garnished with fresh herbs, grapes, and figs. The platter is set on a dark tablecloth.

Sam Hayward's Roast Brined Turkey

Photo Credit: Heath Robbins

Following these roast brined turkey instructions will yield a moist, succulent bird. You can brine a 14-pound turkey overnight in the refrigerator in a large lobster pot. Or, if you’re cooking a very large bird, you can brine it outside in a large, clean picnic cooler filled with the brine and a few bags of ice to keep the temperature cold. You’ll need to double the brine recipe in this case. Secure the lid with heavy weights or a bungee cord; then let the cooler sit outside overnight. The high concentration of salt and sugar in the solution will keep it from freezing.

Total Time

3-1/2-4-1/2 hours, depending on size of bird, plus 12 hours brining minutes

Hands-on Time

40 minutes minutes


For the brine:

Ingredients

2-1/4 cups kosher or sea salt
1 cup granulated sugar
3 bay leaves
3 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tablespoon black peppercorns, cracked with the bottom of a skillet
2-3 sprigs each fresh rosemary, thyme, and sage
2-1/2 gallons cold water

Instructions

The evening before you roast the turkey, mix the first eight ingredients with the water in your container, stirring until the salt and sugar have completely dissolved. Place the whole turkey in the brine, breast side down, and move it around a bit to expel air from the cavity. Place the container in the refrigerator (or outside, if it’s cold, remembering to add ice and secure the lid); then let the turkey rest in the brine 12 hours.

Notes

A note from Sam: “The government suggests much higher cooking temperatures, as high as 165°, to kill food-borne disease organisms, usually resulting in a cooked texture somewhere between beef jerky and compressed sawdust. A conscientious local poultry farmer, careful handling procedures, a clean kitchen, and brining all help to reduce the risk of food-borne disease in poultry, rendering such appalling overcooking unnecessary.”

For the roast:

Ingredients

1 12- to 15-pound turkey, preferably fresh
Extra-virgin olive oil

Instructions

Remove the bird from the brine, and drain it well before roasting. Discard the brine.

Preheat your oven to 400° and set a rack to the second-to-lowest position. Tie the ends of the turkey’s leg bones together with soft twine. Massage the skin well with plenty of olive oil. (Thanks to the brining, you don’t need to sprinkle it with salt and pepper.)

Place the turkey, breast side down, in a large roasting pan. Transfer to the oven and immediately reduce the heat to 325°. Roast the bird this way for about 10 minutes per pound, basting occasionally. Remove the turkey from the oven, turn it over onto its back, return it to oven, and continue roasting for an additional 5 or 6 minutes per pound, basting occasionally.

The bird is fully cooked when an instant-read thermometer registers 150° when inserted into the crease between the thigh and the lower breast, the legs move easily in their hip sockets, and juices run clear when the inner thigh meat is pierced with a meat fork.

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  1. Free up your oven and give the guys something to cook. We cook our turkey in a roasting pan on our Weber gas grill. The first year we tried it, we cooked two turkeys: one on the grill and one in the oven. After the turkey tasting, the turkey on the grill won hands down compared to the oven roasted turkey.

  2. Great concept. I also add a gallon of apple juice, an orange cut in half, 2 cups brown sugar and a bottle of teriyaki sauce to the brine!

  3. Simply use 1 box Bell’s Natural Seasoning instead of chopping and blending fresh sage, rosemary and thyme. The natural antioxidant properties of Bell’s seasoning blend seemed to keep the turkey fresh when stored in the refrigerator.

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