Turkey with lemon & sage butter, and cranberry & orange stuffing
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Turkey with lemon & sage butter, and cranberry & orange stuffing

Why mess with a good thing? Gordon Ramsay serves turkey for his own Christmas lunch, with all the trimmings, of course

Difficulty and servings

Easy

Serves 8 - 10

Preparation and cooking times

Total time

Ready in about 3 hours

Method

  1. You can get this turkey recipe ready the night before and then just cook it off on the day. First, make sure that your turkey is cleaned and ready. Pull out any feather stubs that have been left in, a pair of tweezers makes this easier. Also, don't forget to check if there is a bag of giblets inside that needs to be taken out. They'll be pretty nasty if you cook them by mistake. Next make the sage and lemon butter: chop through the sage leaves once, leaving them in fairly big pieces. Put these in a bowl with 250g butter, half of the lemon zest and a good bit of seasoning. Mix it all together. Now loosen the skin on the breast and legs by carefully by pushing your fingers between it and the turkey breast, don't go mad here or you'll tear the skin and then it will shrink away from the breast as it cooks. Put the sage butter in a piping bag and push the nozzle under the skin on one side of the breast, squeeze out some butter and then smooth it down. Repeat this on the other side of the breast and under the skin where the legs meet the body.
  2. Put a couple of lemon halves and some herbs inside the bird. This not only adds flavour, it will help keep the structure of the bird while it cooks. First season the inside - I know you don't eat the inside of the turkey but seasoning well everywhere is critical for the final flavour. Push 4 lemon halves, the stalks from the sage, and the rosemary and thyme in the bird, rub the breast with olive oil (not butter, it will burn) and then that's it. You can leave it overnight in the fridge - just make sure you take it out a couple of hours before you want to cook it.
  3. You can make the stuffing ahead, or while the bird's cooking, as it will be cooked separately. Start off by heating a frying pan. Add the sugar and 1 tsp salt, and let the sugar start to caramelise, shake the pan to keep the colour even. Once the sugar has melted and turned a golden colour, add a lump of butter and swirl it in, then add the cranberries, remaining lemon zest, orange zest, cloves and cinnamon. It's important to keep this over a high heat so it keeps caramelising - bubble everything together to cook the cranberries but don't turn them to sludge.
  4. Heat the remaining butter in another pan and let it brown slightly; you don't want it to brown too much, just enough to give a good nutty flavour. Add 1 tbsp olive oil if it starts to get too brown. Add the breadcrumbs and stir to fry them a little, then add the juice from half a lemon and half an orange. Tip the mixture into a bowl (keep back a little). Now tip in the cranberry mixture and mix well. Add the remaining breadcrumbs if you need to. Leave to cool until you handle the mixture and then shape it into balls or tip it into a buttered tin. Chill until you need it.
  5. If you're doing roast potatoes, you can parboil them ahead, and you can make the stock for the gravy ahead. On Christmas Day calculate what time you need to put the turkey in (15 minutes to start it off and then 30 minutes per kilo) and turn the oven on to 220C/ fan 200C/gas 7. Drizzle a bit more oil on the turkey and roast it for 15 minutes, turn the oven down to 180C/fan 160C/gas 4, cover with foil and roast for 21/2 hours or until the juices run clear when you pierce the thigh. Take the turkey out and cover with foil and a tea towel and leave to rest while you cook the stuffing and make the gravy (see below). Put the stuffing in the oven, cook for 30 minutes or until it's brown on the outside and heated through. Carve the turkey nicely with a sharp knife.
  6. Make gravy using the giblets. Heat a little oil in a pan and fry them until they are browned all over. Add 600ml water and stir, then add 3 chopped shallots, 2 bay leaves, a few thyme sprigs and 6 black peppercorns. Bring to a boil and skim. Turn down the heat and simmer for an hour. Strain. Pour away the fat from the turkey tin, without losing the turkey juices and put in a tin over a medium heat. Stir in 1 tbsp flour and cook for 2 minutes, then whisk in 100ml red wine followed by the stock. Simmer for 15 minutes and season.

810 kcalories, protein 70.2g, carbohydrate 38.3g, fat 42.9 g, saturated fat 21.1g, fibre 1.7g, salt 2.95 g

Recipe from olive magazine, December 2006.

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Latest comments and suggestions

  • 19 December 2009

    Paul rated and commented on this recipe

    5 stars

    We use this recipe every year at Christmas and it never fails. The turkey tastes astounding.

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  • 26 December 2010

    paul_vicmar rated and commented on this recipe

    5 stars

    Excellent alternative to the traditional turkey recipe. Worth doing the homework and prepare what you can the day before, the stuffing, turkey preparation. My six kilo turkey cooked in a fan oven in two and a bit so be careful with cooking times.

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  • 03 January 2012

    dollmakers commented on this recipe

    I made the cranberry stuffing to go with a different, brined turkey recipe, and I loved it. Very sweet, yes, but very festive - right up my street. My boyfriend was not as convinced, and felt it would work better with something more gamey than turkey, but I loved it. Instead of just using breadcrumbs I also used some bigger, torn-up pieces of a really tasty bread to give a lovely, varied texture. I also dotted a couple of slivers of butter around the top (hey, its christmas!) to make it a little richer. Oh and if you think the caramelised bit at the beginning is going clumpy and horribly wrong, fret not! Do not give up yet! Mine came good after a couple of minutes. Hurrah!

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  • 22 December 2012

    Avinnicombe commented on this recipe

    I tried this last yr and my other half said it was the best turkey he'd ever eaten, which coming from him is a rare complement believe me! The meat was very moist and tasty and I shall be doing it again this yr. I always put lemons inside chicken which is what attracted me to this as I believe it helps keep the meat moist.

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Difficulty and servings

Easy

Serves 8 - 10

Preparation and cooking times

Total time

Ready in about 3 hours

Ingredients

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810 kcalories, protein 70.2g, carbohydrate 38.3g, fat 42.9 g, saturated fat 21.1g, fibre 1.7g, salt 2.95 g

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