Maple Brined Ancho-Scallion Boneless Turkey Breast with Apple-Butter Pecan Stuffing

November 18, 2012 at 2:11 pm | Posted in Breads, Daring Cooks, Dinner, Holiday, Poultry, Vegetables | 53 Comments
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Damn, I thought Thanksgiving was the 29th because Thanksgiving is usually the last Thursday in November.  Oh, boy, this is the trick of the trick of treat for real…the ultimate “Ha ha…you better get your ass in gear, Lisa!” moment.  I think Hurricane Sandy left me a little off-kilter, but I’ll get to that later.


You see, for this month’s Daring Cook’s challenge, which is all about brining meat and/or vegetables, then roasting, which  I’m late to as usual, I decided to brine a whole turkey breast, then layer it with more flavors – like a a compound butter rub, THEN stuff, roll, and tie it…for a lovely Thanksgiving treat for those who don’t want to roast a whole turkey.

Audax of Audax Artifax was our November 2012 Daring Cooks’ host. Audax has brought us into the world of brining and roasting, where we brined meat and vegetables and roasted them afterwards for a delicious meal!

I didn’t have a bowl or bag big enough to fit the turkey and brine, see left, so I ended up using a huge pot..right.

Well, well, well..this is dinner Friday night, the 16th.. and in less than one week..we will have turkey again..a whole 20 lb turkey.  Because of this turkey breast,  I would love to just roast some chickens and be done with it.

“Why did you buy such small turkeys?”  OK, no one in my family is that dumb.

There’s no way I can break tradition here, so more turkey it is.  Yippee.

I love to brine meat, from chicken to pork chops and I most always brine Thanksgiving turkeys. The well-seasoned juicy factor from brining is simply amazing and I can’t think of another method that can give you meat this juicy, unless Thomas Keller is in your kitchen. (Ha ha!  I just read the Thomas Keller/Juicy Meat blurb again and realized how it sounds!)

This turkey breast is so loaded with flavor, I don’t know how I can match it and I wish I could make it again for Thanksgiving.  First you’ve got the salty maple, brown sugar brine with bay leaves, garlic and peppercorns seasoning it to perfection.  Then you have an ancho pepper-scallion-garlic butter rub beneath and on top of the skin.  The stuffing is the crème de la crème..with apples, buttered and toasted pecans, and of course..the usual sauté of onions, herbs and whatever else you want to add to your ‘custom’ mirepoix.  It’s not always celery, carrots and onions IF you don’t want it to be.  No rules!

Oh, what are ancho peppers?  Dried poblano peppers and they taste like spicy raisins, but impart such a lovely, slightly spicy/smoky undertone to dishes. You can find them in plastic packages in many supermarkets.

I nixed celery.  I almost always nix celery in stuffing, or just add a small amount.  I like celery raw and crisp, but I don’t flip over it cooked.  I don’t think it adds much to dishes flavor wise when cooked, except chicken soup..and that’s only because I’m superstitious and believe it’s part of the secret penicillin that makes you feel better.

Tied up and roasted, this turkey breast is a picnic on the palate (did I really just type that?  Boy, I’m worse off than I thought) and as juicy as a warm peach right off the tree (Did I really type that too?)..so all you really need is a side of mashed potatoes and a vegetable..but of course you can add as many sides as you want  (I cannot have Thanksgiving without candied sweet potatoes).  There will be extra stuffing, but use any stuffing you like for this roast…I’m just giving you the recipe for mine because it’s perfect for this rolled turkey breast, even though I saturated it with chicken stock so the breast would be easier to roll.

By the way…I know I say this a lot, but I’m going to say it again and I can’t say it enough. This is the best stuffed turkey breast I’ve ever had in my life.  You know when something tastes so good that no matter how full you are, you keep eating it?  This is one of those.

Who says ugly can’t be delicious?  I’ve had ‘beautiful’ that tastes like pond scum, or how I imagine pond scum would taste.

OK…a GASP moment.  Once again, this turkey breast is so juicy due to the brining, it doesn’t need gravy, the holy grail of Thanksgiving.  BUT, you could make a pan gravy out of the drippings with some butter, flour, white wine and/or stock, because I’m sure at least one person might protest.

Maple Brined, Ancho-Scallion Boneless Turkey Breast with Apple-Butter Pecan Stuffing

Maple Brine
3 quarts water
1 cup pure maple syrup
1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
3/4 cup kosher salt
2 turkish bay leaves
1 tablespoon whole black peppercorns
2 garlic cloves, sliced
One 3 to 3 1/2 lb whole, boneless turkey breast with skin, butterflied, if necessary, and pounded to about 1/2-inch to 1-inch thickness.

