How to Roast a Heritage Turkey

Whether you roast your heritage turkey in the oven, or spit- or string-roast it in front of a fire, there are some basic facts you ought to know about how to best handle heritage turkeys. (For an introduction to String Roasting see the PDF of the string roasting pages from my book, The Magic of Fire.)

Several varieties of heritage turkeys are now being raised for sale as holiday turkeys in the United States. While the quantities of heritage turkeys remain small, the number of birds grown for market is increasing each year. Heritage turkeys now available in a number of stores nationwide.

Heritage turkeys are different from the most common turkey of American commerce. It is helpful to know a little about them before cooking them for the first time.

The modern turkey was developed for a large breast — hence its name Broad Breasted White or Broad Breasted Bronze — and it was also selected fast growth on a high protein diet. Broad breasted turkeys reach marketable size after a few months, while heritage turkeys take much longer to reach marketable weight. Broad Breasted birds are often so heavy their own legs can’t property support them, so Broad Breasted birds tend to be sedentary. Variety, age, physical activity, and feed, are all factors that affect the taste and texture of the heritage turkey you buy.

While variety is a factor in the taste and texture of heritage turkeys, as a rule the turkey variety is not on the label. In any case, heritage turkeys are similar enough to make generalizations possible.

Basic qualities of heritage turkeys:

1. Smaller breast. The breast of heritage birds is smaller in proportion to the rest of the bird than is the breast of the Broad Breasted varieties. This means the balance between white and dark meat is more even that it is with commercial turkeys.

Implications for the cook: White meat is “done” before the dark meat is “done,” and so the closer the balance between white and dark meat, the easier it is to roast the entire bird to perfection. Historically, cookbook authors suggested covering the breast of roasting turkeys with oiled paper until the bird was almost done, at which point the paper was removed. The instruction to put something over the turkey breast is found in Enlish cookbooks dating from the 17th century all the way up through English and American cookbooks to the early 1960’s, at which point the instruction seems to drop out of cookbooks. If you cover the breast, I recommend sticking with the traditonal oiled paper rather than substituing alluminum foil. Foil doesn’t let any moisture out, and thus steams the breast in a way that paper does not. When you let water molecules escape through a covering of paper, or cloth, the flesh of the bird is chemically changed in a way that is different from what happens through steaming — which is the effect of sealing the breast with alluminium foil. If you want to cover the breast, then cut out a piece of brown paper from a shopping bag, rub it with cooking oil, and tie it in place with cotton string. Remove it about 30 minutes before the turkey is done. In my own cooking style I do not cover the breast. Instead, I add additional fat to the breast meat by slipping fat, like butter or olive oil, under the skin over the breast. I will discuss a little, below, turkey should not be over-cooked. Cooking to a temperature that is lower than the current custom. If you cook your bird to 140F you will help insure that the meat is not dry. Always start roasting with a bird that is at room temperature.

2. Leaner birds: The fattest part of a mature heritage turkey is the skin that circled the neck.

Implications for the cook: Hot, quick cooking is a better approach to cooking lean birds than is slow cooking unless you add fat to the flesh which can be done by putting butter or olive oil under the skin, or even by larding with salted pork fat. My advise, however, is to treat the bird more the way you would game birds — pheasant and ducks are both traditionally cooked hot. I roasted my first heritage turkeys — they were small turkeys (6 pounds each) in a bread oven at 630F for 35 minutes. They were perfect. I cooked them to 140F. I suggest roasting in a hot oven — 425F to 450F. A second suggestion is to put fat under the skin of the turkey. Those of you familiar with my book, The Magic of Fire, know that I often favor slipping a paste of olive oil and pounded garlic and herbs under the skin of poultry. It is easy to slip oil and/or butter under the breast, and a little more difficult to get it over the leg and thigh. Slip your hand under the breast work it around as best you can. Putting fat under the skin makes the turkey self-basting. Because heritage turkeys have a mild flavor, slipping flavor under the skin with oil and butter as a carrier lets you easilty produce a bird of memberable flavor.

2. Size: Heritage turkeys are generally smaller than commercial turkey varieties. Expect turkeys in the range of 9 to 15 pounds, although birds that are both smaller than 9 pounds, and larger than 15 pounds are available.

Implications for the cook: Roast the smaller birds hotter than the bigger birds. I would cook a 6-pound bird even as hot as 630F. A 9-pound bird you might cook at 475F — but no less than 450F. I would roast a 15-pound bird at 425F. I have not tested these other sizes in an oven — at home roast birds hanging from a string in front of my fire — so these temperratures are my best guess. I know that if you ask around enough you are bound to run across people who will tell you the opposite — they will say to roast the birds slowly. What should you do in the face of conflicting advice? Do what you are most comfortable doing. If what you do doesn’t work out well — then do it differntly next time. As long as you keep an eye on what you are cooking you cannot really fail. If you are spit- or string-roasting in front of the fireplace then the timing depends on the heat of your fire. I tend to roast hot. My most recent times are a 10-pound stuffed turkey in about 1 1 /2 hours and a 15-pound unstuffed turkey in roughly 2 hours.

