We hope everyone had a wonderful Thanksgiving with family & friends and found something to be thankful for!
XO,
Holly
Friday, November 26, 2010
Turkey Time!
What an AMAZING turkey turn out! This was mine and Jason's very first turkey we both cooked and it was a huge success. It had a really great golden brown crispy skin with the juiciest meat! The flavors from the seasoning went throughout the entire turkey. I HIGHLY recommend slow roasting. Here's what you need below to get started and I'll walk you through the whole process! We used an 11 lb turkey for our group of 7 yesterday.
*First, the night before Thanksgiving, we brinned our turkey. We used a HUGE pot. Place 3 gallons of cold water, 2 cups Kosher salt, 1 cup sugar, 4-5 Thyme sprigs (whole), handful whole peppercorns, several garlic cloves (halved with skin); stir to make sure salt and sugar dissolve. Place turkey in water, cover, and let sit overnight. Do not exceed 12 hours. (We did ours for roughly 9 hours). Doing this will help keep meat moist during cooking, along with another step you will see below. (Don't forget to take the neck and giblets out of the carcass.
Start by preheating your oven to 475 degrees and get the following together:
Roasting Rack
Washed and dice celery and carrots;
Quarter chopped sweet onions;
Placed under turkey rack to mix with drippings!
Room temp. stick of salted butter;
Fresh Thyme & Sage;
Garlic Powder;
Oregano;
Mash together in butter
Separate skin from meat without tearing;
Gently go as far as your hand will fit;
May need to gently slice cartilage with knife to get it started.
Take a big "gob" of butter mixture onto fork and place between the skin and meat. Then take your finger and spread butter underneath by pressing top of skin and "smooshing" the butter towards the neck. Don't worry if you can't get the butter close to neck or all the way down the breast of the bird because during cooking it will melt down throughout the bird. Doing this will also help keep your meat extra moist and not to dry out!
Place your turkey on the roasting rack above the vegetables. Generously sprinkle bird with pepper. (Since we used salted butter instead of unsalted, we didn't put extra salt on the outside). Doing this will help "crisp" up the skin. Once done and your oven is preheated to 475 degrees, place turkey in oven an cook for 20 minutes only. Yep, 20 minutes. This will "seal" the turkey's moisture and you won't have to bast it for the remaining cooking process - no joke.
Take turkey out of oven after 1st 20 mins;
The string you see here is not "trussing" it;
This string came with the turkey and helped with lifting it off the rack onto a plate when it was finished.
See how the very tips of the wings got really brown?
I covered just the tips with a little foil for the remaining cooking time.
While bird is resting, lower oven to 250 degrees.
You want to slow cook your bird so it doesn't cook to fast because this will dry it out.
Your turkey should start looking golden brown like this after the first 20 minutes on high temperature.
When oven is at 250 degrees, put turkey back in and cook for about 3 hours, 40 mins. (for 11 lb) or until breast reads 170 degrees, thighs read 180 degrees and juices run clear. Here's times for other lbs. Regardless of pounds - make sure internal temperate is at these degrees.
10 lbs - 3 hours. 20 mins.
12 lbs - 4 hours
13 lbs - 4 hours 20 mins.
14 lbs - 4 hours 40 mins.
15 lbs - 5 hours
16 lbs - 5 hours 20 mins.
17 lbs - 5 hours 40 mins.
18 lbs - 6 hours
19 lbs - 6 hours 20 mins.
20 lbs - 6 hours 40 mins.
Once complete, lift turkey out of roasting pan and place on platter. (We forgot a big turkey platter at home, so we had to use the biggest plate we could find.) Start carving by taking the legs off first, then starting in the middle of the bird, at the top, slice the breast thin.
*First, the night before Thanksgiving, we brinned our turkey. We used a HUGE pot. Place 3 gallons of cold water, 2 cups Kosher salt, 1 cup sugar, 4-5 Thyme sprigs (whole), handful whole peppercorns, several garlic cloves (halved with skin); stir to make sure salt and sugar dissolve. Place turkey in water, cover, and let sit overnight. Do not exceed 12 hours. (We did ours for roughly 9 hours). Doing this will help keep meat moist during cooking, along with another step you will see below. (Don't forget to take the neck and giblets out of the carcass.
Start by preheating your oven to 475 degrees and get the following together:


Quarter chopped sweet onions;
Placed under turkey rack to mix with drippings!

