Christmas meat
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- Long slender neck
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Christmas meat
What meat will you be consuming this Yuletide season? Not cooking myself on the day but will pick up perhaps a tomahawk steak or something for Boxing Day.
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- Long slender neck
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Re: Christmas meat
Took a vote on it.
Turkey was regarded by most to be bland and cheap meat, so the decision was taken for a perceived upgrade.
As someone who only really eats meat on occasions such as this, I wasn't too bothered..
Turkey was regarded by most to be bland and cheap meat, so the decision was taken for a perceived upgrade.
As someone who only really eats meat on occasions such as this, I wasn't too bothered..
Last edited by Scuba Diver on Thu Dec 19, 2019 12:06 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Christmas meat
Turkey, gammon, beef and pigs in blankets. That way everybody can have something nice to disguise the f*cking turkey.
- Max B Gold
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Re: Christmas meat
Capon this year. Haven't had turkey wurkey for donkeys years. It's rotten.
Last edited by Max B Gold on Thu Dec 19, 2019 12:48 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Long slender neck
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Re: Christmas meat
Yes. Turkey is bad by default. You have to go to great lengths to make it acceptable (i.e shoving butter up under the skin, wrapping it in streaky bacon, ramming other stuff in its cavities etc). And even then it has to be further hidden by cranberry sauce and gravy.
If turkey was in any way decent it would have overtaken chicken as the predominant poultry of choice.
If turkey was in any way decent it would have overtaken chicken as the predominant poultry of choice.
- slacker
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Re: Christmas meat
We enjoy turkey at Christmas. Easy to overcook/dry out, but provided the meat stays moist it’s great. Free range one from the butcher again this year. Plus a ham for the boxing day cold cuts.
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- Tiresome troll
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Re: Christmas meat
I agree free range is the way to go.
frozen or chilled from the sup market are not up to it.
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Re: Christmas meat
according to an article in today's paper
supermarket fresh turkeys are not as fresh as you are made to believe.
apparently they are spayed with carbon dioxide then deep chilled for
up to a month, then they are thawed out put on the cold shelf as fresh plus 72% more cost.
supermarket fresh turkeys are not as fresh as you are made to believe.
apparently they are spayed with carbon dioxide then deep chilled for
up to a month, then they are thawed out put on the cold shelf as fresh plus 72% more cost.
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Re: Christmas meat
Roast beef. Me & my siblings used to stay with an uncle who used to pre-Christmas wring chickens necks ( turkey wasn't really available until 1960's. )
Put us off poultry.
Put us off poultry.
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Re: Christmas meat
Agreed. Some people clearly don’t know what they are doing. Keep basting it and it will never be dry.Prestige Worldwide wrote: ↑Thu Dec 19, 2019 1:58 pm Is there such a thing as bad Turkey? Or is it just bad cooking?
- StillSpike
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Re: Christmas meat
Turkey and Ham for us this year - always moist and juicy. Add in some pigs in blankets, yorkies, spuds, sprouts, carrots, baked suet, and good gravy it's gonna be a cracking Xmas lunch.
Yum
Yum
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Re: Christmas meat
Turkey from a local farm in Hassocks. Birds are killed, plucked and dressed, then hung at zero degrees for at least two weeks. Really tender and full of flavour, unlike the frozen ones from the supermarket.
Mikero
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Re: Christmas meat
My old Dad gets his Turkey from Bridgers Farm at Hurstpierpoint has done for years