3. Flavor: As a rule, heritage turkeys have a more subtle, cleaner flavor than commercial turkeys. There is often less of what I have come to think of as a “turkey flavor.” Depending on the variety, and the way it was raised, the flavor may offer a hint of the wild side — or offer an almost blank palate for you to work with.

Implications for the cook: Historically, turkeys were served with a sauce, and it was the sauce, plus the meat, that constituted a serving of turkey. A light sauce made from the pan drippings is alway a good idea. Slipping flavors, herbs, garlic, and salt pounded up with olive oil or butter and slipped under the tukey’s skin is also often a good idea.

4. Aging the turkey: Wild turkeys — turkeys that are hunted — are always hung for a few days before being eaten. You can deepen the flavor of your heritage turkey, and make it more tender, by letting it age in your refrigerator. I have done this with small birds to excellent effect. The ideal is to take the turkey out of whatever it might have been packaged in, remove any organs packed in the neck or stomach area, rinse it, and then hang the turkey in your refrigerator, uncovered. If you can’t hang it then let it rest on a platter, but turn it once a day so that no part of the turkey is always resting on the platter. Keep the platter dry — so wash off any fluids that might settle in the platter and then dry it before setting the turkey on it. I aged one of my turkeys this year for a week. My own refrigerator is an old one that frosts up. I have not tested aging a turkey in a frost-free refrigerator. Fost-free refrigerators tend to dry out whatever is stored in them, so this is something you would need to experiment with.

Implications for the cook: Smaller turkeys — under then pounds — can sometimes be purchased for less than larger turkeys because there is less demand for them. In any case, if you are familiar with aging wild birds, like ducks, then age your heritage turkey in the same way because aging definitely adds a dimension to the roast turkey that cannot be added any other way.

5. Brining the turkey: I do not advise brining heritage turkeys. My own brining theory is to apply brine to secondary poultry — birds that have no flavor. Brine introduces water and salt into the flesh of the bird. This dilutes the natures flavors. While it is true that salt is a flavor enhancer, I think brining is a crude way to develop the flavor of a heritage turkey. I will also mention that the standard method by which birds are cooled after having been slaughtered in American slaughterhouses is to dip them in a bath of cold water. The birds may take up uas much as 5% water by weight from this soaking. Letting the bird sit, unwrapped in a frost-free refrigerator of a day or two, see “Aging the turkey,” above, might actually improve flavor by removing some of this excess water.

Basic heritage turkey cooking principles.

Starting Temperature
Until the last couple decades, it was assumed that meat was always brought to room temperature before roasting. The 1965 edition of the “Joy of Cooking” advises the turkey be room temperature — 70F — before being cooked. I think this is essential advice for all turkeys. If your turkey was frozen, defrost it in the refrigerator. A few hours before you plan to roast the bird, remove it from the refrigerator and let the bird come to room temperature. The deep flesh, not just the outer half-inch (1 cm), needs to be at or near room temperature before you roast it in order to achieve the best results. If the bird is at 34F (1C) in its interior parts when you start roasting it the breast will be dry long before the deep tissues are cooked.

Cooking temperature
Because heritage turkeys tend to have has little fat, I advise cooking them the way one cooks game birds — quickly. Roast in an oven at 425F to 450F. I have actually roasted small turkeys (6 pounds) in a bread oven at 630 degrees for 35 minutes. My most recent times string-roasting turkeys in front of the fireplace are a 10-pound stuffed turkey in about 1 1 /2 hours and a 15-pound unstuffed turkey in roughly 2 hours.

Finish temperature
Stuffing, if any, is cooked before it is put inside the bird. The stuffing, therefore, is only heated inside the bird, not cooked. If you do stuff a bird, for food safety reasons, stuff it just before roasting. While the USDA (United States Department of Agriculture) calls for cooking turkeys until the stuffing is 160F and the bird is 180F in the thigh. These USDA recommended temperatures are so high that you will dry out the turkey. I would roast a heritage turkey to 140F, and no more. As always, let the bird rest for at least ten minutes before carving.

A note on the cooking termperature: The USDA recommendation of 180F in the deapest part of the thigh, and 160F in the stuffing is based on the government’s need to provide a general rule that will cover all health and safety eventualities, including the handling of the bird by people who have not observed basic hygenic princples, like washing their hands before handling the food.

