A close up of many different types of food on a table

Your Best Thanksgiving Feast Ever, Healthy, Delicious

As startling as food costs are now compared to what they’ve been in past years, turkey is still cheap compared to other types of meat. And the rest of the Thanksgiving dinner can be relatively inexpensive, too.

A close up of many different types of food on a table

The secret to enjoying a traditional feast without overspending is to plan ahead and know a few tricks.

Years ago I sat down with two highly respected professionals—a butcher and a personal chef. What I learned from John Smith, professional butcher and personal chef, Liz Tarditi and pretty much blew a hole in everything I thought I knew about buying, thawing, and preparing a turkey. Their tips and information are timeless and more valuable now than ever. 

Get the Best Turkey

Choosing the best turkey is easier said than done unless you fully understand the difference between a store brand and a name-brand bird. Just because a turkey is more expensive does not make it any better, says John. All that means is that it has a lot of advertising built into its price.

Customers don’t know that one turkey processor slaps many labels on his crop of birds. The turkeys are all the same, only the labels are different.

And now for my conversation with John the butcher:

Fresh or frozen?

JS: First, let me define a “fresh” turkey. According to the people who make the laws, turkeys can be called “fresh” even though the moisture in the bird is frozen! If you press very firmly on the bird the meat is not frozen. The turkey processors have it down to a science. They bring the temperature of the “fresh” birds down to the very legal limit before sending them off to the store two weeks before Thanksgiving.

Frozen turkeys, on the other hand, are quick-frozen immediately upon butchering. So the freshest turkey is really a frozen turkey. The freezing process has no noticeable effect on the quality of the bird.

How can we select the right turkey from the pile?

JS: First, decide what size of a bird you need (one pound per person is a rough guideline) and then select the plumpest frozen bird in that size category. Some will be slim, some fat. Some turkeys are flat-chested and some are quite bony. Choose the roundest. It’s that easy.

If a bird is skinny, it could mean it wasn’t very healthy and might be dry and tough. Bone and fat cost as much as meat so go for the least amount of waste. Remember too, that the larger the turkey the more useable meat-to-bone and fat ratio. Customers often buy a really big one and ask me to saw it in two north-to-south, through the breastbone (no charge, of course). If you do that you can save half for Christmas or share with another family.

Besides the obvious, what’s the difference between a Tom and a Hen?

JS: You’re going to love this. The turkey people who process millions of birds do not have time to do a physical exam. They separate birds by size, not gender. Birds that dress out 16 pounds or more are usually called Toms, 15 pounds and smaller are Hens.

So how about a quick recap?

JS: When choosing a turkey, don’t even look at the brand unless you own stock in the company.

  • Go for the cheapest
  • The freshest turkey is a frozen turkey
  • Pick the plumpest one you can find
  • Toms are big, and hens are small

Turkeys are a great value now, so it’s a good time to fill your freezer. I buy enough turkeys for my family during the holidays to last a year. Kept frozen and in its original plastic wrapping, a turkey can safely remain in the freezer for a year.

Prepare the Turkey Perfectly

For years, Liz Tarditi’s mother tried to kill her family with turkey. Not intentionally, of course, but invariably sometime between Thanksgiving and Christmas someone in the family developed flu-like symptoms. Mother blamed it on the weather and whatever influenza was going around but the truth is they suffered from mild food poisoning that zapped their resistance and required weeks to recover fully.

Tarditi, now a professional personal chef, says the way to avoid “the flu” and make sure the holidays are as healthy as they are happy is to practice safe food handling techniques when preparing the Thanksgiving turkey.

My conversation with Liz:

Well, now that you’ve got my attention, what’s the deal with food poisoning?

LT: Most poultry contains small amounts of salmonella bacteria that when ingested can result in a variety of afflictions all the way from slight illness to death. The way to kill salmonella in food is with heat and on surfaces with an antibacterial agent.

As a professional chef, I am required by law to handle food so as not to poison my customers, so I treat all poultry as if it has live salmonella. Unfortunately, most non-professional cooks don’t take similar precautions, so many people get sick needlessly but rarely connect with their kitchen.

