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Maple-Butter-Glazed Turkey

4.3

(9)

MapleButterGlazed Turkey carved and arranged on a serving platter
Photograph by Isa Zapata, Food Styling by Thu Buser, Prop Styling Tim Ferro 

Chances are you’re going to cook no more than one turkey this year (if any at all). Please let it be this one. Yes, this recipe involves breaking down the bird into parts before roasting, which means removing the legs and wings and part of the backbone so the turkey can lie mostly flat on a large rimmed baking sheet. This method may sound tedious—we promise it’s easy to do following our step-by-step (watch Chris make it here!), or you can ask your butcher to do it—but it has many benefits. So please hear us out.

First, it allows for a dry brine (think mostly salt and sugar) to reach parts of the turkey that normally stay hidden when it is left whole for the most even seasoning possible. Second, it guarantees more even cooking so the breast doesn’t dry out before the legs are cooked through. Third, it creates more surface area so that the oven’s heat can render more fat and brown even more skin. Last, it makes the work of resting and carving the finished roast so much easier since most of the hardest work already happened. Instead of a last-minute carving marathon, simply remove the breasts, slice, and you are done. Another bonus: Roasting a bird in parts and in a near-flat state means it will cook up faster, freeing up precious oven time for side dishes and desserts. While seasoning the turkey a day in advance is ideal, this approach means that even applying the dry brine one hour before roasting will still be very effective.

Less stress? Better turkey? Those are some traditions we can get behind.

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What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Yield

    8–10 servings

Ingredients

Turkey

1

12–14-lb. turkey, neck and giblets removed

1

Tbsp. black peppercorns

cup Diamond Crystal or 6 Tbsp. plus ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt

2

Tbsp. garlic powder

2

Tbsp. light brown sugar

Glaze and assembly

1

Tbsp. vegetable oil or extra-virgin olive oil

2

sprigs thyme

½

cup (1 stick) unsalted butter

¼

cup pure maple syrup

2

Tbsp. soy sauce or tamari

2

Tbsp. unseasoned rice vinegar or white wine vinegar

1

Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce

Special equipment

A spice mill or mortar and pestle

Preparation

  1. Turkey

    Step 1

    Place one 12–14-lb. turkey, neck and giblets removed, breast side up, on a large cutting board and pat dry. Grip a wing and pull it outward so you can see where it attaches to the body. Using a sharp boning or chef’s knife, cut through the joint to separate the wing from the breast. If you hit bone, you’re in the wrong spot; pull the wing out farther to help you get into the place where the joint meets the socket. Remove wing; repeat on the other side.

    Step 2

    Cut through skin connecting 1 leg to carcass. Pull leg back until ball joint pops out of its socket; cut through the joint to separate leg. Repeat on the other side.

    Step 3

    Now for the breast: You can roast the breast as is with the backbone attached, or you can turn the breast over and trim the lower part of the backbone that was formerly adjacent to the legs by breaking it at the midpoint or, using a sturdy chef’s knife, by cutting between the vertebrae to divide it.

    Step 4

    Coarsely grind 1 Tbsp. black peppercorns in a spice mill or with a mortar and pestle; transfer to a medium bowl. Add ⅔ cup Diamond Crystal or 6 Tbsp. plus ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt, 2 Tbsp. garlic powder, and 2 Tbsp. light brown sugar and mix dry brine together with your fingers.

    Step 5

    Place turkey pieces, skin side up, on a wire rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet. Sprinkle dry brine liberally all over both sides of turkey, patting to adhere. You may not need all of it, but it’s good to start out with extra since some will end up on the baking sheet. It is important to have the turkey elevated on a rack so it absorbs the salt mixture evenly (rather than sitting in a pile of salt on the baking sheet). Let sit at room temperature at least 1 hour or chill up to 1 day.

  2. Glaze and assembly

    Step 6

    Remove wire rack with turkey from baking sheet; set aside. Rinse baking sheet to remove excess salt. Pour 1 cup water into baking sheet and return wire rack with turkey to baking sheet. Rub turkey all over with 1 Tbsp. vegetable oil or extra-virgin olive oil and arrange skin side up.

    Step 7

    Cook 2 sprigs thyme, ½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, ¼ cup pure maple syrup, 2 Tbsp. soy sauce or tamari, 2 Tbsp. unseasoned rice vinegar or white wine vinegar, and 1 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce in a medium saucepan over medium heat, swirling occasionally, until thick enough to coat a spoon, 8–10 minutes. Set glaze aside.