As soon as you get your heritage bird home, take it out of its wrapping. If it arrived in the mail, unpack it and immediatly rinse it. Of course, wash your hands before handling the turkey. It is my understanding that the part of the bird that has the most pathogens is the skin. Even with an internal temperature of 140F the skin of the turkey will be above 220F, way over the temperature needed to sterlize the skin.

I also remind you that the USDA suggests high cooking temperatures for other foods, as well, such as for ground beef. I recently ate steak tartar (raw ground beef) at a restaurant in my home town, and I ate raw chopped lamb in a restaurant in Atlanta. In both cases I knew the owners of the restaurant, I had been in their kitchens, and I knew something about where the meat had come from. Raw meat obviously does not meet USDA cooking recommendations. My point is that one needs to balance USDA recommendations against what you know about the source of your meat and the way it was handled.

I also remind you that many aspects of our daily life involve risk-taking — driving kills over 40,000 Americans per year and injures millions — and yet virtually all adult Americans drives. Eating is not risk-free — and I cannot assure you that my recipe is risk free. I can assure you, however, that a heritage turkey cooked to 140F in a fast oven will remain moist and delicious, while cooking the turkey to 180F is problementatic in terms of the final culinary results.

20 Comments Add yours

  1. Sheri says:

    I will be roasting a 9.5 pound heritage turkey, unstuffed, at 450. How long should I allow it to cook before checking the internal temp? Thanks

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    1. William Rubel says:

      Apologies for having let this blog slide so I am answering too late for this! The answer always is to pay attention to the cooking. When it lovely and brown and looks done you can taste. I will say, regarding temperatures, that if your bird was at room temperature when you started than it will cook quickly and as long as the bird itself was handles safely — not left in a warm car for five hours, etc. — that the high temperatures recommended in most cookbooks and by the US government food safety people are higher than you probably really want. I am impressed that you were able to purchase such a small turkey. I personally prefer them small. Historically, even smaller birds were eaten at other times of year.

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      1. Kris Hemeway Sheets says:

        Hello Mr. Rubel,
        We have just started raising heritage turkeys this year. Bourbon Reds. I also have 2 Royal Palm hens. I am seeking permission to add this article to my packet of info that I want to include when I sell my birds next month. (I only have 7-8 to sell this year). I have purchased Narragansett turkeys the last 2 years for Thanksgiving and want to improve the information I received about how to cook them for my customers. I really appreciate the detail in this article!
        Regards, Kris Hemenway Sheets- Twin Creaks Farm, Washington State

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  2. Max says:

    Didn’t know it at first, but this was exactly the article I was looking for. Very informative… I am eagerly looking forward to roasting my heritage bird next week 🙂

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  3. chris Mcnally says:

    Thank you for this! I am roating a Heritage Turkey for Thanksgiving, I cannot risk using the high temp method this time, but I will try it with my next bird. As you say I have to do what is comfortable. But I appreciate your advice. I would never cook anything to the excessive govt recommended temps as they exist to cover up extreme sloppy and dangerous slaughter conditions. My heritage turkey came from a local in state farmer who grows 150 a year just for my food coop.

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  4. Pat Lockyer says:

    Thanks for the article. I am cooking a 16 lb Heritage Turkey, had planned on brining it, but now I won’t. Will be adding butter/olive oil and herbs/garlic under the skin, found great Heritage Turkey recipes in this years Sunset Magazine. Thanks for the advice!

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  5. Chris Ramseyer says:

    I have a very large bronze turkey that I raised over the summer. He dressed out at 32 pounds. What do you think would be the best temperature to cook him. It is currently aging in the fridge for next week.

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  6. Jack Hodges says:

    Enjoyed your article! Regarding stuffing, I want to cook it in the bird so that is will absorb juices as it cooks. I understand it will not yet be done when the turkey is but why can’t I remove it once the bird is done then put it in the oven to bring it up to a safe temperature while the turkey rests and is carved?

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  7. neobux login says:

    Another idea is, if you have the time (24hrs.) you can place the turkey in a very well cleaned out sink filled with the hottest tap water. You will have to change the water every 15-20 mins. until it’s thawed out. I’ve done this once.

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  8. babykitted says:

    Thanks for the tips. This will be my first Heritage and am looking forward to the big day. I have brined before and love it. Will try the dry brine. Thanks.

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  9. Rachel says:

    We are raising some heritage turkeys and plan to slaughter 2 of them for Thanksgiving this year and I found this article very helpful. As we have never slaughtered before, how many days should we allow between slaughter and cooking, or how long should we let it age in the refrigerator?

