32 Comments

    1. Patty,

      Yes! Remove the giblets after the first 2-1/2 hours of roasting. Read through the post again. You’ll see directions to remove the neck and giblets in step 5, and also in a note “Start With a Partial Cook” just above step 3. After roasting for 2-1/2 hours the meat has thawed/partially cooked enough that you can easily remove the neck and giblets. That’s also the point when you season the turkey and place an alarm thermometer probe. It’s a fun method that can really get you out of a pinch!

      Thanks!
      -Kim

    1. Bob,

      A frozen chicken will work too. Apply the same steps to cooking your chicken. The cooking time will be the same—about 50% longer than a thawed chicken.

      Thanks!
      -Kim

  1. What a fantastic write up. Nothing like having new avenues being opened to cooking things and it does allow the stretching of ones cooky experience.

    Thanks,
    bill

    1. Paul,

      Big Green Eggs are quite versatile with their cooking temperature range. As long as the ambient temperature is 325°F throughout the cook, smoking is a great option! Happy turkey cooking.

      Thanks,
      -Kim

  2. What great information, had a turkey-less Xmas one year when my huge frozen turkey never defrosted after a week in my fridge-water-thawed it for Boxing Day,but it wasn’t the same.
    Breasts are always too dry for me,so I am going to deliberately cook a frozen turkey this year.

    1. Upside down 2/3 of the cooking time…in a turkeybag with 1 tbs of flour and slit a couple of holes on top of the bag. After 2/3 of cooking put another bag on outside the first bag, then turn the bird and make a slit on top of the bags.
      Cook the last 1/3 of cooking. Never ever get dry turkey.

  3. I’ve never cooked a turkey over a sheet pan before. My first thought is what about the copious amount of liquid it gives off? I don’t see anything in the write up about dealing with that. I assume you must be pulling juice off as you go with a baster. But then I picture myself constantly in and out of the oven and wonder how the oven temp keeps up with that.

    1. Mike,

      Good question! When a whole turkey is roasted on a sheet pan without high sides or a lid there is enough surface area exposed that the liquid given off will evaporate at a rate fast enough that you don’t have to worry about it overflowing past the edge of the pan. The oven is only opened when the ChefAlarm’s high alarm sounds to verify the turkey’s internal temperature–no basting required.

      Thanks for your question!
      -Kim

    1. CRM,

      Yes! Convection ovens have increased efficiency, and it is most often recommended to decrease the set oven temperature as specified in your recipe by 15-25°F.

      Thanks,
      -Kim

  4. I would like to try Sous Vide a butter ball turkey breast. Does anyone have any suggestions as to the temperature setting for the Sous Vide and for how long.
    Thanks

    1. I’m doing that this year. I set my sous vide to 157°F and use a probe thermometer inside the breast, once it hits 152°F I start a timer and hold it at that temp for a few minutes. The whole process takes 60–90 minutes, I seem to recall. We have a whole post on cooking sous vide turkey, check it out!

  5. Thankyou!
    .Here I was running cold water and thinking I was in trouble. I knew we’d likely not eat until 10PM.
    Now my turkey is in the oven!

    Thanks
    Susan

  6. Hello, My turkey is 22lb and will be 100% frozen. I understand its 50% more for a cook so about 7 hours. My question is does the 2 and 1/2 hour pre-cook time still apply or is it longer, and then can i move into a diff pan to collect drippings for gravy but leave it on the V-rack?

    1. It will probably take longer for the first stage, yes. I’d give it 3 at least. Move forward with the cook once you can get a probe into the breast.

  7. What about using a turkey bag too? I was thinking of putting one on after the giblets are removed (2-2.5 hr mark). Would that shorten the baking time at all? Or make it moister?

    1. A bag is unnecessary. It doesn’t actually make things more moist and will not appreciably speed your cook.

  8. It is my first Thanksgiving that I’m hosting/cooking everything, so it was very ambitious of me. This helped me feel a lot more confident about that ambition 🙂

  9. Can you also use a turkey bag, maybe after the first 2.5 hours? Would this quicken the bake time and make more moist?

    1. I am unsure about quickening the bake, but I do know that it will not make it more moist. It will make it more wet, which is a different thing. Steaming hte bird in a bag will leave moisture on the surface, but will not keep it in the meat where we want it.

    1. Don’t stuff the turkey! Stuffing turkey is a recipe for food-borne illness or dry turkey. The bread of the stuffing absorbs the raw turkey juices like a sponge, and by thte time you get the insulative bread cooked to temp to kill the bacteria in the juices, the meat will be overcooked.

  10. Pingback: The Best Way to Defrost Turkey, According to Food Safety Experts - reviewer4you.com
  11. I have a fully cooked smoked turkey that is frozen (about 8 pounds) can I defrost outside of fridge by tomorrow then heat on traeger or should I just cook from frozen?

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