TURKEY NORMANDY
This is from my Eat Well, Stay Well cookbook. It originally called for chicken breasts, but I adapted it to what I had in the house. It would work well with leftover turkey too. It freezes well. Serve over hot egg noodles.
Provided by dicentra
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 30m
Yield 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- In a large skillet, heat the oil over moderate heat. Cook the turkey until no longer pink. Drain and transfer to a plate.
- Add the scallions to the pan and cook for 1 minute or until tender. Add the apples and sauté for 5 minutes or until lightly browned.
- Remove the pan from the heat and add the apple juice or brandy. Return the pan to the heat and cook until the liquid has evaporated. Add broth to the pan along with the sage. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer, return the turkey to the pan and cook for 5-7 minutes or until heated through.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the sour cream and the flour. Stir it into the pan and simmer, stirring constantly, for 2 minutes or until thickened.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 273.1, Fat 14.2, SaturatedFat 4.2, Cholesterol 95, Sodium 179.8, Carbohydrate 14.4, Fiber 2.1, Sugar 9.4, Protein 21.8
TUSCAN TURKEY ROULADE
Provided by Ina Garten
Categories main-dish
Time 2h20m
Yield 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Place a rack in a large roasting pan.
- Heat 2 tablespoons of olive oil in a medium (10-inch) saute pan over medium heat. Add the onion and fennel seeds and cook for 6 to 8 minutes, tossing occasionally, until the onion is tender. Add the garlic and cook for one minute only. Off the heat, add the sage and rosemary and set aside to cool.
- Meanwhile, spread the turkey breast out on a cutting board, skin-side down. Sprinkle the meat with 4 teaspoons salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons pepper. When the onion mixture is cool, spread it evenly on the meat. Distribute the grated butter on top. Place one layer of prosciutto on top of the butter to cover the meat completely. Starting at the left side of the turkey breast, roll the meat up jelly-roll style to make a compact cylindrical roulade, ending with the seam side down and the skin side up. Tie the roulade with kitchen twine at 1 1/2- to 2-inch intervals as tightly as possible to ensure that it will roast evenly. Slip whole sage leaves underneath each tie of the twine down the center of the roulade.
- Place the turkey roulade, seam side down, on the prepared rack in the roasting pan. Pat the skin dry with paper towels, brush the skin all over with 2 tablespoons olive oil, and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Pour the wine and 1 cup of water in the roasting pan (not over the turkey) and roast for between 1 1/2 and 1 3/4 hours, until the skin is golden brown and the internal temperature is 150 degrees F. (This depends on how large the turkey breast is.) Remove from the oven, cover with foil, and allow to rest for 15 minutes. Slice in 1/2-inch-thick slices and serve warm with the pan juices.
TURKEY BREAST ROULADE WITH GARLIC AND ROSEMARY
Ina Garten has been known as the Barefoot Contessa since she opened a gourmet store by that name in East Hampton, N.Y., in 1985. She shared this recipe from her book "Modern Comfort Food" with The Times for Thanksgiving in 2020, when many cooks were looking for alternatives to whole turkey. If you don't like fennel seeds, leave them out: Garlic, sage and rosemary give this roast the flavors of Italian porchetta, and it will still be fragrant, juicy and delicious without them.
Provided by Julia Moskin
Categories poultry, roasts, main course
Time 3h
Yield 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 11
Steps:
- Heat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Heat 2 tablespoons olive oil in a medium (10-inch) skillet over medium heat. Add the onion and fennel seeds and cook for 6 to 8 minutes, tossing occasionally, until the onion is tender. Add the garlic and cook for 1 minute. Off the heat, stir in the chopped sage and the rosemary; set aside to cool.
- Set the turkey breast on a cutting board and open it up, skin side down. If necessary, pound the turkey to an even thickness of about 1 inch. Sprinkle the turkey with 4 teaspoons salt and 1 1/2 teaspoons pepper. Once the onion mixture has cooled, spread it evenly on the meat. Grate the butter and sprinkle it on top. Arrange the prosciutto on top to totally cover the filling and meat.
- Starting at one long end of the turkey breast, roll the meat up jelly-roll style to make a compact cylindrical roulade, ending with the seam side down. Tie the roulade tightly with kitchen twine at 2 to 2 1/2-inch intervals to ensure that it will roast evenly. Slip the whole sage leaves under the twine down the center of the roulade.
- Place the roulade, seam side down, in a roasting pan and pat the skin dry with paper towels. Brush the skin with the remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil and sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Pour the wine and 1 cup water into the roasting pan, surrounding the turkey with the liquids without pouring them directly over the roulade. Roast for 1 1/4 to 1 1/2 hours, until the skin is golden brown and the internal temperature is 150 degrees.
- Remove from the oven, cover the turkey with foil, and allow to rest for 15 minutes. Remove the string, slice the roulade crosswise in 1/2-inch-thick slices, and serve warm with the pan juices.
