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What food are you responsible for on Thursday for Thanksgiving?

I'm responsible for the Spanish yellow rice and other Puerto Rican food. But this year, I'm not cooking it. Because my son and wife eat it all up before I get a chance to get some. They have done this the last 3yrs.
You should just go hog wild and make 20 pounds of it, lol.
 
Loves dem short ribs....
But they're gettin' 'spensive.
Crazy expensive. Almost $10/lb and I buy them when they get yellow tagged at Walmart in the mornings. Sam's Wholesale Club has them cut thin and I'm going to try cooking them but I'm not optimistic. I noted that they stock beef cheeks too and I'm going to try them for "taco cabeza" soon. Ox tails were $9.89/lb or something like that. Last I saw them at an independent grocers they were asking $19.99/lb. WTF?
 
Get in the brine now, and give it some time in the fridge unwrapped and uncovered overnight for crispier skin.
I'll do it tonight. I've had a day old brine and didn't like how salty it ended up being. Overpowered the rub.
I'll pat it dry when I take it out, coat it in olive oil and add the rub on and under the skin with butter under the skin.
I also spray the skin every half hour with butter. At 250-275 it crisps the skin decently.
 
This year I'm taking BBQ back ribs to my youngest brother's house (his FIL requested them) and braised beef short ribs and a smoked turkey breast to my girlfriend's parents'.
That’s almost worth a trip down to the Macongo to visit my newest BFF ( palmettomoon palmettomoon ) for a joyous Thanksgiving feast!!
 
I'll do it tonight. I've had a day old brine and didn't like how salty it ended up being. Overpowered the rub.
I'll pat it dry when I take it out, coat it in olive oil and add the rub on and under the skin with butter under the skin.
I also spray the skin every half hour with butter. At 250-275 it crisps the skin decently.

Length of your brine that ended up salty could've also been attributed to your turkey's brand and starting point. ALL turkeys come pre-brined. The package will read some wording of "injected with an X% solution of salt, sugar,...." somewhere on the front. Some brands are really high %. I've seen up to 14%, which ends up tasting something like I'd imagine licking a salt block at a deer camp would. Butturballs are 9% if I'm remembering correctly, and honeysuckle white are 9.5%.

I try to find 8% or lower, and "fresh never frozen" birds are usually the lowest around 4% and what i like to use. If I have to use frozen with a higher % solution, I adjust my brine salt level by half or shorten brine time.

Anyway, just throwing that out there because a lot, or most, people don't realize, think about, or know they come pre-brined and lay a salty result solely on the brine recipe or length of time they brined.
 
Length of your brine that ended up salty could've also been attributed to your turkey's brand and starting point. ALL turkeys come pre-brined. The package will read some wording of "injected with an X% solution of salt, sugar,...." somewhere on the front. Some brands are really high %. I've seen up to 14%, which ends up tasting something like I'd imagine licking a salt block at a deer camp would. Butturballs are 9% if I'm remembering correctly, and honeysuckle white are 9.5%.

I try to find 8% or lower, and "fresh never frozen" birds are usually the lowest around 4% and what i like to use. If I have to use frozen with a higher % solution, I adjust my brine salt level by half or shorten brine time.

Anyway, just throwing that out there because a lot, or most, people don't realize, think about, or know they come pre-brined and lay a salty result solely on the brine recipe or length of time they brined.
Appreciate the info.
 
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