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Can we talk turkeys?
With Thanksgiving and Christmas on the horizon, turkeys will soon be more available in the supermarkets.
This is my second winter in the Villages and my first with a freezer. Back in MA, I would fill up my freezer with 4 or 5 turkeys when they went on sale in November and cook them over the winter and spring. I would make up soup and turkey pies, too. I was disappointed in my results last fall - the turkeys just seemed tough. In 41 years of cooking, I cannot remember having such abject turkey failures as I did last winter. Is there a better brand of turkey to buy down here? I am used to Shady Brooks and Butterballs. Are there turkey sales down here? In the past, I could find them on special for 59 or 69 cents a pound. My pantry is already filling up with stuffing, gravy and dressing makings. |
You must have a huge freezer. For whatever reason, meats in Florida are not as good as what you can get in New England.
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I think the beef is higher quality but lamb and turkey not so much. |
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we also hail from MA...and I pick up a couple extra turkeys when they're on sale at 59 cents and put them in a small freezer in the garage.
when we lived up north we'd buy a fresh bird for Thanksgiving...there is a turkey farm in Wildwood...they may offer fresh, but certainly not at 59 cents a pound I just cooked the last turkey we had in our chest freezer and it was tender...don't recall the brand, bought it at Publix last fall I've been purchasing the turkeys at Publix, but it's not Butterball (which I always bought up north)...haven't really noticed any difference in the birds...all good We still roast it in the oven (and stuff it) and we make turkey soup from the carcass and freeze that. As far as other meats, we drive down to Clermont to a BJ's (we always liked BJ's meats when we were up in MA)...I hear that a BJ's will be coming to Summerfield, which will be closer There is a meat specialty store in Wildwood on 301, called Best Meats...we'll go there when we want a crown roast or 'choice'...once in a while Winn-Dixie or Publix will run a sale on 'choice' FL has a lot to offer, but it's different in so many ways from MA |
You can try a brine if you have the extra time and are adventurous.
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Perhaps of interest to only me. Thanks giving was made a national holiday by Abe Lincoln. Imagine done at the end of the civil war a great act to bring the nation together. A good TRUE story, perhaps, useful to bring up on Thanksgiving should guests get out of hand. Used to be foods. Far from an expert but it seems to me where we used to live, in NY Florida oranges were cheaper than in Florida. Lamb chops are way higher in Florida. Deli? |
Yep, lots of tough old birds in Florida!
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I just go to the Ocala Forest with my 12 gauge and blast one.
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There was a joke that hopefully not all have heard. Two cannibals are chatting over a huge boiling pot. One says to the other I hate my mother in law. The other suggest then just eat the soup. |
We brined for as long as I can remember. Always used fresh, never frozen, so cost is usually more than $1.50 a pound. After 40 years of being on the road coaching kids Thanksgiving hockey Tournaments, Thanksgiving can be a challenge when taking it on the road. Now the boys are on their own quest of coaching, that left me solo for the last two thanksgivings.
Two years ago while shopping at TJ’s I found their fresh already brined turkeys. Couple of other posters also recommended them. While not cheap so worth it to have somebody else use the perfect brine, with a fresh turkey. It comes out so well I don’t think I’d ever take the time to brine another turkey again. |
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:bigbow::bigbow: |
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