Bone in turkey breast

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Scott Eisenbraun

Smoking Fanatic
Original poster
Sep 30, 2018
396
109
Bismarck ND
Have a bone in turkey breast in Pop's brine since yesterday. Am going to smoke day after tomorrow. Should I leave skin on, or off? Will be making lunch meat and using an electric slicer when finished for packaging.
 
I always leave the skin on. But, once cooked, the skin gets pulled off. I figure it just keeps the bird from drying out.
 
Leave the skin on and pull it off when slicing if your not going to crisp it up.

Chris
 
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Wouldn't 2 plus days in a brine be somewhat to much for the bird ..? I know I've personaly over brined chickens and they ended up mushy and a bit off tasting..
Is there a method I'm not aware of ?
 
Not mushy at all. I used a light Pops brine 1/2 cup salt and 1/2 cup sugar and 1.5 tbl of cure #1 for a gallon of water. Smoked on the 3rd day to 165f. Chilled overnight and put through slicer. I tried it sliced across the grain and with the grain. It had a better bite with the grain. I would like a little saltier, the wife thinks it has plenty of salt. I know it's better than she brings home from the deli.
 
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Right on !! Well ..I'll definitely give your brine recipe a try.. That's what's great about this forum... We're always learning and sharing the one thing we have in common..BBQ !

CHEERS
 
I've learned a lot about curing on this site. I like Pop's theory that a less is more when it comes to Cure #1. Less cure and more time than most commercial recipes. I also inject the brine to insure the cure is fully distributed throughout.
 
Would you put cure in the brine if you're not slicing for lunchmeat, but serving the turkey or chicken hot as part of a meal? I would think you don't use cure in the brine if it's for a hot meal.
 
It depends if you want that ham flavor that Cure #1 gives it. That's the big difference between using cure or not.

Next experiment is to use same brine and cure on chicken wings, but cook at 350 for crispy skin.
 
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