Sounds scary!

EC: I can understand a restaurant following strict rules because it’s a public place. But it seems extreme for home cooks. Our parents and grandparents didn’t worry about salmonella and antibacterial cleaners, and they did okay.

LT: Yes, but think about that turkey your grandmother made. Was the white meat moist and juicy or was it dry as dust? Did she wiggle the drumstick to see if it was done? That method of cooking turkey until the meat falls off the bones (an ancient test for poultry doneness) requires at least 185 F internal temperature. That’s overkill and means white meat so dry you’ll choke on it. Reducing the cooking time and temperature so the turkey just passes the safety point (165 F) produces delectable results: perfectly moist and juicy white and dark meat.

So where do we start?

LT: You must have an effective antibacterial solution in your kitchen, but don’t spend $6 for a 12-ounce bottle of cleaner. Make it yourself: One gallon of 70 F (cool) water plus one teaspoon of liquid unscented chlorine bleach. Any warmer and the bleach evaporates; more bleach will harm some surfaces and fabrics.

Don’t get obsessive, just measure carefully and stick with this perfect, dirt-cheap recipe that will not harm wood, paint, granite, marble, or fabric. Regularly sanitize all surfaces with this bleach water, particularly those that may have come in contact with raw poultry including the inside of the refrigerator.

Okay. Here I have this great big frozen turkey. Now what?

LT: Back up a couple of hours. Clean out your refrigerator before you go shopping and make a place for a large sheet pan to catch the raw run-off drippings while it sits in the fridge. Leave the turkey wrapped and place it in the fridge on the sheet pan. Even sealed in plastic, it will drip. Let the frozen turkey thaw naturally.

It will take one day per five pounds. Don’t take it out and leave it on the counter to speed it up; don’t try to quick-thaw it by placing it into the oven at a low temperature, or in a sink of water. Don’t “blast” it at 500 F for three hours before it’s time to eat.

Thawing a turkey any other way than in the fridge on a sheet pan for several days invites trouble because it increases the chances that some bacteria will make it through the cooking process alive and well.

What if it is fully thawed several days before Thanksgiving?

LT: Even if the bird is thawed completely by say, Tuesday, just leave it fully wrapped in the refrigerator. It will still be excellent on Thursday.

What’s the best way to safely stuff a turkey?

LT: In a word? Don’t! As the bird cooks, raw juices drip into the soft, absorbent stuffing. The stuffing may be steaming hot when you spoon it out, so you think it’s fully cooked because the bird is. It’s not. Turkey must reach an internal temperature of 165º F, and so must the contaminated stuffing. It’s nearly impossible to cook a stuffed turkey to perfection and also guarantee uncontaminated stuffing.

You don’t really expect us to give up stuffing, do you?

LT: No! Prepare your stuffing as you always have but bake it in a separate foil-covered pan while the turkey’s roasting. Use some turkey stock to give it that great flavor we all know and love. After the bird is fully cooked and out of the oven, mix some of the roasting pan drippings and fat into the stuffing before you make the gravy. An unstuffed turkey cooks faster and more evenly.

What’s the easiest, and hopefully fool-proof way to roast a turkey?

LT: Set the oven to 325 F. Place the turkey in a roasting pan, season with salt and pepper and put it in uncovered. It will take about 3 hours for a 12-pound turkey; add 10-12 minutes for each additional pound, up to 6 hours total for a 25-pound bird.

Check internal temperature 2/3 through the cooking time using a meat thermometer inserted into the thigh meat. It’s done when it reads 165 F. Always sanitize the thermometer before and after you stick it in the bird. Let the bird rest for 20 minutes before carving for juicier and more flavorful meat.

Remember the Season

Build your menu around fresh stuff that is really cheap this time of year. Pumpkins, squash, onions, apples and potatoes are in season and very inexpensive right now. You won’t have to look far to find excellent recipes for butternut squash, sweet potatoes, and onions.

And think about this: How cheap is a bag of flour plus a few packets of yeast? Dirt cheap! The crowning glory of your holiday meal can be homemade bread rolls.

