Myron Mixon Turkey

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Where is the link ??   Can't see it....    Dave

Found it..... Make the "link" bold or enlarge it.... easier for us "old folks" to find.....  Dave
 
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Where is the link ??   Can't see it....    Dave
Dave click on the word LINK     
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Also

http://compare.ebay.com/like/370676621686?var=lv&ltyp=AllFixedPriceItemTypes&var=sbar
 
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Okay....still cross eyed and a tad confused with all of the great info. I read about Myron's turkey. My question is.....which is best...turkey on the rack or in a pan on the rack. Know in a pan...would be easier to get out of the smoker.
 
I don't see any salt in the recipe unless you are referring to whatever salt is in the rub. If so, there are reduced salt chicken broth.
I didn't even think about the rub but you would be correct.  My point was he said there wasn't any salt in that recipe and I was simply pointing out that there was likely salt in the broth he used.  A container I have in my cabinet now (not reduced sodium) says it contains 800mg per cup.
 
Yeah, I'd guess there is more salt in that recipe than in the 1 cup per gallon I  use in my brine. Between the 2 cups of rub and the chix broth, it's plenty salty. On the other hand, I've seen a couple articles that claim you can brine a chicken or turkey in plain water. They of course weighed the birds before and after to show how much moisture they retained. What they didn't show, however was the post cooked weight. I suspect that the plain water brined birds lost most additional moisture during the cooking process.
 
Yeah, I'd guess there is more salt in that recipe than in the 1 cup per gallon I  use in my brine. Between the 2 cups of rub and the chix broth, it's plenty salty. On the other hand, I've seen a couple articles that claim you can brine a chicken or turkey in plain water. They of course weighed the birds before and after to show how much moisture they retained. What they didn't show, however was the post cooked weight. I suspect that the plain water brined birds lost most additional moisture during the cooking process.
That would be my thinking also.
 
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