Mine in various stages
DiskoTroop said:
170*? By all means cook it how you like it but that's turkey jerky to my taste.
I wrap my turkey with a stick of butter at 135*F, pull at 145*F and hold for 20+ min. Looks like this:
AgLA06 said:DiskoTroop said:
170*? By all means cook it how you like it but that's turkey jerky to my taste.
I wrap my turkey with a stick of butter at 135*F, pull at 145*F and hold for 20+ min. Looks like this:
Turkey is still poultry. I'm all for juicy, but no way I'd be pulling turkey that early and hoping it holds to food safe.
SoulSlaveAG2005 said:
Those look great. We are up in AF as well, we did a simple pan fry as the kids had never had trout before and wanted it simple for them.
DiskoTroop said:AgLA06 said:DiskoTroop said:
170*? By all means cook it how you like it but that's turkey jerky to my taste.
I wrap my turkey with a stick of butter at 135*F, pull at 145*F and hold for 20+ min. Looks like this:
Turkey is still poultry. I'm all for juicy, but no way I'd be pulling turkey that early and hoping it holds to food safe.
Pasteurization is a function of time and temperature brother. Turkey pasteurizes at 145* in 3 minutes. It's fine, I promise. But as mentioned, by all means cook it how you like it. No judgement here!
A real American would just call it the sirloin cap. It's a brazilian name for a cut of meat that somehow exists on American cattle too.dr_boogs said:
Celebrated the 4th w Picanha. Reverse sear. Didn't really think that through, a Brazilian cut on our Independence Day, but oh well. Homemade chimichurri from the OB, Swiss cheese potatoes, obligatory greens, bottle of Slingshot cab. Delicious. Happy 4th fellas.
Change the name from sirloin cap to Picanha and some people will pay 50, 60, 70% more for the same cut of meat. Who knows why????Prince_Ahmed said:A real American would just call it the sirloin cap. It's a brazilian name for a cut of meat that somehow exists on American cattle too.dr_boogs said:
Celebrated the 4th w Picanha. Reverse sear. Didn't really think that through, a Brazilian cut on our Independence Day, but oh well. Homemade chimichurri from the OB, Swiss cheese potatoes, obligatory greens, bottle of Slingshot cab. Delicious. Happy 4th fellas.
It looks good, though! Did the unamerican name make it taste even better?
You're right! I followed the wrong line on my chart when you questioned it yesterday. It's a 9.2 min pasteurization window at 145*F according to my chart. Here's the info I'm following but in a graph format for better visibility for idiots like me.AgLA06 said:DiskoTroop said:AgLA06 said:DiskoTroop said:
170*? By all means cook it how you like it but that's turkey jerky to my taste.
I wrap my turkey with a stick of butter at 135*F, pull at 145*F and hold for 20+ min. Looks like this:
Turkey is still poultry. I'm all for juicy, but no way I'd be pulling turkey that early and hoping it holds to food safe.
Pasteurization is a function of time and temperature brother. Turkey pasteurizes at 145* in 3 minutes. It's fine, I promise. But as mentioned, by all means cook it how you like it. No judgement here!
Chicken times are less than turkey at every temp point. And that has to be so all the way through including marrow.
There's a reason food safety procedures are what they are. I'm glad nothing negative has happened to you or your family yet. Poultry isn't worth family and friends health to avoid protein firming up. Keep it juicy and it won't matter.
And I sold millions of pounds of poultry last year, so it isn't bias.
EMHJR said:
Where are you guys getting your turkey breasts?
The ones I have been able to find are not very firmed up?
HEB out at Skinner Road / 290 had some when I grabbed some ribs they had on sale. I normally can't find one in town, so I stopped after dropping off my daughter at golf practice.EMHJR said:
Where are you guys getting your turkey breasts?
The ones I have been able to find are not very firmed up?