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    1. I have been behind these last weeks. Apologies for not responding until it is too late for this year. I have done some experimenting with aging heritage turkeys. One week to ten days in the refrigerator, uncovered, turned often, makes for a more tender bird — and for better flavor.

      My refrigerator is just a small under counter refrigerator. No fan. If yours is a more modern refrigerator, as I would assume it will be, with a fan that might dry it out you will just need to monitor for dryness.

      What is crucial is that the bird not be wrapped in plastic! Don’t let any part of it sit on a plate so that you build up blood and an oxygen deprived environment for pathogens to grow. If you could control to actually hang the turkey inside your refrigerator, that would be ideal.

      The aged bird is better.

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Apologizes for the the last minute reply. The absolute first rule, the single most important issue here, is that the turkey be a room temperature before you start roasting it. If need be, warm it in a bowl of warm water. You absolutely must have the interior temperature up to room temperature.

      Next, you should string it up so that you can flip it from time to time for even cooking. If you need verbal help with this call me at 831 600 5969.

      For the fire. You need a very strong fire. That said, for the first hour, anyway, you want to think of yourself as warming up the turkey more than roasting it. At first, don’t use a roaring fire. Get the turkey to start increasing in temperature but not browning.

      Once the bird is warming, say, after an hour, then start building the intensity of the fire.

      I am assuming that the bird is turning on a string that clears the mantle by an inch or two so that when it turns it turns on the edge between the firebox and the hearth extension.

      In an emergency situation, you can speed up the cooking by putting aluminum foil behind the bird to make a reflector oven. Not wrapped around the bird. But foil held up on the inside of the fire screen, for example. I did this once for a very large turkey I was string roasting for a big dinner at a friend’s house to make sure it was done on time given that it had been put on very late.

      Times. I just roasted a ten pound turkey in about 1.5 hours. I don’t keep good records on this, but I’d say that you can do it three to four hours. You are able to push it with a very hot fire and, as I said, in extremis, with the foil reflector. I say extremis only because a foil shield isn’t the most beautiful fireplace accompaniment.

      Unstuffed and the bird goes faster. The stuffing, if any, also must be at room temperature.

      Another element of success is being sure the entire turkey is well trussed before you hang it. I often tie it with string on the outside to make it tight, like an egg. Also, when it hangs, it is important that it hangs vertically, not at an angle.

      Feel free to call.

      Again, apologies for such a last second response.

      I’ll post my turkey roast on Facebook in a few minutes.

      William

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  10. Paula Shatkin says:

    Help…I have a 20 pound heritage turkey…..any ideas of how hot and how long?

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    1. Paula — A last thought. I cook in my fireplace all the time and have for years so I feel very much in control of the heat. As long as you keep basting it you ought to be able to push the heat if you need to — by which I mean roast with a roaring fire. As as a rule, a step just down from roaring is probably best, but you do what you have to do do.

      If you need a wall of flame then you can also burn kindling. Kindling gives you instant results. Should you feel that the cooking is stuck and you can’t get the fire hot enough with logs (because they are wet or not properly aged or too thick) then give your bird a boost with a wall of flame.

      I would pound up butter with garlic and herbs and stuff that under the skin over the breast and leg/thigh. Adding fat this way helps deal with potential drying from roasting super hot. It also makes for a very flavorful bird. Add a little salt to that butter.

      As I said, do feel free to call me.

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    1. Thank you for this. In my experience, leaving a bird, unwrapped in a refrigerator that is NOT frost free — no air being circulated — for a week or so also works. Turn the bird ever day. Be sure it rests on a clean towel — so change the towel every day.

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  11. Laura says:

    Thank you for this!! This will be my first thanksgiving with a heritage Turkey and I am so thankful for your advice!

    I was going to try to spatchcock my Turkey this year. Do you have any advice for spatchcocking a heritage Turkey?

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    1. I do not. I have never butterflied a turkey. That said, I can offer the basic advice that you be sure it has reached room temperature before baking. I would also rub it all over with salt before baking. I’d start around four hours before you want to bake so the salt can penetrate well. I’d massage the salt into the bird from time to time — wear disposable gloves if that makes you feel better — otherwise, the also basic advice to wash your hands before and after handling the bird. You can also pound fresh garlic, and fresh herbs, like thyme and rosemary along with the salt to make the rub more flavorful—though salt is the number one flavor enhancer. Before baking, I would poke holes into the bird here and there deep into the leg, thigh, and breast meat and push in butter pounded with garlic and herbs. Sliding butter under the skin — pound with garlic and herbs — is also something that I would do. Lastly, I would start the baking in a slow oven, like around 300F to bring it all up to temperature before increasing the temperature to brown the skin.

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