Fresh Thyme & Sage;
Garlic Powder;
Oregano;
Mash together in butter

Gently go as far as your hand will fit;
May need to gently slice cartilage with knife to get it started.

Place your turkey on the roasting rack above the vegetables. Generously sprinkle bird with pepper. (Since we used salted butter instead of unsalted, we didn't put extra salt on the outside). Doing this will help "crisp" up the skin. Once done and your oven is preheated to 475 degrees, place turkey in oven an cook for 20 minutes only. Yep, 20 minutes. This will "seal" the turkey's moisture and you won't have to bast it for the remaining cooking process - no joke.

The string you see here is not "trussing" it;
This string came with the turkey and helped with lifting it off the rack onto a plate when it was finished.

I covered just the tips with a little foil for the remaining cooking time.
While bird is resting, lower oven to 250 degrees.
You want to slow cook your bird so it doesn't cook to fast because this will dry it out.
Your turkey should start looking golden brown like this after the first 20 minutes on high temperature.
When oven is at 250 degrees, put turkey back in and cook for about 3 hours, 40 mins. (for 11 lb) or until breast reads 170 degrees, thighs read 180 degrees and juices run clear. Here's times for other lbs. Regardless of pounds - make sure internal temperate is at these degrees.
10 lbs - 3 hours. 20 mins.
12 lbs - 4 hours
13 lbs - 4 hours 20 mins.
14 lbs - 4 hours 40 mins.
15 lbs - 5 hours
16 lbs - 5 hours 20 mins.
17 lbs - 5 hours 40 mins.
18 lbs - 6 hours
19 lbs - 6 hours 20 mins.
20 lbs - 6 hours 40 mins.

Hope you enjoy as much as we enjoyed making this turkey!
~Made by: Holly & Jason
Roasted Veggies

At Thanksgiving, people always seem to have too many starches and not enough veggies...so I made some roasted vegatables to make me feel a little better about not being healthy on this holiday. I thought I had a big enough pan for all of them, but I ended up having to divide them into 2 separate dishes. And when I'm packing everything up in the car yesterday, I noticed I forgot to put my pearl onions in the mix! Oh well. Here's what I did:
Ingredients:
1 lb Zuchinni
1 lb Yellow Squash
1 lb Broccoli Florets
1 Red Bell Pepper
3 Shallots
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Salt
Pepper
Make it:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees;
Wash all veggies;
Chop/slice zuchinni, squash, shallots in quarter sizes; place in casserole dish;
Slice red pepper in thin strips, place in casserole dish with broccoli;
Sprinkle salt and pepper over all veggies;
Drizzle EVOO over all veggies and toss;
Bake in oven for 10 minutes;
Remove and toss again;
Bake additional 20 minutes;
Voila!
~Made by: Holly
Potatoes Au Gratin

Jason really wanted to make some type of scalloped/potatoes au gratin this Thanksgiving. They turned out really good. However, he realized he forgot to get some green onions from the store to put into it and garnish it with, but it's included in the recipe below and we think would really add to this dish!
Ingredients:
2 cups heavy whipping cream
1 cup gruyère cheese, shredded
4 sprigs of Thyme, off stem, chopped
Salt & Pepper, to taste
2 cloves fresh garlic, chopped
3 Tbsp. chives, in mixture, some for garnish
2 lbs. Russet Potatoes, sliced thin
1-1/2 cup Parmesan Cheese
Make It:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees
Wash, peel, and slice potatoes thin;
Combine all ingredients in bowl, mix well;
Pour mixture into casserole dish and flatten in dish with spatula;
Sprinkle 1/2 cup shredded Parmesan cheese on top (also garnish with some green onions)
Bake for 40 minutes or until golden brown and bubbly and potatoes are tender.
Enjoy!
~Made by: Jason
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Deviled Eggs

