Best Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (2024)

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The best roast turkey - Christmas or any time

With herby pork & apricot stuffing

  • Dairy-freedf

Best Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (2)

With herby pork & apricot stuffing

  • Dairy-freedf

“I always think that turkey's not just for Christmas – in fact, done right, it rocks for Sunday roast ”

Serves 8

Cooks In3 hours 40 minutes plus cooling and resting

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Cook with JamieTurkeyChristmasBritishMains

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 572 29%

  • Fat 21.9g 31%

  • Saturates 6.9g 35%

  • Sugars 13.5g 15%

  • Salt 2.16g 36%

  • Protein 75.2g 150%

  • Carbs 20.4g 8%

  • Fibre 3.6g -

Of an adult's reference intake

Recipe From

Cook with Jamie

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Ingredients

  • Metric
  • Netherlands
  • Germany

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  • 1 sprig of fresh sage
  • 12 strips higher-welfare pancetta or thinly sliced streaky bacon
  • 1 bulb garlic
  • 4 medium red onions
  • 2 sticks celery
  • 1 big handful of breadcrumbs
  • 1 handful of dried apricots
  • 300 g higher-welfare minced pork
  • 1 lemon
  • 1 pinch of grated nutmeg
  • 1 large free-range egg
  • 12 small sprigs of fresh rosemary , plus a few extra
  • 4-4.5 kg higher-welfare turkey , at room temperature
  • 2 carrots
  • 1 large orange
  • olive oil
  • 2 tablespoons plain flour
  • 1.1 litres organic chicken or vegetable stock

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The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

Recipe From

Cook with Jamie

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Method

  1. Preheat the oven to maximum. Heat a saucepan until medium hot and add a splash of olive oil. Pick the sage leaves and add to the pan with 6 of the pancetta or bacon strips.
  2. Peel and chop 2 garlic cloves and 1 onion. Trim and chop the celery and add to the pan with the garlic and onion. Fry everything gently until soft and golden brown. Take the pan off the heat, add the breadcrumbs and, while the mix is cooling down, roughly chop the apricots and stir them in.
  3. When the stuffing has cooled down, add the pork, lemon zest, nutmeg, egg and lots of sea salt and freshly ground black pepper, and mix everything together well.

    Slice the remaining strips of pancetta or bacon in half and peel and slice 1 peeled garlic clove into thin slivers. Place a rosemary sprig and a garlic sliver on one end of a halved strip of pancetta and roll it up tightly. Repeat with the other pieces of pancetta until you have 12 little rolls.

  4. Stab the thighs and drumsticks of the turkey in 6 places on each side. Push a little pancetta roll into each hole until it just peeps out. This will give your turkey thighs a fantastic flavour and will keep them moist while they cook.
  5. Peel the remaining onions and chop in half, and peel and thickly slice the carrots.
  6. Give your turkey a good wipe, inside and out, with kitchen paper, and place it on a board, with the neck end towards you. Find the edge of the skin that's covering the turkey's breasts and gently peel it back. Work your fingers and then your hand under the skin, freeing it from the meat. If you're careful you should be able to pull all the skin away from the meat, keeping it attached at the sides. Go slowly and try not to make any holes!
  7. Lift the loose skin at the neck end and spoon the stuffing between the skin and the breast, tucking the flap of skin underneath to stop anything leaking out. Pop the orange in the microwave for 30 seconds to warm it up and stuff it into the cavity.
  8. Weigh the stuffed turkey and calculate the cooking time (about 20 minutes per 500g/1lb 2oz).
  9. Place the bird on a large roasting tray, rub it all over with olive oil and season well. Surround with the chopped carrots, onions and remaining cloves of garlic, cover with tin foil and place in the preheated oven. Turn the heat down right away to 180°C/350°F/gas 4 and roast for the calculated time, or until the juices run clear from the thigh if you pierce it with a knife or a skewer. Remove the tin foil for the last 45 minutes to brown the bird.
  10. Carefully lift the turkey out of the tray and rest on a board covered loosely with foil for at least 1 hour, preferably 2 hours for bigger birds.
  11. When the resting time's nearly up, skim off the surface fat from the roasting tray and add the flour and stock. Place the tray on the hob and bring to the boil on a high heat. When the gravy starts to thicken, strain it into a bowl.
  12. Carve your turkey, serve with the gravy and dig in!

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Recipe From

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© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Best Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (2024)

FAQs

How to cook Christmas turkey with Jamie Oliver? ›

Place your roughly chopped veg in the bottom of a roasting pan and lay your turkey on top. Cover the turkey with tin foil then put it in the hot oven and immediately turn the temperature down to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Cook for about 35 to 40 minutes per kilo. The 5kg bird in this recipe will take about 3 to 3½ hours.