If you can’t find a whole, rolled,boneless turkey breast with skin in your meat section, buy a whole turkey and have the butcher cut it off for you (which is what I did..using the rest of the turkey for roasted legs and stock)..or do it yourself if you feel comfortable.

DIRECTIONS:
1. Bring all the ingredients, except the turkey breast, to a boil in a pot on the stove..until sugar is dissolved. Let cool completely, then refrigerate until cold.

2.  Pour brine into a pot or gallon bag and add turkey breast.  Let brine in the refrigerator 4 to 6 hours…no more than 8!

4.  Remove turkey breast from brine and rinse well under cold, running water.  Pat completely dry and continue with recipe.

Ancho-Scallion Butter Rub
Adapted from Food and Wine
6 tablespoons unsalted butter
2 ancho peppers, stemmed and seeded
6 scallions, chopped
2 garlic cloves
Kosher salt and pepper

DIRECTIONS:
1. In a small skillet, toast the ancho chiles until they just start to blister, about 4 minutes. Place the chiles to a small bowl and pour boiling water on top of them to cover. Let stand for 15 minutes. Drain and pat dry.

2. In a food processor, combine the chiles, butter, garlic and the chopped scallions and purée until smooth. Season well with salt and pepper. Carefully loosen the turkey breast skin and rub half of the ancho-scallion butter over the breast meat.  I decided not to loosen the turkey skin since I didn’t want to risk tearing it.  You need the skin to cover as much as the breast as possible when rolling it, so I rubbed some on the pounded breast meat before spreading the stuffing on top.  Let sit until ready to stuff, roll and tie.

Butter Pecan – Apple Stuffing
6 tablespoons of butter, divided 4 and 2.
A few leaves of fresh sage, julienned and chopped
leaves off of 4 sprigs of fresh thyme
1/4 bunch fresh flat-leaf parsley, roughly chopped
1 large onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 leek, cleaned well and chopped
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored and chopped
1 1/2 cups chopped pecans
4 tablespoons melted butter
1/4 cup heavy cream
1 to 1 1/2 cups low-sodium chicken stock
5 cups day old bread of your choice (I used ciabatta, crusts removed), hand torn or cut into 2-inch cubes. If not day old, oven-dry at 200F for about an hour or two, after tearing or cutting into cubes.

DIRECTIONS:
1. Stir together chopped pecans and 1/4 cup melted butter. Spread in an even layer on a parchment lined sheet pan. Bake at 350° for 15 – 20 minutes, stirring them round once half way through. until pecans are toasted (you’ll be able to smell them). Remove from oven, and let cool.

2.  Place bread cubes or pieces in a large bowl. Melt 4 tablespoons of butter in a large sauté pan and add the onions, leeks and garlic.  Saute until soft.  Pour on top of bread.  Melt two tablespoons of butter in the same pan and sauté the apples until lightly browned.  Add the herbs and sauté for another two minutes.  Scrape it all into bowl with the bread, onions, leeks and garlic.  Stir in buttered pecans.

3.  Stir together chicken broth or stock and cream.  Warm in a pot on the stove,. Season with salt and pepper to taste, then pour over stuffing mixture in bowl.  IMPORTANT – the juices from the turkey will moisten the stuffing, so if you like a really moist stuffing, add all the chicken broth-cream mixture like I did, which makes the turkey breast easier to roll.  If not, add liquid until it’s the consistency you prefer, and use less in the turkey.

4.  Let cool completely before stuffing turkey breast ( I refrigerate it for 1 hour after it cools to room temperature)..or, you can bake this stuffing on its own.  Spoon into a lightly buttered baking dish, cover with buttered foil, and bake in a 350 F preheated oven for about 35 minutes, then remove foil and bake for 10-15 minutes more to brown the top.  Since you will have leftover stuffing, you’ll need to do this anyway.

ASSEMBLE:
1.  Make sure the two breasts attached to the skin are pounded flat enough that they come together.  I recommend you have someone really strong or your butcher do this because I had a hell of a time and never got them pounded together or as  flat as I wanted, not to mention, my arm still hurts.

2.  Skin side down, rub the meat with half the ancho-scallion butter, then spread about two to three cups of stuffing all over the meat…pushing it to about 1-inch from the ends of the pounded meat.  Make sure you don’t spread it to the skin, since it will ooze out when you roll it.  Some will ooze out anyway..but don’t worry about it.

