Turducken Roll

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A Turducken Roll consists of rolled-up meat from three deboned birds: a chicken, a duck and a turkey, in ascending order of size. The chicken is stuffed inside the duck, which in turn is stuffed inside the turkey.

You can make your own Turducken Roll. But it's fraught with peril. First, the birds must be boned. You can try asking a butcher to de-bone the birds for you but you may get a look that says "what did your last slave die of?" If you are reduced to doing your own deboning, remember that deboning one bird, let alone, three, is very time-consuming to do, and requires deboning practice in advance. If you do debone your own birds, remember to keep any bird that you are not currently working on in the fridge.

American chef Paul Prudhomme provides very long instructions on his website for preparing Turducken Roll, including three different stuffings for you to make that go inside.

You can purchase Turducken Rolls already prepared, either plain, or with stuffing such as Shrimp & Crawfish, Cornbread and Creole Pork, etc. If you're purchasing one, be sure to get your order in well in advance.

If you are buying the birds already boned and just assembling the roll yourself, allow for 1 hour assembly time including making 1 stuffing.

A 15 pound (7 kg) Turducken Roll will serve 15 to 20 people.



Turducken Roulade


This is a smaller version of Turducken. It is made of three layers of meat -- boneless butterflied turkey breast, duck breast and chicken breast, in that order -- with dressing between each layer, then rolled up, It is easier to make yourself at home than a full-fledged Turducken. It also takes less time to cook, about 1 1/2 hours.

Commercial rolls may be bound with string netting.

Wrap in aluminum foil to cook until the end, then remove foil to brown a bit,

A 5 pound (2 1/4 kg) Turducken Roulade will feed 6 to 8 people.

Cooking Tips
If you purchased a Turducken Roll frozen, thaw it first before cooking. Allow 2 to 3 days for a 15 pound (7 kg) one to thaw in the refrigerator.

Bake with the string around it. For a 15 pound (7 kg) one, roast at 350 F (175 C) covered for 4 1/2 hours, then uncover, and roast for an additional hour or until browned. The meat should reach the internal safe temperature for poultry of 165 to 185 F (74 to 85 C.) For a 20 pound (9 kg) Turducken Roll, some say allow 12 to 13 hours of cooking (sic) at 190 F (88 C.)

Alternatively, Turducken can be smoked or cooked on a barbeque grill, but not deep-fried.

To carve, let rest covered for half an hour. Remove the string. Then, first slice completely in half lengthwise, to make two long halves. Then, slice across each half.

History
Turducken is considered a novelty still.

Some people, on seeing it mentioned for the first time, are a bit startled at the thought of a food beginning with those four first letters.

Some people consider it the epitome of American excess. Some say, good grief, why not just stuff a camel? It was, however, actually a very Medieval practice to stuff one critter inside another.

In its current incarnation, Turducken appears to have originated in Louisiana. The American chef Paul Prudhomme thinks it may have originated with him.

It is is possible, though, that it may have been inspired by a product that appeared in the 1950s: "Tur-King is a new kind of turkey, a 9-pound roll of boned, uncooked turkey meat, light and dark, all the meat that's usable on a 19- to 20-pound bird, wrapped in heavy aluminum foil, pressed into log form, and frozen. Tur-King is being packaged now in 2 ¼-pound logs for home use to sell through the frozen-food markets. It is processed and packed by Farmers' Produce Company of Willmar, Minnesota, for the Norbest Turkey Growers' Association of Salt Lake City." -- Paddleford, Clementine (1898 - 1967). Food Flashes Column. Gourmet Magazine. May 1950.s

Literature & Lore
"From the bayou country that gave birth to jambalaya, etouffee and various blackened delicacies comes a holiday hybrid of birds - a triple play of festive fowl that Mother Nature never intended. Behold the turducken... Turduckens are growing in popularity, and there are assembly instructions and recipes on the Internet, including the Web site of the tri-bird's apparent father, Cajun chef Paul Prudhomme, who says he made his first one in the 1960s. But the deboning is treacherous and assembly complicated, so most consumers opt for buying them already prepared."

-- Sewell, Dan. Associated Press. A holiday hybrid when plain turkey just isn't enough. Doylestown, Pennsylvania. The Intelligencer Record. Thursday, 27 November 1997. Page A15.

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