Turducken (A Chicken in a Duck in a Turkey)

"A Turducken is a de-boned turkey stuffed with a de-boned duck, which itself is stuffed with a small de-boned chicken. The name is a portmanteau of those ingredients, turkey, duck, and chicken. The birds can be deboned the day before to save some time since this recipe requires a long slow cook time."
 
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photo by Karen From Colorado photo by Karen From Colorado
photo by Karen From Colorado
photo by Karen From Colorado photo by Karen From Colorado
photo by Karen From Colorado photo by Karen From Colorado
Ready In:
11hrs
Ingredients:
8
Serves:
25
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ingredients

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directions

  • Debone the birds:

  • If it is your first time deboning a fowl, you might want to practice first on the chicken rather than the turkey since mistakes will be hidden inside the bigger birds.
  • Rinse the turkey and remove the neck and any giblets.
  • Place the turkey, breast side down, on a clean flat surface.
  • Cut through the skin along the length of the spine.
  • Using the tip of a knife and starting from the neck end, gently separate meat from rib cage on one side.
  • Toward neck end, cut through the meat to expose the shoulder blade; cut meat away from and around the bone, severing bone at the joint to remove shoulder blade.
  • Disjoint wing between second and third joints. Leave the wing bones and keep the wing attached to the meat.
  • Continue separating meat from frame, working toward the thighbone and being careful to keep the "oyster" (pocket of meat on back) attached to skin, rather than leaving it with the bone.
  • Cut through ball-and-socket joint to release the thighbone from the carcass (bird will be open on one side). Keep the leg attached to the meat.
  • Repeat boning procedure on the other side of the bird.
  • Carefully remove the carcass and use it to make stock for your gravy and stuffing. To make stock, put the turkey carcass in a large pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil, then simmer on low heat. You can also place it in a large crock pot.
  • You should end up with a flat boneless (except for wings and legs) turkey with the skin intact in one large piece. Put the boned turkey in a large dish or bowl and cover with plastic wrap to keep it from drying out. Place it in the refrigerator.
  • Repeat the deboning process on the duckling and the chicken, but debone both stumps of wings and leg drumsticks. Cut through flesh at the thinnest point and trim around these bones with a knife until they can be removed. (Since they have little meat, you can cut off the entire wings and add them to the stock pot.) Both the chicken and duck will be stuffed inside the turkey and need not be kept "perfectly" intact.
  • Trim excess skin and fat from the birds. Ducks, in particular, have a lot of excess fatty skin that should be saved to render fat to be used later for making gravy. You can completely remove the skin from the chicken, but keep some duck skin which adds flavor.
  • At least 10 to 11 hours before dinner, assemble the Turducken.
  • Mix together the seasonings in a small dish.
  • Spread the turkey, skin down, on flat surface, exposing as much meat as possible.
  • Rub 3 tablespoons of seasoning mix evenly on meat.
  • Spread some of stuffing over the turkey in an even layer approximately 3/4 inch thick.
  • Place duck, skin down, on top of stuffing.
  • Season exposed duck meat with about 1 tablespoons of seasoning mix.
  • Spread more stuffing in an even layer (about 1/2 inch thick) over the duck.
  • Arrange the chicken, skin down, evenly on top of the stuffing.
  • Season chicken meat with seasoning mix.
  • Spread remainder of your stuffing on top of chicken.
  • With another person's help, carefully lift the sides of the layered birds, folding the sides of the turkey together.
  • Have a helper hold the bird while sewing the opening down the back of the turkey together using cotton thread. The bird may not close perfectly, and a strip of cheese cloth can be used to help close the "crack" in the back of the turkey so stuffing will not leak out when the bird is turned over.
  • Since the turducken has no skeleton, it must be trussed up or it may fall apart in cooking.
  • Tie 4-5 pieces of cotton string around the bird, widthwise to act as skeletal support.
  • Turn the bird over and place in a roasting rack inside a large roasting pan so it is breast side up and looks like a "normal" turkey.
  • Tie the legs together just above the tip bones.
  • Cooking:

  • Heat oven to 225 degrees F.
  • Place the bird in the center of the oven and bake until a meat thermometer inserted through to center reads 165 degrees, approximately 9 hours, though cooking times will vary depending on the size of the birds and amount of stuffing used. Rely on temperature and not time cooked for doneness.
  • There will be no need to baste, but accumulated drippings may need to be removed from the pan every few hours so that the lower portion does not deep fry in the hot oil. Save pan drippings for gravy.
  • Remove the turducken from the oven and let cool in the pan for an hour before serving. Make gravy according to your favorite recipe.
  • To serve cut bird in half. Carve crosswise so each slice reveals all 3 meats and stuffings.

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Reviews

  1. You gave agood explaination of how to make this somewhat complex meal. I love your recipe!
     
  2. looks very good!
     
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Click here to get to chat: http://koach.com/index.php?id=chatlogin&amp;client=web&amp;chan=%23Recipezaar The picture above is of me, but is not a very recent one. It was taken during a very sweet time of my life many years ago. The face is mostly the same, but atlas....everything has aged by about 20 years. I am a little heavier, my hair is not permed anymore and is straight with a slight wave to it, almost to my waist with a touch of grey at my temples. I like the picture because it reflects me and my love of the beautiful Colorado Rocky Mountains near Wellington Lake. I am grandma to Xavier Pryce (aka Zavy) who is 7, his&nbsp;little brother, Rylan James, who is 6 and Baby Wyatt who will be 3 in December.&nbsp; They and their momma are the light of my heart. I enjoy hosting a chat room called #Recipezaar on koach.com, named after the old site.&nbsp; Many people don't know this, but I was Recipezaar's first paid employee when Food.com was Recipezaar and Gay and Troy owned it.&nbsp; I am finding it difficult to spend as much time here as I used to.&nbsp; I am retired now and spend my days watch my grandsons while their momma works.&nbsp; Trying to spend time on the computer with 3 rowdy, hyper little boys in the house can be frustrating and sometimes even impossible unless their momma is home to keep an eye on things while grandma indulges herself on the computer.I wish I was as witty a writer as some of the others here on food.com, but I am afraid that all of my creativity and talent goes into my cooking, but I will give this my best shot anyway. I am a single mother to one 25 year old daughter (Alicia) and grandma to Xavier Pryce, Rylan James and Wyatt William. They all still live with me, so I am pretty much the boy's other parent.&nbsp; Cooking is never a chore for me. I collect cookbooks and am an avid reader of anything but have a particular love of horror novels. Stephen King and Dean Koontz are my favorite authors. Although I have degree in office management and graduated with a 3.8 GPA, I must be Food's worst spelling member so please excuse me if you notice it in my posts and if you notice it in my recipes, then my thanks in advance for editing the recipe to be spelled correctly if you have done so. My screen name is pretty simple and easy to remember, but sometimes people do ask me why it says Karen from Colorado instead of Karen from California. It used to be Karen IN Colorado until I moved here to Southern California to be near my sister, Morti, after our parent's deaths in 1996 and 97 and the loss of my job in Colorado in 2002. I tried Karen In California after moving, but it just didn't seem like me so I changed it to Karen FROM Colorado which will always be home to me no matter where my address is at the time. I was born there and will always love that bright and beautiful state. Especially my beloved Rocky Mountains where I spent so much of my time while living there all of my life. If you find yourself using one of my recipes as your dinner tonight, please feel free to change it to suit your own tastes. I will not mind in the least. It is what I would do if the recipe were posted by you. Your ideas might be much better then mine and just might make the recipe even better then I thought it was when I posted it. Please do mention the changes and results in your review even if the change didn't work out like you thought it might. I truly do welcome the feedback and promise not to jump all over you if you make this your practice. 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A friend gave me the recipe; she said you couldn't beat it. There must be something wrong with her, I couldn't even eat it!</p>
 
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