3.  From the long end..start to roll the breast, pulling the skin so it covers as you roll.  It won’t cover completely, but that’s ok.  Once rolled as much as you can roll it without losing half your stuffing…using cotton twine, tie the roast at 1 to 2-inch intervals.  There are various methods of doing this…like THIS and THIS, but since my stuffing was oozing and the skin wasn’t covering completely, I just made simple double knot ties 2-inches apart, using about 6 pieces of long twine.  To make it more secure, I also tied it vertically by taking an extra long piece of twine and weaving it through the horizontal ties on both sides….tying both ends of the twine together, tightly, on one end.  Preheat oven to 400F.

3.  Place rolled turkey breast on a lightly oiled rack in a roasting pan or on a baking sheet covered with foil.  Rub the tied roast..all over..top and bottom, lifting as you go along, with the remaining ancho – scallion butter.

4.  Place on the middle rack of your oven, and roast for 20 minutes, or until it starts to brown.  Reduce the temperature to 350F and roast for another 35 to 40 minutes or until an instant read thermometer registers 155 degrees F in the middle.  If not stuffing the breast…roast until it registers 145 degrees F.

5.  Let rolled breast sit for 20 minutes before slicing..then slice into about 1/2 to 1-inch slices and arrange on a platter.  Enjoy!


Now to Hurricane Sandy, originally dubbed ‘Frankenstorm’.  By now you know the devastation it caused throughout the Northeast.  We were lucky, since we’re up on the Palisades, so the water couldn’t touch us, but it was scary.  Branches and god knows what else were slamming against the side of my house hard and fast.  There were even points where I could feel the whole house shake, like it was going to be lifted off its foundation.  I kept waiting for a tree to come through the roof, but thankfully, none did.

We were also lucky that we didn’t lose power for good.  We had sporadic power losses, but by midnight, our power stayed on for good.  The other side of my town lost power for almost two weeks.

However…the devastation around me and down the shore was of a magnitude I still can’t believe and it’s heartbreaking.  Two friends did have trees smash down on their roofs and the sides of their houses, and in the weeks since the hurricane, I’m still hearing of friends whose houses were destroyed or battered to the point of being unlivable, especially old friends who live on the Jersey Shore.

Speaking of the Jersey Shore..my heart is broken.  Seaside Heights, the place where my Bad Boy First Love Story began and spanned, and the place of so many wonderful memories, is gone as I knew it.  Yes they will rebuild, but to those of us who grew up spending summers at the shore..it will never be the same.  Most of Seaside was built before I was even born..including the over 100 year old carousel on the Casino Pier, which is gone forever.

At the top of this page in the right sidebar..I’ve provided a link to donate money to help the victims of Hurricane Sandy via the Red Cross.  Here are some other places you can donate to..

The Mayor’s Fund

AmeriCares

Hurricane Sandy NJ Relief Fund

United Way Sandy Recovery Fund

The Humane Society of the United States

Donations will be needed for a long, long time, so I urge you to give what you can.  Any amount of money will help.

Speaking of the Jersey Shore...several people read my last draft of the last part of Bad Boy First Love and all agreed everything was squished together in short spurts to try to end it.  “Needs more details” was the general consensus.  SO, I’m adding more details and there’s a good possibility the ‘end’ will come in two parts, so part 18 may not be the very last (Oy Ve, right?)  I will have part 18 up early next week at the latest.  Thanks so much for your patience and understanding.

Finally, thank to Audax for a great Daring Cooks challenge (Sorry it’s 4 days late!).  To see what my fellow Daring Bakers brined and roasted, click on the links to their blogs, HERE.  To see the recipes and read about the method of brining meats and vegetables, along with charts. click HERE.

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Thanksgiving Leftover Turkey and Fixin’s Pop Tarts, PLUS, the Fairy Hobmother Wants to Grant a Wish to YOU!!

November 26, 2011 at 10:27 am | Posted in Breads, Dinner, Fruit, Holiday, Jams/Jellies, Lunch, Pastry, Pies and Tarts, Poultry, Vegetables, Vegetarian | 69 Comments
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Yes, you read that right – turkey dinner pop tarts. I bet the first thing that comes to mind is pieces of turkey in jam and frosting on top, right?  No worries, these are savory pop tarts!  Any sweetness comes from what you usually mishmash together on your Thanksgiving plate, like sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, or fruit in your stuffing.  BUT, what you add to these flaky, tarts of Thanksgiving dinner, is entirely up to you, or what you have left over.

I came up with this idea last week, fully thinking I would have PLENTY of leftovers to attempt these.  I made SO much food, there was no way I wouldn’t.  Well, happily, there were barely any leftovers because everyone loved everything so much, but sadly, that left me with nothing to make these pop tarts come to fruition.