Here's the typical recipe:
Ingredients:
12 eggs, hard boiled
4 Tbsp. Mayo
2 Tsp. Spicy brown mustard
2 Tsp. Sweet pickle relish
Salt, to taste
Pepper, to taste
Paprika, for looks
Make It:
1~ Boil dozen eggs in water for 12 minutes; cool in fridge; crack shells, peel, rinse off.
2~ Cut hard boiled eggs in half & separate yolk; turn egg over and yolk will fall out into bowl; place whites onto separate plate; repeat for all eggs.
3~ Add mayo, mustard, relish, salt & pepper to taste to yolk & mash all together until creamy and smooth. You may want to add more mayo, mustard and/or relish per your taste.
4~Spoon in yolk mixture back into whites of egg halves
5~Dust top of eggs with paprika
6~Refrigerate and serve cold.
~Made by: Holly
Candied-Bacon Sweet Potato Souffle

It may not look like much in this photo, but this is truly an amazing and different dish. I am a huge sweet potato fan. I lived out in Arkansas for about 4 1/2 years and 3 of those years, I lived with my grandmother who was also a big sweet potato fan. She made them often with dinner for us and I learned a lot about different ways to cook them. There's the traditional sweet potato casserole topped with marshmellows that most people have at Thanksgiving. However, Jason decided we needed bacon somewhere on the menu. I came across a recipe for a candied-bacon sweet potato casserole, but when it came down to this Thanksgiving week, I could not find the recipe anywhere! So, I have made it up. I'm combining a sweet potato souffle and putting the candied-bacon in it, on top of it, and even in between the souffle and topping itself. I hope you enjoy it and make it too one day because it sure is amazing! The candied-bacon alone is super easy and addicting - so be careful if you want to watch your waist-line! :) The recipe:
Ingredients for the Souffle:
4-5 medium cooked & mashed sweet potatoes
1 cup sugar
3 eggs, beaten
1/2 cup milk
8 Tbsp. unsalted butter, melted
1 Tbsp. vanilla extract
1/2 Tsp. light salt
4 strips of candied-bacon, chopped
4 strips of candied-bacon, whole
Ingredients for Topping:
1 cup Splenda brown sugar
4 Tbsp. unsalted butter (1/2 stick) cubed at room temperature
1/2 cup self-rise cake flour
4 strips of candied-bacon, chopped
Ingredients for Candied-Bacon:
12 strips of Center Cut Bacon
Splenda Brown Sugar
Make it:
1~ Preheat oven to 400 degrees while you prepare the bacon; (I like to use center cut) and cook the sweet potatoes to prepare them to mash.
Peel and cut in half each sweet potato;
Cover in salted water and bring to a boil until soft; drain and mash;
Place wire rack on cookie sheet; make sure to spray rack well with Buttery Pam Spray
Roll/smear brown splenda sugar on both sides of 12 strips of bacon;
Place strips of bacon on wire rack;
Cook for 8 mins.;
Remove from oven and completely cool;
2~ Keeping oven at 400 degrees; lightly grease 8 inch baking dish;
In a large bowl combine mashed sweet potatoes, sugar, egg, milk, butter, vanilla extract, and salt; once combined, chop 4 strips of candied bacon and put into mixture. Pour into the baking dish;
3~Place 4 whole strips of candied- bacon across top of souffle;
4~In a separate bowl combine all ingredients for the topping and pour over sweet potato souffle and whole strips of candied-bacon in baking dish.
5~ Bake 20-25 minutes, until golden brown on top.
Enjoy!
~Created and Made by: Holly
Corn Casserole

I think this is the easiest recipe anyone could ever make for a casserole. If you love corn, then you'll love this tasty, easy recipe for a casserole! So without any further chit-chat, here's the recipe:
Ingredients:
1/2 cup butter, melted
2 eggs, beaten
1 (8.5oz) pkg. dry corn bread mix
1 (15oz) can of whole kernel corn, drained
1 (14.75oz) can of cream corn
1 cup of sour cream
Make it:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees;
Lightly grease 9x9 inch dish;
Combine all ingredients above;
Bake 45 minutes or till golden brown on top.
See, now wasn't that easy?!
~Made by: Holly
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