Black Turkey - circa 1963
Tried and True!
For about a
dozen years, at the approach of turkey-eating season, I have been trumpeting
to all who would listen, and to a good many who would rather not, that
there is only one way to cook a turkey. This turkey is not my turkey.
It is the creation of the late Morton Thompson, who wrote "Not
as a Stranger" and other books.
This recipe
was first contained in the manuscript of a book called "The
Naked Countess" which was given to the late Robert Benchley, who
had eaten the turkey and was so moved as to write an introduction to
the book. Benchley then lost the manuscript. He kept hoping it would
turn up-- although not as much, perhaps, as Thompson did, but somehow
it vanished, irretrievably. Thompson did not have the heart to write
it over. He did, however, later put his turkey rule in another book.
Not a cookbook, but a collection of very funny pieces called "Joe,
the Wounded Tennis Player."
THE ONLY WAY
TO COOK A TURKEY!
This turkey
is work... it requires more attention than an average six-month-old
baby. There are no shortcuts, as you
will see.
Get a HUGE
turkey-- I don't mean just a big, big bird, but one that looks as though
it gave the farmer a hard time when he did
it in.
It ought
to weigh between 16 and 30 pounds. Have the poultryman, or butcher,
cut its head off at the end of the neck, peel back the skin,
and remove the
neck close to the body, leaving the tube. You will want this
for stuffing. Also, he should leave all the fat on the bird.
When you
are ready to cook your bird, rub it inside and out with salt and
pepper. Give it a friendly pat and set it aside. Chop
the heart,
gizzard, and liver and put them, with the neck, into a stewpan
with a clove of garlic, a large bay leaf, 1/2 tsp coriander,
and some
salt. I don't know how much salt-- whatever you think. Cover
this with about
5 cups of water and put on the stove to simmer. This will be
the basting fluid a little later.
About this
time I generally have my first drink of the day, usually a RAMOS FIZZ.
I concoct it
by taking the whites of
four eggs,
an equal amount of whipping cream, juice of half a lemon
(less 1 tsp.),
1/2
tsp.
confectioner's sugar, an appropriate amount of gin, and blending
with a few ice cubes. Pour about two tablespoons of club
soda in a chimney
glass, add the mix, with ice cubes if you prefer. Save your
egg yolks, plus 1 tsp. of lemon -- you'll need them later.
Have a
good sip!
(add 1 dash of Orange Flower Water to the drink, not the
egg yolks)
Get a huge
bowl. Throw into it one diced apple, one diced orange, a large can
of crushed pineapple, the grated rind
of a lemon,
and three
tablespoons
of chopped preserved ginger (If you like ginger, double
this -REB). Add 2 cans of drained Chinese water chestnuts.
Mix this
altogether, and have another sip of your drink. Get a second, somewhat
smaller, bowl. Into this, measuring
by teaspoons,
put:
2 tsp hot dry mustard
2 tsp caraway seed
2 tsp celery seed
2 tsp poppy seed
1 tsp black pepper
2 1/2 tsp oregano
1/2 tsp mace
1/2 tsp turmeric
1/2 tsp marjoram
1/2 tsp savory
3/4 tsp sage
3/4 tsp thyme
1/4 tsp basil
1/2 tsp chili powder
In the same bowl, add:
1 Tbsp poultry seasoning
4 Tbsp parsley
1 Tbsp salt
4 headless crushed cloves
1 well-crushed bay leaf
4 lrg chopped onions
6 good dashes Tabasco
5 crushed garlic cloves
6 lrg chopped celery
Wipe your brow,
refocus your eyes, get yet another drink--and a third bowl. Put in
three packages of unseasoned bread
crumbs (or
two loaves
of toast or bread
crumbs), 3/4 lb. ground veal, 1/2 lb. Ground fresh pork, 1/4
lb. butter, and all the fat you have been able to pull
out
of the bird.
About now it
seems advisable to switch drinks. Martinis or stingers are recommended
(Do this at your own risk
- we always
did! -REB).
Get a fourth bowl, an enormous
one. Take a sip for a few minutes, wash your hands, and mix
the contents of all the other bowls. Mix it well.
Stuff the
bird and skewer it.
Put the leftover
stuffing into the neck tube.
Turn your oven
to 500 degrees F and get out a fifth small bowl. Make a paste consisting
of those
four egg yolks and
lemon juice
left from
the
Ramos Fizz.
Add 1 tsp hot dry mustard, a crushed clove of garlic, 1
Tbl onion juice, and enough flour to make a stiff paste. When
the oven
is red hot, put
the bird
in, breast down on the rack. Sip on your drink until the
bird has begin to brown
all over, then take it out and paint the bird all over
with paste. Put it back in and turn the oven down to 350 degrees
F. Let the
paste set,
then
pull the
bird out and paint again. Keep doing this until the paste
is used up.
Add a quart
of cider or white wine to the stuff that's been simmering on the stove,
This is your basting fluid.
The turkey
must be
basted every
15 minutes. Don't argue. Set your timer and keep it up.
(When confronted with the choice "do I baste from
the juice under the bird or do I baste with the juice
from the pot on the stove?" make certain that the
juice under the bird neither dries out and burns, nor
becomes so thin that gravy is weak.
When you run out of baste, use cheap red wine. This critter
makes incredible gravy! -REB) The bird should cook about
12 minutes per pound, basting every 15
minutes. Enlist the aid of your friends and family.
As
the bird cooks, it will first get a light brown, then
a dark brown, then darker and darker. After about 2
hours you
will think
I'm crazy.
The bird
will be turning
black. (Newcomers to black turkey will think you are
demented and drunk on your butt, which, if you've followed
instructions,
you
are -REB)
In fact,
by the time
it is finished, it will look as though we have ruined
it. Take a fork and poke at the black cindery crust.
Beneath,
the bird will be a gorgeous mahogany, reminding one of those golden-browns
found in precious Rembrandts.
Stick
the fork
too deep,
and the juice will
gush to the ceiling. When you take it out, ready
to carve it, you will find that
you do not need a knife. A load sound will cause
the bird to fall apart like the
walls of that famed biblical city. The moist flesh
will drive you crazy, and the stuffing--well, there
is nothing
like
it on this
earth. You
will make the
gravy just like it as always done, adding the giblets
and what is left of the basting fluid.
Sometime during
the meal, use a moment to give thanks to Morton Thompson. There is
seldom, if ever, leftover
turkey
when this
recipe is used.
If there is,
you'll find that the fowl retains its moisture
for a few days. That's all there is to
it. It's work, hard work--- but it's worth it.