LOUISE PENNY’S

STILL LIFE: ROAST TURKEY AND CHESTNUT STUFFING

STILL LIFE: ROAST TURKEY AND CHESTNUT STUFFING

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They ate by candlelight, the candles of all shapes and sizes flickering around the kitchen. Their plates were piled high with turkey and chestnut stuffing, candied yams and potatoes, peas and gravy.

Still Life

Makes 8 generous servings, with leftovers

INGREDIENTS:

StillLife Roast Turkey

For Brining and Roasting the Turkey

  • One 12- to 14-pound (5.5-kg) fresh turkey
  • 1½ cups kosher salt
  • ¼ cup (50 g) sugar
  • 1 large bunch fresh sage leaves (save a few for the stuffing)
  • 3 carrots, peeled and left whole
  • 3 celery stalks, trimmed and left whole
  • 3 large yellow onions, peeled and cut into quarters through the core
  • 2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter

For the Stuffing

  • One 1-pound (450-g) loaf of coarse-textured country bread, crusts left on, whole loaf cut into 1-inch (2.5-cm) dice–about 8 cups/2 liters (Note: a mix of country bread and soft bread, such as challah, can be nice, too.)
  • 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 1 medium yellow onion, finely diced
  • 2 celery stalks, trimmed and finely diced
  • 2 tablespoons minced fresh sage leaves
  • 1½ teaspoons minced fresh thyme leaves
  • 5 to 6 ounces (150 g) dried chestnuts (about 1 cup), coarsely chopped
  • 1 cup (230 ml) chicken broth, preferable homemade
  • ½ cup (120 ml) light or heavy cream
  • Sea salt
  • Freshly ground black pepper

DIRECTIONS:

  • Prep and brine the turkey: Remove the turkey from its wrapping and remove the package containing the gizzards, liver, etc. Also, look for the neck (sometimes left loose in the cavity) and check the “crop” (the opening on the neck end). Refrigerate the gizzards and neck. Reserve the liver separately if you plan to use it for something else, as it will not be part of the gravy. Rinse the turkey well, inside and out, under cold running water and let drain thoroughly in the sink.
  • Choose a large (10-quart/10-liter or so) pot and pour in 8 cups (2 liters) of room- temperature water. Stir in the kosher salt, sugar, and all but a few of the sage leaves. Make sure the salt and sugar have dissolved, then put the turkey in the pot. Pour in additional water, if needed, to completely cover the turkey. Refrigerate at least 12 hours and up to 18 hours.

    NOTE: The entire brining process can be omitted. Instead, season the turkey well, inside and out, with sea salt in addition to the pepper and butter. Roast on a “rack” of vegetables and gizzards as described above.

  • While the turkey is brining, make the stuffing: Put the bread into a large bowl. Heat the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the diced onion and celery, the sage and thyme, and the chestnuts. Cook, stirring often, until the onion and celery have softened, about 8 minutes. Scrape the chestnut mixture over the bread in the bowl, slowly pour in the chicken broth and cream while tossing to moisten the bread evenly. Season with salt and pepper. Transfer the stuffing to a heavy baking dish (a 14-inch (36-cm) oval dish works well). Refrigerate until you remove the turkey from the refrigerator and brine to bring it to room temperature, and preheat the oven.
  • Scatter the whole carrots and celery, the onion wedges, and the neck and gizzards (no liver!) over the bottom of a roasting pan large enough to hold the turkey comfortably. Carefully drain the turkey in the sink. Pat it dry, inside and out, with paper towels and set on the bed of vegetables and gizzards in the pan. Season inside and out with black pepper and smear the skin with the butter. (Don’t worry about covering the skin evenly; the butter is mostly to enrich the pan sauce later.)
  • With the rack set in the lower third of the oven, preheat the oven to 400°F (204°C). Let the turkey come up to room temperature while the oven is preheating. Roast the turkey until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the thigh away from the bone reads 170°F (80°C). To be sure the turkey is fully cooked, test both thighs and also the joint where the wing connects to the breastbone. Remove from the oven and let stand for about 30 minutes. As soon as the turkey comes out of the oven, put in the stuffing; it will take about 30 minutes to brown and cook.
  • Transfer the turkey to a carving board, first tipping the turkey slightly so the juices inside dribble into the pan. (A sturdy wooden spoon and large metal spatula or fork are helpful for tipping the turkey and transferring it to the board.)
  • Pour the chicken broth into the pan and heat over low heat, stirring, until the little brown bits stuck to the pan have loosened. Strain the sauce into a small saucepan and keep warm over low heat.
  • After the turkey has rested for about 30 minutes, and the stuffing is ready, carve the turkey and arrange it on a platter. Pass the stuffing and pan gravy separately.

