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Turkey post-mortem: science vs. bird


paulraphael

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I just cooked what's probably my dozenth turkey, using variations on the same method, and my 4th since getting a fancy multiprobe thermocouple thermometer. As I gloated in that former EG post, the thermocouple-headed hydra promised to vanquish any remaining shreds of stress or guesswork.

 

Sadly, it doesn't. It works almost perfectly with more geometrically simple dinners (rib roasts, etc.). But there's something about a bird that defies reliable measurement, at least for me and my various thermometers.

 

This year, I put more care than usual into probe placement.  One of them went into what I thought was the thickest part of the thigh, inserted horizontally from the front. The other went into what I thought was the thickest part of the breast, also horizontally from the front. The third was an ambient probe for oven temperature. 

 

I think that ambient probe did its job, which was to tell me that the oven in my new house doesn't actually reach 500°F. Even when you crank it to 525. My IR thermometer concurred. This was an embarrassing thing to notice after roasting in it for 2 years. 

 

The worse part was that despite all my tricks, the breast probe was galloping off into the 160°F range (target was 143) while the thigh languished in the low 140s (target was 147). I messed with my foil barding and with rotating the bird and with switching between bake and broil to get the top to brown adequately, and finally just resigned myself to an overcooked bird. Which for me justifies creating an awkward moment for guests as I commit seppuku at the dining table with a carving knife. 

 

But alas—good news for me, bad news for the thermometer—the bird was close to perfect. I'm happy with the result, but not the process. It would have been easier and lower stress to just eyeball it. 

 

I have not tested the probes yet in boiling water. My strong guess is that they'll be fine. Within a degree or so. Which means that the problem, as it usually is, is with how to put them in the right place.

 

Does anyone have the holy grail of poultry probing wisdom? Or should I surrender, and just eyeball it the old fashioned way?

 

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Notes from the underbelly

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I have one with a probe that stays in the bird and a cable to the readout/alarm box.

I graph the temps - which allows much better control of when the bird will finish.

as it gets close, I use an insta-read thermometer - checking in various places white/dark/thick/thin/stuffing to fine tune "it's done"

Thanksgiving DinnerPlan.pdf

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the 'in oven probe' I put in the classic 'thickest part of the breast at the leg area'

as it nears done, I check with the insta-read.

my method is simply to check multiple places - if I see wildly 'off' temp one can be pretty sure one poked in a 'goofy' spot.

2-3 spots midway down the breast - neck to tail.

the leg is the trickiest - because the tendons/etc limit one's choice of 'spots I wanna' check'

if the bird has been trussed, checking the thigh is pretty easy.

I go straight into the stuffed cavity, the length of the probe . . .

 

if you present the bird, then take it to the kitchen for carving . . . my trick is to wrench off both legs and put them back in a hot oven on a rack for best circulation - bringing the dark meat up to a full 160'F temp while carving . . .

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@paulraphael

 

Im sure you knew this before this experiment  , and now have it confirmed :

 

'''   the breast probe was galloping off into the 160°F   '''

 

'''   the thigh languished in the low 140s ''

 

yet , ''  the bird was close to perfect ''

 

and you've thought about probe placement 

 

'''   Which means that the problem, as it usually is, is with how to put them in the right place '''

 

you are asking the probes to confirm digitally that the bird is doing well , and will end up ' close to perfect '

 

but the bird was perfect , and

 

'''  eyeball it the old fashioned way? '''

 

w a digital guide is the way Id go .  

 

did you Thermapen the bird , in white//dark places just before carving ?

 

that would have been interesting information .

 

I  think digital information is an interesting guide 

 

the WHPS   ( Yoder-ing )  is done by a friend , of a different age 

 

and he sends me digital curves of the various Cooks.   I have no idea what to make of them 

 

but Im sure Id not rely on them heavily , unless the outcome

 

on the plate 

 

was pretty bad.

 

 

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