Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver (2024)

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Christmas turkey with homemade gravy, roast potatoes, veg and pork and onion stuffing

A step-by-step guide to the perfect Christmas feast

Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver (2)

A step-by-step guide to the perfect Christmas feast

Serves 10

Cooks In5 hours

DifficultyShowing off

TurkeyChristmasThanksgivingDinner PartySunday lunchFruit

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 611 31%

  • Fat 27.2g 39%

  • Saturates 7.5g 38%

  • Sugars 5.1g 6%

  • Salt 1.3g 22%

  • Protein 82.5g 165%

  • Carbs 7.7g 3%

Of an adult's reference intake

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • CHRISTMAS TURKEY WITH HOMEMADE GRAVY
  • 1 x 5 kg free-range turkey
  • 4 cloves of garlic
  • 1 lemon
  • a few sprigs of fresh thyme
  • a few sprigs of fresh rosemary
  • 100 g unsalted butter , (at room temperature), plus extra for greasing
  • 2 onions
  • 2 sticks of celery
  • 2 carrots
  • 3 clementines
  • 1 litre organic chicken stock , fresh if you can get it
  • 2 tablespoons plain flour
  • 1 splash red wine
  • PORK & ONION STUFFING
  • 4 onions
  • 1 large handful of dried fruit , such as apricots, cranberries, prunes, dates
  • 1 large handful of mixed unsalted nuts , such as almonds, shelled pistachios, pine nuts
  • 1/2 bunch of fresh thyme
  • 75 g stale bread
  • olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon allspice
  • 300 g higher-welfare pork mince
  • ROAST POTATOES & VEG
  • 1 kg parnsips
  • 1.5 kg red-skinned potatoes
  • 500 g small carrots
  • 300 g shallots
  • 1 bulb of garlic
  • a few sprigs of fresh rosemary

Tap For Method

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

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Method

  1. Remove the turkey from of the fridge 1 hour in advance to come up to room
    temperature.
  2. For the stuffing, peel and finely chop the onions, roughly chop the dried fruit and nuts, and pick the thyme leaves. Whiz the bread into breadcrumbs in a food processor.
  3. Heat a lug of oil in a large pan on a medium heat, then add the onion. Cook for around 10 minutes, or until softened, stirring regularly. Add the allspice, dried fruit, nuts, thyme and a pinch of sea salt and black pepper. Stir-fry for 2 minutes, then transfer to a large bowl and leave to cool completely.
  4. Once cool, add the pork mince and breadcrumbs to the bowl and scrunch everything together with clean hands. Reserve about half the stuffing for the turkey, then transfer the rest to a greased baking dish (approximately 20cm). Spread it out in an even layer, keeping it rough on top, then put aside.
  5. Preheat the oven to full whack. Rinse the turkey under the cold tap, then
    pat it dry, inside and out, with kitchen paper.
  6. Peel and crush the garlic, finely grate the lemon zest, then pick and roughly chop the thyme and rosemary. In a small bowl, mix the soft butter, garlic, lemon zest, half the thyme and rosemary leaves and a good pinch of salt and pepper.
  7. Push your finger and thumb between the skin and the flesh around the main cavity to make a gap and use a spatula to push in the butter. Squash the skin back down and use your hands to smooth and spread the butter under the skin. Open up the neck cavity and pack in the reserved stuffing. Pull the skin over the cavity and tuck it under the bird.
  8. Drizzle the bird with oil and season with a good pinch of salt and pepper, then rub this into the meat. Cut the zested lemon in half and place in the empty cavity.
  9. Peel and roughly chop the onion, trim and roughly chop the celery and carrot, then place in a large roasting tray with the turkey on top. Cover with tin foil then place in the hot oven. Immediately reduce the temperature 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.
  10. Check your turkey every 30 minutes or so – spoon over any juices from the
    bottom of the tray to keep it juicy. After 2½ hours, remove the foil so the skin crisps up. Thirty minutes before the turkey is ready, mix the remaining herbs with oil and scatter over the bird. Halve and add the clementines to the tray and leave in for the remaining cooking time.
  11. To check the turkey is cooked, stick a small sharp knife into the fattest part
    of the thigh. If the juices run clear and the meat pulls apart easily, it’s ready. If not, cook it for a bit longer then check again. Once done, transfer the turkey to a serving platter and turn the oven up to 200ºC/400ºF/gas 6. Cover the turkey with tin foil and 2 clean tea towels to keep it warm. Leave to rest for about 30 minutes while you cook your veg, stuffing and gravy.
  12. For the roast potatoes and veg, peel the parsnips, scrub the potatoes and carrots, then peel and halve the shallots. Break the garlic bulb up into cloves. Parboil the baby carrots in a pan of boiling salted water on a high heat for 5 minutes. Drain them in a colander and leave to steam dry. Chop the potatoes into 2cm chunks and peel and halve the parsnips lengthways.
  13. Add the veg to 2 large roasting trays with the shallots. Crush the garlic cloves with the heel of your hand and pick the rosemary leaves. Add both
    to the trays along with a good pinch of salt and pepper. Drizzle everything generously with oil and toss well to coat. Roast in the hot oven along with the stuffing for 30 to 40 minutes, or until cooked through.
  14. When the veg and stuffing are in the oven, warm the stock in a pan on a
    medium heat. Skim most of the fat away from the roasting tray, then stir in the flour, using a wooden spoon to scrape up all the sticky bits from the bottom.
  15. Place on a medium heat and add the red wine. Once that has cooked away, pour in the stock, bring it all to the boil, then reduce to a medium heat and simmer for 15 to 20 minutes until you get a good consistency.
  16. Carefully pour the gravy through a sieve into a serving jug, using a spoon to push all that goodness through. Discard anything left in the sieve. Carve your turkey in the kitchen or at the table, and serve with all the usual trimmings.