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98 replies on “STILL LIFE: ROAST TURKEY AND CHESTNUT STUFFING”

I would love to spend a week or so in the area and go to cooking classes featuring these recipes! What an adventure! Living in the southern Plains, trees are a precious commodity. Hiking through the forests Ms. Penny describes would bring it all to life. I love to cook and would love to learn the local cuisine of my favorite series!

Pass the stuffing, please. I could make a meal of just the stuffing. I love the idea of recipes for the wonderful dishes we have read about.
Hi to all. Please join us at The Bistro. We have a great time discussing LP, her books and much more.

Yummy. I will have to try the chestnuts. I loved the communal quality of their meal, such joy. Wish you could have someone create Myrna’a bouquet. As to the turkey, I now use a dry brine that I rub on the turkey the night before and then rinse off before prepping it for the oven. My aunt gave me 2 large fork skewers that are an immense help with the bird. I like to start my turkey upside down, the breast meat gets juices flowing into it and the dark meat is exposed to more heat and cooks better. Oh, again I long for a community like 3 Pines.

So close to easter for this and now we will just change from ham to have a bistro styled stuffed roast turkey, I am told . . . looking forward to every delicious mouthful. Thanks and blessings.

YES!!! Truly a dream come true! THANK YOU! I do hope those luscious croissants will be part of the recipe book…I can still smell and taste them…just from the description! Bless you!

Agh, not fair! You really should warn about the prep of the chestnuts. Childhood memories. Which is why I love your stories, childhood memories.

Yes, I wondered about the chestnut preparation, too. The chestnuts are best if local and roasted first. Those vacuum-packed or canned ones from off-shore are not appealing.

Oh dear. We in the southern USA did not encounter chestnuts until we grew up and got a cone of them roasted in NYC. WHAT is involved in prepping them? The recipe does not give a hint of hidden horrors.

Simple, straight forward, scrumptious! Easter turkey just might be coming up this weekend!
Thanks Louise!

Love the books and am now can’t wait to receive the wonderful recipes from these stories!! Only problem with the books is that you don’t write fast enough!! Keep them coming!!

From the beginning, Louise Penny has drawn us into the Gamache series through all our senses – we smell the smells, we hear the sounds, we see Three Pines… How wonderful that we can now actually taste some of these recipes for ourselves. Thank you, Louise, for always keeping us in mind.

No need to add or change anything. Sounds succulent and delicious! Thank you so much for doing this. Have been waiting ever since you mentioned it in you Newsletter . Looking forward to a Three Pines Turkey feast!

I’m so excited about this food series! The village of Three Pines has become so real in my mind! I so want to sit and have a meal in The Bistro – now I can savor some of the meals! Thank you!!!!

I am so into brining. It is definitely worth doing and there is something so satisfying about it. It is a great way to resurrect a not so great bird and it is very hard to overcook or dry out a brined turkey. I use a big old cooler and I keep it in the cool basement overnight. It’s nice to use similar flavouring to your stuffing. So yes sage is great but you can also try cardamum, star anise, orange, bay leaves and I always add real Canadian maple syrup. I think that Olivier is a brine kinda guy. I can see him saving the rinds of cheese and the ends of parsley stalks for just such a purpose.

Oh, I think so – Olivier is a “brine kind of guy.” Love the idea of using a bit of real maple syrup for sweetness. But wasn’t the turkey in Still Life a meal at Clara and Peter’s house? Well – that’s a good enough reason to go back and read the book again, I think!

I put a V shaped rack on top of the vegetables in the roast pan, and set the oven temp. to 425. The brined turkey goes in the rack breast side down for the first 30-45 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 325, and turn turkey, breast side up for the rest of roasting time.

Not even 9:00 a.m. and my mouth is watering. This is going to be a great series great lead-up to the new book. Classy again Louise Penny.

Vive Gamache! Thank you for this series on the food of Three Pines. Your descriptions of the food, the meals, and the friendships that go along are as interesting as the plot itself.

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