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TURKEY BRINE 
6 quarts water (24 cups)
3 1/2 cups kosher or sea salt
4 cups sugar
2 tablespoons cracked peppercorns
7-8 cloves garlic
5 bay leaves, crumbled coarsely

Wash and dry a cooler which is large enough to hold the turkey you will be placing in the brine. (Or use a food grade plastic bag made for the purpose, available at your supermarket; this method will require only half the amount of brine.)

Prepare brine by combining ingredients in a stainless steel or enamel pan (do not use aluminum). Bring to a boil, stirring occasionally, until all of the sugar and salt are dissolved. Allow brine too cool. Pour into cooler (or bag, if using).

Add 2-3 quarts of ice; enough to bring the temperature of the brine to about 35°F degrees. (Or, if using a plastic bag, add 1 1/2 quarts cold water and refrigerate the brine until it reaches this temperature.)

Remove giblets, neck, etc. from inside turkey and refrigerate to use later on for making gravy, stuffing, or broth. Wash turkey well, inside and out. Rub inside of turkey liberally with additional kosher or sea salt.

Prepare sufficient brine to submerge turkey entirely. Recipe may be doubled, if required (or halved, if using a plastic bag for the brining).

When the brine is cold, add the turkey to the cooler or plastic bag. Keep the turkey cold (35°F or below). This can be accomplished by adding ice, or placing the cooler or plastic bag in a cold place. Check temperature to be sure it does not go above 40°F. (Note: A frozen turkey can be brined until it has thawed).

When ready to roast the turkey, remove from brine and rinse thoroughly in cold water. Pat dry with a clean towel. Rub turkey skin with 2 tablespoons melted butter combined with 1 tablespoon olive oil and 1 teaspoon soy sauce. Bacon drippings can be added for extra flavor. Sprinkle turkey with garlic powder, salt, pepper, and paprika.

Proceed to Roast Turkey.

Submitted by: CM

recipe reviews
Turkey Brine
   #185343
 Donnalee Milakovich (California) says:
I have been using this brine recipe for 15 years now. I put it in the brine on Monday night and remove it on Thanksgiving morning. Then I cook it on the Weber charcoal grill. Absolutely fabulous. Everyone raves about it!!!
 #160619
 Rmwitzky (Texas) says:
As for wild or heritage breed turkeys, they aren't pumped full of salt water. Low and slow, with brining and aromatics in the cavities. My personal secret is a Nesco type free standing oven. The heating elements are in the sides of the oven, so the legs and thighs get a stronger blast of heat than the breast. If the breast doesn't brown, stick the whole liner pan under the broiler for a few minutes.
   #146929
 Caren (Florida) says:
I've been using this recipe to brine our TG bird since '07. It's hands down the BEST, most delicious way to cook a turkey (and trust, we've tried many methods)! Some years we brine it for 3 days, sometimes 2 (some years are busier than others!). We use a "cube" cooler on wheels, no bag, just let the bird float in the brine and ice. To monitor temperature, we have a digital aquarium thermometer and add ice to the cooler as needed. Relatively easy recipe and procedure. Everyone that eats our brined turkeys says it's the best they've every had :)
 #135409
 Cheri (Minnesota) says:
Wild turkey is great and a wonderful treat! I have been hunting and roasting wild turkey for the past 15 years. It is all about how you prepare and roast your wild turkey... I have never had one that tasted like a board. What's a board taste like? Can't imagine I would like it either. I brine, rinse well, stuff the cavity with apples, celery, your favorite herbs, and onions. I roast (covered, sometimes I add foil on the roasting pan to hold moisture and then put on the cover even with my stainless steel roasting pan) at a high heat 425°F for 30-45 minutes and reduce to 300 for next 1-3 hrs depending on size/age of bird. The wild flavor is wonderful... it is all about preparing the meat properly, whether it be a wild goose, venison, squirrel, duck, or wild turkey. I'm making one right now for a Christmas gathering. Bon appetite!!
   #134085
 Amy (California) says:
I love this brine recipe!!! I have been using it for years!
 #133978
 Char (Ohio) says:
CJ. Wild turkeys is best if you fillet the breast bread it and fry it fresh. But if you use a turkey bag to roast it also turns out great but be sure to add butter to the cavity because really no fat on the bird. Season with what ever you like. Good luck and enjoy.
 #114726
 John Lane (Philippines) says:
Next year I'm going to use Alla's method. Perfect way to keep it cold and out of the way. I like the butter trick too.
   #114000
 Leland (Ohio) says:
I have used this recipe for 3 years now! Always a hit!!!!
 #113785
 The Bith (California) says:
C.J. A good cook can make even that board taste good. Make it right and that wild turkey will be the best you've ever had. You don't have to waste your time or gas looking for a "Honeysuckle White" (laughing).
   #113612
 Sg (United States) says:
With all the "running", Wild turkeys are to tough to prepare for TG dinner. The only edible part is the breast and I like to can that to use for turkey soup, noodles or pot pie. I agree with Treehuggerdon. Go buy a bird.
 #113535
 Treehuggerdon (Ohio) says:
CJ... put the wild turkey on a board, cook it, then eat the board... wild turkeys are awful... go buy a Honeysuckle white.
 #113481
 Alla (Colorado) says:
Sounds like the path I am going to take, enjoyed your comments.
 #112866
 CJ (Wisconsin) says:
I'm making my first wild turkey, I have made several store bought one's before but never a wild game turkey. I was wondering if anyone had some good suggestions for preparing the "wild game turkey". It's in my freezer right now.
 #192834
 J. Brecht (Michigan) replies:
Soak turkey overnight in milk.
   #89334
 Sandy (California) says:
I have never had such rave reviews for a turkey no one could stop talking about it. I added the all spice and brined it for 2 days.
 #83601
 Alla (California) says:
The first year my husband and I were married, I hosted the Thanksgiving dinner. Good news: the bird was delicious, a 25 lb. for a party of 10, and not enough left over for even one "day-after-sandwich... my fave! Bad new: I was made the designated turkey maker for going on 17 years. A few tricks I've come up with along the way:

1) always place a whole stick of butter under the skin of each breast.. (yeah, the turkey's :)
2) make your own "flavored butter", like garlic and soy sauce..(you can use your imagination to come up with endless variations), by adding the ingredients to softened butter, than freezing the butter before using. Use foil or waxed paper to shape the butter into rolls, making it much easier to place under the skin when you are ready to cook
3) "brining" the bird makes it super juicy and flavor-able. I used the "trash bag" method, but placed the bag in the cooler (on wheels). This allows you to make sure that the bird is remaining cold, by packing the cooler with ice. And, you can "brine" evenly,by periodically opening the bag, and "massaging" the bird. I had a lot of fun rolling the cooler around the kitchen for 2 days.. quite the bonding experience. And best of all (aside from a phenom. juicy bird), I didn't have to waste precious refrigerator space... Hope these tips help.. enjoy!

 

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