Tips

The best bit of advice I can give you is to buy a good meat thermometer
to make sure your turkey is cooked through. Along with the checks I’ve given you in the recipe, stick the thermometer into the thickest part of the breast and the deepest part of the thigh – when the temperature reaches at least 72ºC, the turkey is ready to come out.

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© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie  Oliver (2024)

FAQs

How to cook 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.

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

There are four essential steps for a perfectly roasted Thanksgiving turkey: brining, stuffing with aromatics, rubbing with herb compound butter, and roasting to perfection. The herb butter does double duty. Part of it is rubbed under the skin and over the meat of the bird for a major boost in flavor.

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.

Can I cook my Christmas turkey the day before? ›

You don't want the meat to dry out while it sits overnight, so you will need to cover it with a liquid. Spoon some chicken broth or the drippings from the roasting pan (and the cutting board) over the turkey so it stays moist. Cover snugly and refrigerate overnight.

How does Trisha Yearwood cook her turkey? ›

Bake for exactly 1 hour and turn off the oven. Do not open the oven door! Leave the turkey in the oven until the oven completely cools; this may take 4 to 6 hours. Reserve the pan juices and refrigerate the turkey if it will not be served soon after roasting.

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."

What should you season your turkey with? ›

Stick with salt and pepper, put herbs like rosemary, thyme, and sage to work, or take spicy Cajun seasoning for a spin for some kick. Whatever blend you choose, spread it all over the turkey—on top, underneath, between the body and wings and legs, under the skin, and even in the cavity of the bird.

Is it better to rub turkey with butter or oil? ›

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.

Should I season turkey the night before? ›

Every piece of poultry and pork, plus thicker cuts of beef and lamb, and even meatier fillets of fish like swordfish and grouper get seasoned at least one day ahead, and sometimes more, with kosher salt.

How does Ina Garten cook her turkey? ›

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. Remove the turkey to a cutting board and cover with foil; let it rest for 20 minutes.

How does Martha Stewart roast a turkey? ›

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 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.

Should I cover my turkey with aluminum foil? ›

To achieve a perfectly golden, juicy turkey, let the bird spend time both covered and uncovered in the oven. We recommend covering your bird for most of the cooking time to prevent it from drying out; then, during the last 30 minutes or so of cooking, remove the cover so the skin crisps in the hot oven.

Can I cook turkey on Christmas Eve and reheat on Christmas Day? ›

Safety tips for reheating turkey

Cold, cooked turkey meat will keep in the fridge for up to four days, but always use your best judgement. Always reheat cold turkey until it's piping hot, not just warmed through. Only reheat cooked turkey once.

Should you bring a turkey to room temperature before cooking? ›

Your turkey will cook more evenly and faster if you start it out at room temperature so remove the turkey from the refrigerator 1 hour before roasting. If you plan to stuff your turkey, wait until you're ready to put it in the oven before putting the stuffing in the turkey.

Do you cook turkey covered or uncovered? ›

To achieve a perfectly golden, juicy turkey, let the bird spend time both covered and uncovered in the oven. We recommend covering your bird for most of the cooking time to prevent it from drying out; then, during the last 30 minutes or so of cooking, remove the cover so the skin crisps in the hot oven.

How to keep turkey moist when cooking? ›

Other top tips for roasting a turkey:
  1. Choose the right size turkey. ...
  2. Adjust the cooking time based on the size of your bird. ...
  3. Bring the turkey to room temperature. ...
  4. Use a roasting rack. ...
  5. Start with a super hot oven, then reduce the temperature. ...
  6. Use more butter than you feel comfortable with. ...
  7. Brine your turkey.
Nov 16, 2022

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