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Bourbon and Brown Sugar Glazed Turkey

4.3

(7)

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Bobbi Lin

Separate cooking techniques for breast and legs in this recipe ensure that the different cuts reach their most delicious potential. Cutting the raw turkey into parts is the only challenge here; if possible, ask your butcher to do it for you.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    8 Servings

Ingredients

Dry Brine

6

tablespoons kosher salt

4

tablespoons black peppercorns, medium ground

1

tablespoon granulated sugar

1

tablespoon paprika

1

12–14-pound turkey

Confit Legs

1

head of garlic, cut in half crosswise

2

sprigs rosemary

Olive oil (for cooking; 5–7 cups)

Breast and Assembly

½

cup (packed) light brown sugar

½

cup bourbon

2

tablespoons soy sauce

2

tablespoons unsalted butter

1

teaspoon paprika

Preparation

  1. Dry Brine

    Step 1

    Mix salt, pepper, granulated sugar, and paprika in a small bowl. Arrange turkey on a cutting board breast side up. Remove legs (keeping thigh and drumstick intact) by slicing through the skin that joins breast and leg, then bend leg down to expose joint and cut completely through the joint. Try to leave as much skin on breast as possible. Place legs on a large rimmed baking sheet. Set aside neck and giblets in cavity for making gravy. Arrange turkey on baking sheet with legs and generously sprinkle legs and turkey all over with dry brine, patting to adhere. Chill, uncovered, at least 12 hours and up to 2 days.

  2. Confit Legs

    Step 2

    Wipe off turkey legs (do not rinse) and place in the smallest heavy pot that will accommodate legs in a single layer (it’s okay if they overlap slightly). Add garlic and rosemary. Pour in oil just to barely cover legs. Heat over medium until a few bubbles begin to appear. Cover, reduce heat, and very gently simmer until meat is tender (the meat on the drumstick will have pulled away from the bone), 3–3½ hours. Let turkey thighs cool in oil until just warm, about 2 hours. Chill at least 2 hours but preferably longer. Meat will firm up the colder it gets, making it less likely to fall apart when glazing.

    Step 3

    Do Ahead: Legs can be cooked 1 day ahead. Keep chilled in oil.

  3. Breast and Assembly

    Step 4

    Preheat oven to 425°. Place turkey on a wire rack set inside a large rimmed baking sheet. Roast, rotating baking sheet once, until golden brown all over, 35–40 minutes.

    Step 5

    Meanwhile, bring brown sugar, bourbon, soy sauce, butter, and paprika to a simmer in a small saucepan over medium heat, stirring occasionally, until reduced by about half and thick enough to coat a spoon but not syrupy, 6–8 minutes. Reduce heat to very low and keep glaze warm until ready to use.

    Step 6

    Reduce oven temperature to 325° and roast turkey until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of breast registers 100°–110°. Then roast, basting every 10 minutes or so, making sure to lightly coat the entire breast each time (but save some glaze for the legs) and rotating baking sheet occasionally, until thermometer registers 150°, 60–75 minutes total after reducing oven temperature to 325°. Transfer breast to a cutting board and let rest at least 30 minutes before carving.

    Step 7

    Increase oven temperature back to 425°. Remove turkey legs from oil, wiping off excess, and place on a clean rimmed baking sheet; discard or chill cooking oil (skim off juices and use them in gravy; use oil for cassoulet or another confit).

    Step 8

    Carefully move a rack to upper third of oven and roast legs until skin is golden brown and fat is rendered, 15–20 minutes. Then roast, basting every 3 minutes or so with remaining glaze, until legs are well coated, 10–12 minutes. Arrange on a platter with sliced breast for serving.

Nutrition Per Serving

Calories (kcal) 910 Fat (g) 44 Saturated Fat (g) 11 Cholesterol (mg) 395 Carbohydrates (g) 11 Dietary Fiber (g) 0 Total Sugars (g) 9 Protein (g) 105 Sodium (mg) 750
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Reviews (7)

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  • I used this recipe for Thanksgiving 2020 with an 8lb turkey breast. Dry brined it at 5pm the night before and stuck it in the oven the next day at 2pm. 40 mins at the high temp, then about 70 mins at 325 before it reached the internal temp. The sauce smells pretty odd when applying it but it gave it a fantastic flavor that managed to really get into the turkey, not just the skin. The turkey also stayed extremely juicy. Definitely would use this recipe again.

    • Anonymous

    • Detroit, MI

    • 11/27/2020

  • I have made this five times for my Annual Friendsgiving and it is an absolute show stopper. I’ve never done the legs just breast and always comes out moist with a beautiful color skin! Winner

    • Anonymous

    • BOSTON

    • 11/16/2019

  • I have made this turkey 4 times. It is a showstopper. I never bother with the confit legs, I mean come on there's enough other stuff to do for Thanksgiving. This year I tried to use the drippings for gravy, big mistake. It tasted like the ocean and we had to throw it out. I even blended two sweet potatoes in to cut the salt, no dice. I guess a heavily salted dry brine has its downsides...

    • the-nomad

    • 11/23/2018

  • My experience was completely different from anonymous. Made this for our family feast last year, and everyone loved it. The glaze itself was something to behold. Its aroma was weird, its taste on the tongue, warm and fitting for thanksgiving. We had two people bring turkeys, and the bourbon turkey was the first to go (the second was a traditionally seasoned turkey). I’ll be making it this year again. If you decide to go with this, my suggestion for whiskey Is Woodford Kentucky straight bourbon. You’ll have some leftover good whiskey to enjoy.

    • Grilledcheese

    • Los Angeles

    • 11/17/2018

  • The flavors are all wrong. Bourbon does not compliment the taste of the turkey and the glaze is much too sweet. I was drawn in by the picture but I would steer clear of this one in the future. Luckily This was just a breast and not a whole turkey.

    • Anonymous

    • San Francisco

    • 11/27/2017