Parents to the rescue…they had a small container of one of the stuffings I made (which was amazing..created by Jessica of How Sweet It Is), a bit of cranberry sauce, and a couple of slices of breast meat from my turkey (which was also amazing, created by Amy of SheWears Many Hats).  This year I added some new to my old and always requested Thanksgiving standby’s, and now both of the above will most likely be part of every Thanksgiving repertoire from hereon in.


SO, instead of celebrating Black Friday with my wallet, patience, and sicko traffic jams, I made these.  I partook in a bit of online Black Friday fun, but the best is yet to come on Cyber Monday, and you don’t have to leave your house to get some great deals.  I’ll be there, butt firmly implanted in my computer chair, thank you.

Speaking of deals…did I ever tell you all about the marble pastry board I placed a bid on at ebay?  Welll…for days, I was the only bidder, which is usually what happens.  With 3 minutes left to go, someone started bidding on it…fighting me, until my original bid of $12.00 was up to $40.00!  When it hit $45.00, I gave up..that was just too ridiculous for a small marble pastry board.  I surfed different online stores for another marble board, and sure enough, found the same exact marble pastry board for $14.00!  I couldn’t resist..I sent the obsessed, opposing bidder a message with all the links to the $14.00 pastry board.  She replied with an ‘Eff You’.  That was probably the most gratifying ‘Eff You’ anyone has ever bestowed upon me.

I digress, Mom and Dad save the day.  I couldn’t make as many pop tarts as I wanted to (I made half the recipe and was able to cobble together a top for the 9th dough rectangle that was left without a partner –  for a total of 5 pop tarts), and I didn’t know if they were  going to work, but at least I had something to fill them with now.  The urge to try these was so strong, I actually gasped for a second when I realized I might not be able to attempt them – but just one second – I swear.   I may be obsessed with ideas and experimenting, but not that obsessed.  OK, maybe a little more than ‘not that obsessed’.

OK…I know what you may be thinking as I ramble on about my ‘idea’ and ‘experiment’.  Leftover turkey and sides wrapped in a dough and baked?  That’s been done a gazillion times – from homemade hot pockets to empanadas, to turkey pot pie, to savory hand pies.. ad infinitum.

Look at these Thanksgiving croissants from The Milk Bar!

What’s different about these is that they’re streamlined.  You cannot  fit a ton of filling into a pop tart.  You get just the right amount of turkey, cranberry and stuffing (or whatever leftover sides you want to add with the turkey) with each bite, without filling oozing all over the place (not that that’s a bad thing), and they’re definitely much more portable, like your basic boxed pop tart, albeit, much better because it’s all homemade – nothing artificial.

I over-baked these by about 6 minutes (33 minutes).  So, about 25-27 minutes, as you see in the first photo up top, is just about right.

How could I forget the best part?   You can heat these up in a pop-up toaster once they’ve baked and cooled.  Try that with a big, fat loaded hand or turkey pot pie!  You can also make tons of them (double the dough recipe) and freeze, unbaked, taking out how ever many you need, for 6 months – OR, you can bake them and freeze them – again, taking out what you need, but letting them thaw, then heating them up in the oven, toaster oven, or, my fave, the pop-up toaster!

Not exactly the best interior photos, but trust me, these look A LOT better away from my Lowel Ego Light.  Most importantly, they’re delicious – so flaky and loaded with Thanksgiving dinner flavor!

Obviously, I’m selling you on these because they did work.  They’re awesome.  I’m eating one as I type this.  I used an herb pie dough for these, but you can use any favorite pie dough recipe.  Also – for the fillings, use any combination of leftovers with the turkey – from turkey, mashed potatoes and stuffing, to turkey, mashed potatoes, and whatever vegetable(s) you have left over  to just turkey, a little gravy and mashed potatoes.  How about a turkey – sweet potato or candied yam pop tart?   As you can see in the photo collage, I was lucky enough to have scrounged some candied sweet potatoes before they poofed until next year. Of course you can completely omit the turkey and make these vegetarian!

Is it just me, or is there far too many exclamation points in this entry?

I made one change to the recipe after biting into one.  Instead of the thin slices of turkey you see in the collage above, I changed it to two tablespoons chopped turkey per pop tart.  I did this because with some bites, I ended up pulling out the whole slice of turkey, having to bite down to break it in half so I wasn’t left with a pop tart without turkey.

