Da bird...how much

/ Da bird...how much #2  
I would say 90% of the purchasers are buying them for the snob value and the remainder are buying them because they are morons....
 
/ Da bird...how much #3  
Who cares why they are buying them. I want to raise some "Heritage" turkeys and sell them for $200 a pop. That's huge profit!
 
/ Da bird...how much #4  
Who cares why they are buying them. I want to raise some "Heritage" turkeys and sell them for $200 a pop. That's huge profit!

Depending on how many snobs and morons you can convince to buy them....:laughing:
 
/ Da bird...how much #7  
Heritage turkeys are packed with more flavor than your standard Butterball, according to Cook’s Illustrated’s taste test, and Lesnik said they cook in a third of the time.

I really have my doubts about this statement. I recall my Mom getting up at 2:00 in the morning on Thanksgiving in order to get the turkey in the oven in enough time for it to be done for dinner. And under no circumstances would she buy a Tom turkey, because it was just too tough and took too long to cook. This was back in the 50's, and I'm pretty sure these were the "heritage" turkeys. I know the local farmers flocks looked essentially like wild turkeys.
 
/ Da bird...how much #8  
Some more T-Day stats..

https://www.morningagclips.com/than...r&utm_term=newsletteredition&utm_medium=email

Interesting the meal cost fluctuations over the past few decades.

More data on the real, nominal, and time cost of Thanksgiving dinner (https://www.aei.org/publication/som...-lower-than-last-year-and-26-lower-than-1986/)


turkey1.png

turkey2.png


Steve
 
/ Da bird...how much #9  
59 cent/# publix turkey for me. :)
 
/ Da bird...how much
  • Thread Starter
#10  
I recall my Mom getting up at 2:00 in the morning on Thanksgiving in order to get the turkey in the oven in enough time for it to be done for dinner.


I can remember my ex mother-in-law would get up before 7am and then cook the Thanksgiving Day turkey just waaay too long. She was always so worried about it being undercooked. And it usually ended up so dry you had to dump a quart of gravy on to get it down! :laughing:
 
/ Da bird...how much #11  
If I want a turkey - I go out on my property and shoot a wild one. I found out that the "wild" ones have to be cooked quite a bit longer or you need a chain saw to carve them. Otherwise, they don't come any fresher. In the last 10-15 years this area has become overrun with the dam birds.
 
/ Da bird...how much #12  
If I want a turkey - I go out on my property and shoot a wild one. I found out that the "wild" ones have to be cooked quite a bit longer or you need a chain saw to carve them. Otherwise, they don't come any fresher. In the last 10-15 years this area has become overrun with the dam birds.

Wild turkeys do taste different than the butterball. I think they taste better.
 
/ Da bird...how much #13  
Wild turkeys do taste different than the butterball. I think they taste better.

I don't what they eat there, but we had wild turkey once. It was gamy as all get out; much prefer a Butterball.
 
/ Da bird...how much #15  
Have seen hundreds of the wild birds around here but am too d*** lazy to take a shot at them...and too cheap to buy one. Still...have always wondered what they must taste like. Thanks for sharing your story, 2LaneCruzer.
 
/ Da bird...how much #16  
I really have my doubts about this statement. I recall my Mom getting up at 2:00 in the morning on Thanksgiving in order to get the turkey in the oven in enough time for it to be done for dinner. And under no circumstances would she buy a Tom turkey, because it was just too tough and took too long to cook. This was back in the 50's, and I'm pretty sure these were the "heritage" turkeys. I know the local farmers flocks looked essentially like wild turkeys.

I had a pasture-raised Narragansett last year for Thanksgiving. It cooked very quickly, if we hadn't used a meat thermometer it would have overcooked. It was very different from a Butterball. Almost no breast meat, it was mostly dark meat. The meat was much more flavorful than a Butterball, very tender and juicy and a much stronger flavor. Delicious. We're having another one this year.

It was less than six months old, birds get tough when they're older. It wasn't super huge either, probably closer to ten pounds than 20.

It was more expensive than a supermarket turkey -- they practically give them away -- but not extravagant. I think we paid around $5/pound which is less than we'd pay for a prime cut of beef or fish. For a holiday meal it was worth it.

What I have to take with a grain of salt is the claim that farmers are getting $200 for turkeys.
 
/ Da bird...how much #17  
Well - I shot one about 5-6 years ago. It took 1 1/2 times longer than a store bought bird to cook, the meat was very dark - like a grouse. It sure didn't have the fat on it like a store bought bird - I liked the way it tasted, the wife --------- it was a little strong for her. We cooked it in the oven. Now, I find, most folks around here cook them in those large deep fat friers. Supposedly, it cooks faster and the bird tastes a lot better.
 
/ Da bird...how much
  • Thread Starter
#18  
I had a pasture-raised Narragansett last year for Thanksgiving. It cooked very quickly, if we hadn't used a meat thermometer it would have overcooked. It was very different from a Butterball. Almost no breast meat, it was mostly dark meat. The meat was much more flavorful than a Butterball, very tender and juicy and a much stronger flavor. Delicious. We're having another one this year.

It was less than six months old, birds get tough when they're older. It wasn't super huge either, probably closer to ten pounds than 20.

It was more expensive than a supermarket turkey -- they practically give them away -- but not extravagant. I think we paid around $5/pound which is less than we'd pay for a prime cut of beef or fish. For a holiday meal it was worth it.

What I have to take with a grain of salt is the claim that farmers are getting $200 for turkeys.


A local farm here does pasture raised non gmo fed turkeys. Sold out for this season @ $4.45lb
 
/ Da bird...how much #19  
Well - I shot one about 5-6 years ago. It took 1 1/2 times longer than a store bought bird to cook, the meat was very dark - like a grouse. It sure didn't have the fat on it like a store bought bird - I liked the way it tasted, the wife --------- it was a little strong for her. We cooked it in the oven. Now, I find, most folks around here cook them in those large deep fat friers. Supposedly, it cooks faster and the bird tastes a lot better.

ANYTHING deep fried will taste better....:laughing:
 
/ Da bird...how much #20  
59 cent/# publix turkey for me. :)

Us too, only Meijer's. 16# bird was $9.44.

I'll flour a cooking bag, lay in some celery, carrots and sliced onion. Stick the bird in the bag. Rub some vegetable oil on it. Shove a half stick of butter up its.... cavity. Close the bag. Poke some holes. Stick a thermometer in it. Throw it in the over at 350 and 2.5-3 hours later it will be done, falling off the bone, juicy. :licking:
 

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