Recipes Dinner Poultry Dishes Roast Turkey 3 Tricks to a Perfect Roast Turkey, Every Time Bonus: These techniques work great for weeknight chicken, too. By Ann Taylor Pittman Ann Taylor Pittman For 20 years, Ann Taylor Pittman built a career of creating healthy recipes at Cooking Light magazine, where she most recently served as Executive Editor. She is the recipient of two James Beard Foundation Awards: a feature writing award for "Mississippi Chinese Lady Goes Home to Korea" and a cookbook award for The New Way to Cook Light. She is now a freelancer specializing in recipe development, writing, and video. Ann lives in Birmingham, Alabama, with her husband, their 13-year-old twin boys, one big dog, and one little dog. Food & Wine's Editorial Guidelines Published on November 11, 2024 Close Photo: Food & Wine / Photo by Chris Simpson / FOOD STYLING by MARGARET MONROE DICKEY / PROP STYLING by AUDREY DAVIS We’ve been turning out roast turkey recipes at Food & Wine for over 45 years, and we’ve recommended plenty of new tricks: slathering it with mayonnaise, pushing cured lard underneath the skin, and even skipping the oven altogether. But in all our years of testing, we’ve found the three techniques below to be the most effective for an evenly cooked, perfectly seasoned, and crisp-skinned turkey. Best of all, simple techniques like spatchcocking and dry-brining can be used beyond Turkey Day. Master these skills to cook a foolproof Thanksgiving bird, and a better roast chicken throughout the year. Spatchcock for success Think of spatchcocking as turning a 3D turkey into a 2D one. It involves butterflying the bird so that it’s splayed out and lies flat. Why spatchcock? First, it cooks the bird much more quickly — in less than an hour and a half. Because all the meat is on the same plane and equally exposed to the heat, it all cooks more evenly — no more breast meat overcooking as the thighs struggle to get done. And with all the skin on top of the bird, the entirety of it becomes wonderfully crisp. Finally, a spatchcocked bird takes up less vertical space, so you can accommodate more dishes on the other oven rack. How to do it Turn the bird upside down so the backbone is facing up. Using heavy-duty poultry shears, cut along either side of the backbone to remove it. Turn the turkey over, breast side up, and press down firmly on the center of the breastbone until it cracks and the bird lies flat. Spatchcocking Is the Key to the Juiciest Roast Chicken — Here’s How to Do It Our Dry-Brined Spatchcocked Turkey recipe calls for seasoning the bird with about 3 1/2 tablespoons of salt. Greg DuPree Dry-brine it ahead Dry brining means salting and seasoning the turkey and then allowing it to rest. Why dry-brine? It’s easier and less messy than wet brining, but it achieves the same result — juicy, well-seasoned meat. It also yields crispier skin. How to do it Combine salt and seasonings, and rub under and over turkey skin. Refrigerate, uncovered, for 24 hours. Plan on 3/4 teaspoon to 1 teaspoon of Diamond Crystal kosher salt per pound. (Diamond Crystal kosher salt because it has a consistent, small flake size that is easy to sprinkle and dissolves quickly.) Why You Should Pre-Season Your Turkey Roast it right Let it sit Make sure to let the turkey rest at room temperature for an hour before roasting. You don’t want it going into the oven fridge-cold. Test the fit Before you turn the oven on, test-fit the roasting pan (with the turkey on it) to see exactly where you need to arrange the oven racks. Take its temp Preferably, use a digital probe (leave-in) thermometer so you don’t have to open the oven to check the turkey’s temperature. Insert it in the meaty part of the thigh, making sure the tip doesn’t hit bone and doesn’t go all the way through. Let it rest Let the bird sit for 30 minutes to allow the juices to settle before carving. How to Carve a Turkey Was this page helpful? Thanks for your feedback! Tell us why! Other Submit