Finally, how would you like a visit to your blog by the Fairy Hobmother to grant you a wish, one which you can then pass on to your readers?  Thanks to Jamie from Life’s a Feast, the Fairy Hobmother stopped by my blog and gifted me with an Amazon gift certificate!  The Fairy Hobmother is from Appiiances Online -UK, where they sell just about every appliance you could ever wish for.  Since I couldn’t decide what I wanted or needed, the Fairy Hobmother gave me a gift coupon to Amazon so I can choose what I want when I can figure it out.  If you leave a comment, – make a wish, since the Fairy Hobmother will be watching over my comment section to choose someone to sprinkle fairy dust on – in other words, receive what you wish for!  Leave a comment and you might get lucky!

Thanksgiving Leftover Pop Tarts
Yield:  9 Pop Tarts – maybe 10 with dough scraps

Herbed All-Butter Flaky Pie Dough
Inspired by my Grandmother’s recipe card
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, chilled
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
1 tablespoon chopped fresh thyme
1 to 2 tablespoons chopped fresh sage
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon sugar
16 tablespoons (2 sticks) unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch pieces and frozen
About 6 tablespoons ice water

DIRECTIONS:
1. Blend first 6 ingredients in processor until herbs are very finely chopped. Add frozen butter. Pulse processor until mixture resembles coarse meal.

2. Transfer mixture to large bowl. Using a fork, mix enough ice water into flour mixture to form moist clumps.You want it to look raggedy with lumps of butter.  Gather dough onto a piece of plastic wrap and gently flatten into rectangle. Wrap tightly and chill 30 minutes. (Can be made 2 days ahead. Keep chilled. Let dough soften slightly before rolling out.)

Pop Tart Filling
* 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons chopped turkey breast meat
9 heaping tablespoons stuffing
9 tablespoons cranberry sauce
OR – any combination of leftover sides you prefer, a tablespoon or small amount of each
1 egg, beaten
Grated parmesan, Grana Padano or any hard, aged Italian cheese. (optional)

* You can make these completely vegetarian by omitting the turkey.  So many possibilities!

ROLL, CUT AND ASSEMBLE POP TARTS:
1. Preheat oven to 350 F.  Remove both pieces of dough from the refrigerator. Let sit until workable.

2. Place one piece of the chilled and workable dough on a lightly floured work surface.  Roll it into a rectangle about 1/8″ thick, large enough that you can trim it to an even 9″ x 12″. Trim off the edges so you have a perfect 9″ x 12″ rectangle.  Roll and trim second piece of dough the same way.  Wrap and refrigerate dough scraps, you may have enough for another pop tart.

3. Using a ruler, make notches every 3-inches across 9-inch side.  Make notches every 4-inches across 12-inch side.  Cut using a pizza wheel or pressing down with a very sharp knife, as straight as you can, so you have 9  3″ x 4″ rectangles of dough. Repeat all of the above with second sheet of dough.  You will now have 18 3″ x 4″ rectangles of dough.

4.  Brush 9 rectangles of dough lightly with beaten egg.  Let sit until egg is tacky instead of wet and slippery, about 5 minutes.

5.  Spread 1 tablespoon stuffing over each of the 9 rectangles, leaving about 1/4-inch or a bit more, clean along each edge around the rectangle, so you’ll be able to seal them.  Top stuffing with 2 tablespoons chopped turkey and a tablespoon of cranberry sauce.  Repeat with the rest of the dough rectangles.

6. Top each filled rectangle of dough with a rectangle from the second piece of dough. Press down each edge to seal it well, then press the tines of a fork all around the edges of the rectangle. Repeat with remaining pop tarts.

If you’re not going to bake them immediately – NOW is the time to freeze them.  Place tarts on baking sheet and freeze until frozen solid.  Place them in a freezer bag and freeze up to 6 months.  To bake frozen, add 5 to 10 minutes to original baking time in a 350 F preheated oven.

7.  Gently lift pop tarts and place on a parchment or silpat lined baking sheet, three per row.  Brush each pop tart with remaining beaten egg, and sprinkle with some parmesan or any hard Italian grating cheese you prefer (I used grated Grana Padano).  Poke holes to vent the pop tarts.  I poked three rows with a fork.

8.  Place baking sheet with pop tarts in refrigerator for 30 minutes.  No need to cover them since they’re brushed with egg wash.

9.  Remove baking sheet from refrigerator and put in preheated oven.  Bake for 25-30 minutes, until light golden brown.

If you want to freeze them already baked – let cool at room temperature, then freeze them on the baking sheet until frozen.  Put pop tarts in a freezer bag for up to 6 months, To serve and eat, let them thaw in the refrigerator, then heat in a 350 F oven or toaster oven for about 10-15 minutes  OR, just pop them in a pop-up toaster for a few minutes.

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