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Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey

Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Thanksgiving may still be a ways away for our American cousins south of the border but it is right around the corner for us here in Canada, so with one of the biggest turkey days of the year at hand, here's a delicious idea for a very flavorful roast turkey that your guests will love. The lemon sage butter gets tucked under the skin of the bird to infuse its flavor directly into the meat while adding extra moisture to ensure a succulent, juicy turkey. The cavity of the turkey gets stuffed with extra aromatic lemon and sage do that the flavor infuses from inside and out. If you're looking for an easy and delicious way to depart from your traditional roast turkey, this is the recipe you need.

Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Recipe by Barry C. Parsons
The lemon sage butter gets tucked under the skin of the bird to infuse its flavor directly into the meat while adding extra moisture to ensure a succulent, juicy turkey.
Prep time: Aproximately 20 minutes.
Cook time: Aproximately 20 minutes per pound.
Total time: Dependent on turkey size.
Ingredients
  • One 10-15 pound turkey
  • 3/4 cup butter
  • zest of one lemon, finely minced
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh sage, (or 1 tsp dry sage if fresh is unavailable)
  • 1/2 clove fiinely minced garlic (optional)
  • 1/2 lemon
  • 3 springs fresh sage
  • 1 small onion, or large shallot cut in chunks
Cooking Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Beat together the butter, lemon zest, salt, pepper, sage and minced garlic until well combined.
  3. Loosen the skin on the breasts and thighs of the turkey by very gently pushing your fingers between the skin and the meat. Be careful not to tear the skin.
  4. Using about a tablespoon of the lemon sage butter at a time, gently push it under the skin all over the turkey.
  5. Pat the outside of the turkey to distribute the butter as evenly as you can all over the bird.
  6. Place the onion (or shallot), lemon and sage sprigs in the microwave for a minute or so to get them heated before stuffing them into the body cavity of the turkey. Preheating them helps these aromatics begin to immediately start infusing their flavors as the turkey roasts.
  7. Tie the turkey legs together with butcher string and tuck the wing tips under the turkey.
  8. Place the turkey on a roasting rack and roast UNCOVERED until the turkey is completely cooked. It is not necessary to baste this turkey.
  9. Turkey generally takes about 20 minutes per pound to be completely cooked but sometimes an unstuffed bird will roast more quickly. I ALWAYS use a meat thermometer to ensure that the internal temperature at the center of the thickest part of the breast and thighs has reached 170 degrees F. Avoid hitting a bone with your thermometer as this can give an inaccurate reading.
  10. ALWAYS let your turkey rest under a tent of aluminum foil for 20 minutes before carving. This step is essential for a juicy turkey; carving a turkey too early can result in drier meat, especially breast meat.
Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Thanksgiving may still be a ways away for our American cousins south of the border but it is right around the corner for us here in Canada, so with one of the biggest turkey days of the year at hand, here's a delicious idea for a very flavorful roast turkey that your guests will love. The lemon sage butter gets tucked under the skin of the bird to infuse its flavor directly into the meat while adding extra moisture to ensure a succulent, juicy turkey. The cavity of the turkey gets stuffed with extra aromatic lemon and sage do that the flavor infuses from inside and out. If you're looking for an easy and delicious way to depart from your traditional roast turkey, this is the recipe you need.

Lemon Sage Butter Roasted Turkey
Recipe by Barry C. Parsons
The lemon sage butter gets tucked under the skin of the bird to infuse its flavor directly into the meat while adding extra moisture to ensure a succulent, juicy turkey.
Prep time: Aproximately 20 minutes.
Cook time: Aproximately 20 minutes per pound.
Total time: Dependent on turkey size.
Ingredients
  • One 10-15 pound turkey
  • 3/4 cup butter
  • zest of one lemon, finely minced
  • 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2 tbsp chopped fresh sage, (or 1 tsp dry sage if fresh is unavailable)
  • 1/2 clove fiinely minced garlic (optional)
  • 1/2 lemon
  • 3 springs fresh sage
  • 1 small onion, or large shallot cut in chunks
Cooking Directions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  2. Beat together the butter, lemon zest, salt, pepper, sage and minced garlic until well combined.
  3. Loosen the skin on the breasts and thighs of the turkey by very gently pushing your fingers between the skin and the meat. Be careful not to tear the skin.
  4. Using about a tablespoon of the lemon sage butter at a time, gently push it under the skin all over the turkey.
  5. Pat the outside of the turkey to distribute the butter as evenly as you can all over the bird.
  6. Place the onion (or shallot), lemon and sage sprigs in the microwave for a minute or so to get them heated before stuffing them into the body cavity of the turkey. Preheating them helps these aromatics begin to immediately start infusing their flavors as the turkey roasts.
  7. Tie the turkey legs together with butcher string and tuck the wing tips under the turkey.
  8. Place the turkey on a roasting rack and roast UNCOVERED until the turkey is completely cooked. It is not necessary to baste this turkey.
  9. Turkey generally takes about 20 minutes per pound to be completely cooked but sometimes an unstuffed bird will roast more quickly. I ALWAYS use a meat thermometer to ensure that the internal temperature at the center of the thickest part of the breast and thighs has reached 170 degrees F. Avoid hitting a bone with your thermometer as this can give an inaccurate reading.
  10. ALWAYS let your turkey rest under a tent of aluminum foil for 20 minutes before carving. This step is essential for a juicy turkey; carving a turkey too early can result in drier meat, especially breast meat.

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