Should I put butter under the skin of my turkey? ›

Impart rich flavor and add moisture to your Thanksgiving turkey by adding a layer of butter under the skin before roasting.

How to cook Christmas turkey Gordon Ramsay? ›

Roast the turkey in the hot oven for 10–15 minutes. Take the tray out of the oven, baste the bird with the pan juices and lay the bacon rashers over the breast to keep it moist. Baste again. Lower the setting to 180°C/Gas 4 and cook for about 2 1⁄2 hours (calculating at 30 minutes per kg), basting occasionally.

How often should you baste a turkey? ›

How Often to Baste a Turkey. Most recipes will tell you to baste your turkey every thirty minutes. But our rule of thumb is actually every forty minutes, and here's why. You don't want to open the oven too many times, or else the whole bird will take much long to cook, and that's a huge inconvenience.

How to cook the perfect turkey Jamie Oliver? ›

Preheat your oven to full whack, get the turkey in the roasting tray and cover with foil. As soon as it goes in the oven, immediately turn the heat down to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4. As a rough guide, you want to cook the turkey for about 35 to 40 minutes per kilogram, so a 7kg turkey will want about 4 to 4½ hours in the oven.

What does Jamie Oliver put in his turkey? ›

Ingredients
  1. 1 x 6 kg higher-welfare turkey , with giblets.
  2. 125 g unsalted butter.
  3. 1 clementine.
  4. ½ a bunch of fresh woody herbs, such as bay, sage, rosemary , (15g)
  5. 2 onions.
  6. 2 sticks of celery.
  7. 2 carrots.

Should I brush my turkey with oil or butter? ›

Fat is going to help the skin get brown and crisp, and contrary to what most might think, butter isn't better. Butter does an okay job, but because it contains a lot of water, oil is a better fat to rub on the skin to ensure it gets extra crispy.

Do you put water in the bottom of the roasting pan for turkey? ›

"Often, consumers will inquire about adding water to the bottom of their roasting pans. We do not recommend adding water to the bottom of the pan. Cooking a turkey with steam is a moist heat-cook method and is acceptable, sure, but is not the preferred method for cooking your turkey."

How does Martha Stewart cook a turkey in the oven? ›

Roast 1 hour, then baste every 30 minutes with pan liquids, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of thigh (avoiding bone) registers 125°F, about 3 hours. Remove foil; raise oven heat to 400°F. Continue roasting, basting occasionally, until thigh reaches 180°F, 45 to 60 minutes more.

How does Ina Garten cook her turkey? ›

Brush the outside of the turkey with the butter and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Tie the legs together with string and tuck the wing tips under the body of the turkey. Roast the turkey for 2 1/2 hours, basting from time to time with pan juices, until the juices run clear when you cut between the leg and the thigh.

How to cook a turkey Bobby Flay? ›

Put the turkey on top of the vegetables, put in the oven and roast until lightly golden brown, about 45 minutes. Reduce the heat to 350 degrees F and continue roasting, basting with the warm chicken stock every 15 minutes, 2 to 2 hours 15 minutes hours longer.

Is it best to cook a turkey at 325 or 350? ›

It's better to cook a turkey at 350°F after preheating the oven to 450°F. This makes the skin crispier and ensures the turkey will get cooked evenly.

Do I put aluminum foil on my turkey? ›

So, yes, you do want to cover the turkey with foil to give it a chance to roast without getting dry. But then, towards the end of the cook time, remove the foil so the skin—the best part in this writer's opinion—gets a chance to crisp up.

What happens if you don't baste a turkey? ›

If you want juicy meat, basting the bird won't help—brining or salting it is what guarantees moist turkey. In fact, every time you baste the bird, the juices merely run along the skin rather than actually infusing the meat. Basting is for your comfort, not the turkey's.

What temperature to cook turkey jamie oliver? ›

Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4. You want to cook a higher-welfare bird for 25 to 30 minutes per kilo, and a standard bird for 35 to 40 minutes per kilo.

When should I start cooking my Christmas turkey? ›

Cook your turkey on Christmas Eve and start in the morning so that it has plenty of time after cooking to cool before chilling overnight. 3. Take the fresh or defrosted turkey out of the fridge about an hour before cooking to bring to room temperature.

What is a traditional Christmas turkey dinner menu? ›

Classic turkey dinner
  • co*cktail. Mulled wine sangria.
  • Main. Roast turkey with cider gravy.
  • Side. Pesto green beans. Creamy scalloped potatoes with crispy potato skins.
  • Dessert. Pomegranate posset.
Dec 21, 2021

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