    Step 8

    Place a rack in bottom third of oven; preheat to 425°. Roast turkey, rotating baking sheet halfway through, until skin is mostly golden brown, 20–30 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 300° and continue to roast turkey, brushing with reserved glaze every 20 minutes and adding more water by ½-cupfuls as needed to maintain some liquid in baking sheet, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of breast registers 150°, and 170° when inserted into the thickest part of thighs, 50–70 minutes longer (total cooking time will be about 1½ hours). Skin should be deep golden brown and shiny. Transfer turkey to a cutting board and let rest 30–60 minutes before carving.

    Watch Chris make it here

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Reviews (9)

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  • I did a test run using a chicken and it turned out to be amazing. The meat was juicy, the skin was crispy, and I loved the flavors. It might redeem thanksgiving turkey for me this year, which I always threaten to skip.

    • B-money

    • PA

    • 11/16/2022

  • There is one other review here. It contrasts sharply with mine. Note the amount of salt that is used for the dry brine and consider its impact. The recipe does not state to rinse the brine from the turkey. All that salt remains in the meat to be placed into your, well, mouth. My guests and I couldn't continue ingesting. My only thought is that tastes are changing and I am not "keeping up..." Pro tip: serve copious amounts of water with this meal. (I haven't used bon appétit in a long time, and it will be a long time before I use their recommendations again...)

    • Anonymous

    • Cherry Hill, NJ

    • 11/16/2022

  • This was the first turkey I made and it was amazing. I was told by many people that it was the best turkey they ever had, I didn't even get to try any of the white meat because it was all gone before I had a chance to get any. It was juicy on the inside and the sweetness of the glaze really added to the flavor. I did not manage to get the skin as crispy as Chris did in the video but it was still a lovely golden brown and stayed on the meat. carving the wings and legs before baking made it cook so much faster and more evenly, I will be making this again for the family thanksgiving. This is the first time I have ever enjoy a turkey, even better than fried.

    • Anonymous

    • Des Moines, IA

    • 11/21/2022

  • I haven't made this turkey yet (it's currently sitting in my fridge, soaking up brine). But more importantly, neither has Anonymous from Cherry Hill. Who makes a turkey for guests 11 days before Thanksgiving? Now that we've established that they're lying, the amount of salt in this recipe isn't crazy. Kenji Lopez-Alt's recipe calls for six tablespoons of Morton's. Note that this recipe also says, "you may not need all of it." The only issue I have with this recipe is it claims that 1 hour of brining is enough, and over 24 too much. I'm going to give it 48 hours, myself.

    • Matt

    • Raleigh, NC

    • 11/23/2022

  • As seen in the above video, Chris put the brine on VERY lightly. If you apply 1/4 or less of the brine, leave it on to cook. Me? I used it all so I’ll be rinsing it off as most dry and wet brine recipes require. I may make a small amount to sprinkle on the top before cooking, small amount it the key.

    • Ready2Eat

    • Newton MA

    • 11/24/2022

  • Not blowing my own horn, but easily one of the best turkeys I've had in my 36 years on earth. I don't even LIKE turkey, but it was required for Thanksgiving, so my compromise was if I have to eat it, I'm going to make it. The road was straight, if uphill at times! I definetly spent some time wrestling with the bird butchering (....totally mangled BOTH oysters...weeping) and I wasn't sure if the dry brine was right, the smallest turkey I could find was 20lbs and I think Chris's was 12-14? I feel like i misread somewhere in the directions for 2 CUPS of maple syrup? Pretty sure my eyes were lying so I went with 1/2 a cup of maple cream (because i had it on hand and i wanted to) and all attendees were interested in MORE glaze samples after their first one xD Overall awesome, my skin didn't lacquer the same but the turkey was nicely salted from the brine, the skin survived slicing, the glaze was -d e l i c i o u s- and i felt like the G.O.A.T when I put that sliced platter down on the table. 10/10 would reccomend.

    • Molly M.

    • Burrillville, RI

    • 11/25/2022

  • I made this recipe but substituted the turkey for chicken since I was cooking for 2. I modified slightly the glaze rates to include more maple syrup because the butter was taking over the flavor. The rest of the recipe was the same. I didn’t modify the ratios because brine and glaze are things you can control based on preference. I cooked the chicken whole and it came out juicy and soft on the inside, and crisp on the outside. The chicken was coming apart so nicely I didn’t need a knife. Chicken size was 5 pounds and it was fresh. The flavor was great and not sweet (which surprised me), but did have a woody undertone. Well balanced overall. 10000% recommended.

    • Celia

    • Greenwich, CT

    • 11/25/2022