by alabubba » Thu Nov 29, 2007 10:00 pm
I have had fried turkey before, and it was so good. I was planning to fry another last Thursday, but the weather here turned rainy and I didn't have a good covered place outside to set up the turkey fryer.
But, I went ahead and prepared my turkey as if it would be deep fried, by injecting it with an injectable marinade (my own secret recipe) and letting the bird rest in the cooler for several hours. Rather than deep fry it, when I got it out of the cooler, I patted it down with barbecue rub (also my own secret recipe, you can ask but I'll never tell 'cause I don't wanna have to, well, you know... I don't wanna do nobody no harm), trussed it up, and cooked it in my rotisserie (the largest model of Showtime rotisserie, by the way).
After the 14 lb bird was completely devoured (nothing left but the carcass by noon the next day) my sons (22, 18 and 16) said it was the best, tatiest, most succulent turkey they had ever eaten BY FAR and would I please cook another (Friday), because they weren't even close to having had enough of that good turkey! They have NEVER had that kind of response to turkey before.
So yes, deep fried turkey, done properly, is absolutely delicious, but I now think that the moisture and flavor from a good injected marinade is a big part of that. The other major factor is that the hot oil immediately seals the moisture in the bird, keeping it very moist even in the breast, which can otherwise easily become dried out; plus it also cooks the bird quickly.
Well, what I discovered last Thursday was that the rotisserie also keeps the juices inside the bird, and is another reasonably quick cook as well, at right about two hours, so nothing was at all dried out. Plus, no dangerous pot of hot oil to deal with, etc.
If a camel is a horse designed by a committee, then a consensus forecast is a camel's behind.