Sorry for the lack of posts past few days, been traveling and prepping for the most important day of the year: Thanksgiving 2006, or “the one where Jeremy smokes a whole turkey (and doesn’t get high).” My beloved wife bought me a BBQ smoker for my birthday this past year, and I’m putting it to work tomorrow for gobble gobble time.I’ve read a few turkey smoking recipes although at the end of the day it comes down to these simple steps:
- Brine the turkey (I generally go for a very simple brine myself – while I am certain that brining matters, I am uncertain that different brines have a major impact on the flavor) overnight. I’d prefer a full 24 hours, but since my time machine is still on the fritz, I’m going with about 14.
Air-dry the turkey. Again, this would ideally be almost a full day just resting in the fridge, but it’ll probably be a pat-down and about 2 hours at the most.- Rub the turkey. Don’t be filthy people. I’m going to use roughly the same recipe I do for chickens, which is a spice mix combined with enough olive oil to give a paste-like consistency. For my devoted readers, I happily provide JT’s Super-Mega-Awesome Chicken Rub Mix freely here:
1 part Paprika
1 part Chili powder
1.5 parts Salt (I like to use both fine and coarse salts)
1 part freshly ground Black pepper
1 part cumin
1 part dried oregano (can be substituted for another dry herb as you’d like)
1/2 part sugar (or brown sugar)
1/2 part onion powder - Smoke the sucker. I’m using apple wood chunks. I’ve read that about 25-35 minutes per pound is appropriate, so our bird should be good in about 5-6 hours.
Eat.- Drink.
- Be Merry.
- Fall asleep.
Click here for pictures from my cousin and I cooking a 25-pound bird a few years ago. Happy Thanksgiving everybody!