 

Stick to the basics

Forget all those fancy appetizers, charcuterie boards, and far-out exotic dishes that end up costing a small fortune. Most people don’t care that much for exotic fare, anyway. Stick with a traditional menu of turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes and gravy, one or two vegetables, a salad, rolls, and dessert.

If you want to impress your guests by jazzing things up a bit, try this easy soup to start off the meal:

A bowl of soup on a table
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
5 from 6 votes

3-Ingredient Butternut Squash Soup

A friend turned me on to a recipe for this semi-homemade soup that truly is one of the best soups I have ever tasted—in just 20 minutes!
Prep Time5 minutes
Cook Time15 minutes
Total Time20 minutes
Course: Soup
Cuisine: American
Servings: 6
Calories: 89kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 quart butternut soup (See NOTE 1)
  • 1 10-ounce bag frozen butternut squash cubes
  • 2 tablespoons pure maple syrup, or more to taste!
  • 1/4 cup heavy cream optional (See Notes)
  • salt, pepper to taste

Instructions

  • Pour the soup into a medium saucepan or soup pot and add the bag of frozen squash.
  • Bring to a boil, then turn the heat down to low. Allow to cook very gently, uncovered, until the squash is tender (15 minutes or so should do it, but check from time to time as you don’t want this to turn to mush).
  • Puree in a typical blender or use an immersion blender right in the pot. Add salt and pepper, if any, to taste.
  • Add the cream if you choose to include this optional ingredient.
  • Stir in maple syrup.
  • You’re done, Einstein. I call you that because this soup, served with a dollop of sour cream and croutons, will make your friends and family think you’re a genius.
  • Serving suggestion: Serve with a dollop of sour cream and croutons

Notes

1. I find Pacific Butternut Squash Soup in a quart-size box at my supermarket, KingSoopers, and also at Trader Joe's. There are other brands.
2. A bag of frozen butternut squash cubes is perfect for this soup, so much easier than cubing fresh squash—however, fresh that you have soften in boiling water prior to starting this recipe, is certainly an option. 
3. Adding heavy cream gives this soup a delicious velvety richness.
4. Nutritional values are without the added cream.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cup | Calories: 89kcal | Carbohydrates: 23g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 7mg | Potassium: 571mg | Fiber: 3g | Sugar: 7g | Vitamin A: 16784IU | Vitamin C: 33mg | Calcium: 83mg | Iron: 1mg

John Smith is the author of the book “Confessions of a Butcher: Eat Steak on a Hamburger Budget and Save.” Chef Liz Tarditi is a professional personal chef. She provides delicious, home-cooked gourmet meals for busy clients in their homes.

 


 

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4 replies
  1. Deb R. says:

    5 stars
    Even though I’ve got a good 46 years of Thanksgivings and Christmases behind me, I still learned a few things here. Buying the roundest turkey makes sense the way the butcher explains it. And that difference between a tom and hen — that was eyeopening! I was always bothered by how many surfaces the 22-lb turkeys I handled had to touch and I was always obsessive about clean up. But is there anything that should be done to the turkey itself? I pat it down but don’t wash it as I was told once that spreads germs. Also, I cook mine in a roasting bag. It takes less time and all those juices stay right in the bag. And last of all, I actually do my turkey the day before, slice it, put it in a large roasting pan, pour juices over it (from that roasting bag) and reheat the next day. That way, all the turkey mess is cleaned up and gone from the kitchen the day before.

    Reply
    • Cathy down on the farm... says:

      THANK YOU for the great tips, Mary. I learned some things, too, to put my mind at ease after 45 years of cooking Thanksgiving Dinner. My 20 pound turkey is thawing as we speak. I, too, make my turkey (and prep the rest of the sides) a day before Thanksgiving. I make my mac and cheese in a crock pot and just let it go on Thanksgiving Day. I am grateful for your wonderful tips, Mary. Happy Thanksgiving and God Bless.

      Reply
  2. Luisa says:

    5 stars
    Thank you for a very helpful article. Everything you’d want to know is in it, whether you’re a first-timer or a veteran cook. Happy Thanksgiving, Mary!

    Reply

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