TUSCAN TURKEY ROULADE
This rolled and tied bird cooks evenly, slices into beautiful disks, and is saturated with the rich herb-and-garlic flavors of porchetta. If you let your butcher do the work of removing the bones, preparing it is remarkably straightforward.
Provided by Food Network Kitchen
Categories main-dish
Time 2h50m
Yield 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Combine the fennel, juniper, 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt and 1 tablespoon ground black pepper in a small bowl and set aside. Combine the pancetta, rosemary, red pepper flakes, garlic and lemon zest in a small food processor and pulse several times to make a coarse paste, scraping down the bowl as needed.
- Open the turkey like a book, skin-side down, on a large cutting board. (It should look like an irregular rectangle with the drumsticks on one side and the wings on the other.) Pull off the long, thin tenderloins from the breast, and lay them on the inside of the thigh meat to even out the thickness of the turkey. Sprinkle the inside of the turkey with some of the salt mixture, and top evenly with the pancetta mixture.
- Roll up the turkey starting at the edge closest to you, and continue to roll forming a tight log, finishing with the seam-side down. Tie with kitchen string at 1-inch intervals, maintaining as tight a log as possible. Adjust the string to make the drumstick as straight as possible. Tuck the wings behind the turkey's back and sprinkle the outside with the remaining salt mixture. (The turkey can be prepared to this point up to 1 day in advance.)
- Position an oven rack in the lower third of the oven, remove the top racks and preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Fit a wire rack into a baking sheet and put the turkey on top. Brush all over with olive oil and turn the turkey seam-side up. Roast until the skin is browned and crisp, about 1 hour. Remove the baking sheet from the oven and carefully flip the turkey using a large spatula.
- Return the turkey to the oven and continue cooking until the top is deep golden brown, and an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the turkey registers 155 degrees F, 50 to 60 minutes more. Remove from the oven, tent loosely with foil, and let rest 20 minutes before slicing. (The turkey will continue cooking as it rests.)
- Cut off the string with scissors, taking care not to tear the skin. Cut the turkey into 1/2- to 3/4-inch slices and separate the drumsticks and wings. Serve immediately.
SIMPLE ROAST TURKEY
For all the attention we lavish on Thanksgiving turkeys, the truth is more work does not necessarily yield a better bird. That's right: You can skip brining, stuffing, trussing and basting. Instead of a messy wet brine, use a dry rub (well, technically a dry brine) - a salt and pepper massage that locks in moisture and seasons the flesh. No stuffing or trussing allows the bird to cook more quickly, with the white and dark meat finishing closer to the same time. And if you oil but don't baste your turkey, you'll get crisp skin without constantly opening the oven.
Provided by Melissa Clark
Categories dinner, main course
Time 3h30m
Yield 10 to 12 servings
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Remove any giblets from the cavity and reserve for stock or gravy. Pat turkey and turkey neck dry with paper towel; rub turkey all over with 1/2 teaspoon salt per pound of turkey, the pepper and the lemon zest, including the neck. Transfer to a 2-gallon (or larger) resealable plastic bag. Tuck herbs and 6 garlic cloves inside bag. Seal and refrigerate on a small rimmed baking sheet (or wrapped in another bag) for at least 1 day and up to 3 days, turning the bird over every day (or after 12 hours if brining for only 1 day).
- Remove turkey from bag and pat dry with paper towels. Place turkey, uncovered, back on the baking sheet. Return to the refrigerator for at least 4 hours and up to 12 hours to dry out the skin (this helps crisp it).
- When you are ready to cook the turkey, remove it from the refrigerator and allow it to come to room temperature for one hour.
- Heat oven to 450 degrees. In the bottom of a large roasting pan, add the cider and enough wine to fill the pan to a 1/4-inch depth. Add half the onions, the remaining 6 garlic cloves and the bay leaves. Stuff the remaining onion quarters and the lemon quarters into the turkey cavity. Brush the turkey skin generously with oil or melted butter.
- Place turkey, breast side up, on a roasting rack set inside the roasting pan. Transfer pan to the oven and roast 30 minutes. Cover breast with aluminum foil. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees and continue roasting until an instant-read thermometer inserted in the thickest part of a thigh reaches a temperature of 165 degrees, about 1 1/2 to 2 hours more. Transfer turkey to a cutting board to rest for 30 minutes before carving.
SOLE NORMANDE
If you're in Normandy, you'll hear that this dish is Norman. If you read Elizabeth David, she says Careme invented it in Paris. Either way, it is a lovely dish, very elegant, and quite simple if you do your mise en place. If you can't get sole, you can substitute flounder.
Provided by Chef Kate
Categories Mussels
Time 1h
Yield 6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- In a small saucepan, bring the fish stock and wine to a boil; reduce heat to very low and keep stock warm.
- Pre-heat oven to 425 degrees.
- Make beurre manie by combining the flour and butter together till smooth (if you choose, you may make larger amounts and keep beurre manie on hand in the fridge or freezer).
- Sprinkle the shallots over the bottom of a large non-reactive baking dish.
- Roll the fillets and place the six of them, equally spaced, in the dish.
- Sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- Distribute the mussels, mushrooms, shrimp and scallops around the fillets, and pour the stock/wine combination over all.
- Bake for about 15 minutes, until the fish becomes white and flakey and the mussels open.
- Remove the fish to a warm serving platter.
- Arrange the mushrooms, shrimp, scallops and mussels on the platter, discarding any unopened mussels.
- Cover and keep warm.
- Meanwhile, strain the liquid from the baking dish into the small saucepan (straining is important, bring to a boil, and cook over medium heat for about five minutes.
- Reduce heat and whisk in two tablespoons of beurre manie until smooth.
- Simmer the sauce for 9 to 10 minutes.
- Mix the creme fraiche with the egg yolks and, removing the sauce from the heat, add the yolk mixture to the sauce, whisking all the while.
- Return to the stove and simmer over medium heat, whisking constantly for 4 to 5 minutes until the eggs have thickened the sauce--do NOT boil.
- Pour sauce over filets and serve.
- Note: If you do not have or care to make fish stock, you may substitute strained unsalted clam juice or chicken stock, unsalted.
- Note 2: If you have insufficient liquid for your sauce, add white wine and stock or wine and water to the strained liquid.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 428.6, Fat 18.3, SaturatedFat 9.5, Cholesterol 249.1, Sodium 396.1, Carbohydrate 5.8, Fiber 0.2, Sugar 0.6, Protein 54.1
ROAST TURKEY WITH ORANGE AND SAGE
Roast turkey with white wine and a lot of butter, too, as it happens. The butter, massaged under the bird's skin, does a lot to help keep the breast meat moist, and the juice and wine in the pan below the bird create a deliciously steamy environment for the roasting. The combination leads to an interesting outcome: a bird that crisps up nicely not at the beginning of cooking, but at the end. The sweet-savory drippings make for excellent gravy.
Provided by Sam Sifton
Categories dinner, roasts, main course
Time 3h
Yield 8 to 10 servings
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Heat oven to 400 degrees. Pat turkey dry with paper towel and place it on a rack in a roasting pan. In a small bowl or on a clean cutting board, mash the butter together with the orange zest, sage, garlic, salt and pepper to create a paste. Lift the turkey's skin at the neck and gently use your hand to separate skin from breast meat. Rub about half of the compound butter under the skin, covering the breast meat. Rub the rest of the butter over the skin of the turkey and season with a little more salt and pepper.
- Fold the wings of the turkey under the bird, and tie its legs together with butcher's twine. Pour the wine and orange juice into the roasting pan, scatter the sage leaves over the liquid and carefully slide the pan into the oven.
- Roast for about 2 to 3 hours, basting bird every 30 minutes with drippings. Start checking the bird 1 hour and 45 minutes into cooking, and tent it with foil if skin is turning too dark. Cook until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh without touching bone registers 165 degrees. Transfer to a cutting board or platter and allow to rest at least 30 minutes before carving.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 749, UnsaturatedFat 17 grams, Carbohydrate 10 grams, Fat 33 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 92 grams, SaturatedFat 12 grams, Sodium 1037 milligrams, Sugar 6 grams, TransFat 1 gram
More about "turkey normande recipes"
TURKEY RECIPES
From allrecipes.com
RECIPES FROM NORMANDY ARCHIVES - NORMANDY THEN AND …
From normandythenandnow.com
TARTE NORMANDE AUTHENTIC RECIPE | TASTEATLAS
From tasteatlas.com
ALLRECIPES
TURKEY NORMANDE FOOD - HOME AND RECIPE
From homeandrecipe.com
INA GARTEN'S TUSCAN TURKEY ROULADE RECIPE IS SIMPLE BUT DELICIOUS
From eatingwell.com
TURKEY NORMANDY | OPERATION IN TOUCH
From operationintouch.com
NORMAN ROCKWELL THANKSGIVING TURKEY | RECIPEISH | GUSTUS VITAE
From gustusvitae.com
BEST TURKEY ROULADE RECIPE - HOW TO MAKE ROASTED TURKEY …
From delish.com
TURKEY CUTLETS NORMANDY - REDBOOK
From redbookmag.com
15 BEST NORMANDY RECIPES FROM NORTHERN FRANCE - FRENCH FOOD
From frenchfood.com
TURKEY NORMANDE - DINING AND COOKING
From diningandcooking.com
CHICKEN A LA NORMANDé - LIVE NATURALLY MAGAZINE
From livenaturallymagazine.com
JUICY ROAST TURKEY RECIPE - NATASHA'S KITCHEN
From natashaskitchen.com
RICH TURKEY TOMATO BOLOGNESE RECIPE - TASTING TABLE
From tastingtable.com
TURKEY NORMANDE FOOD - TOPNATURALRECIPES.COM
From topnaturalrecipes.com
HOMEMADE TURKEY SAUSAGE WITH SCRAMBLED EGG WHITES | RECIPES
From weightwatchers.com
TURKEY NORMANDE- WIKIFOODHUB
From wikifoodhub.com
You'll also love