Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (2024)

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Jamie's Christmas turkey

With onion and sage pork stuffing

  • Dairy-freedf

With onion and sage pork stuffing

  • Dairy-freedf

“I've kept this roast turkey recipe simple and hassle-free – Christmas should be about fun after all! ”

Serves 10

Cooks In3 hours 30 minutes plus cooling and resting time

DifficultyShowing off

Jamie Cooks ChristmasTurkeyChristmasBritish

Nutrition per serving
  • Calories 448 22%

  • Fat 15.3g 22%

  • Saturates 4.3g 22%

  • Sugars 6g 7%

  • Salt 1.4g 23%

  • Protein 68.5g 137%

  • Carbs 9.9g 4%

  • Fibre 1.6g -

Of an adult's reference intake

Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (3)

Recipe From

Jamie Cooks Christmas

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Method

Ingredients

  • 5 kg turkey , preferably free-range or organic
  • olive oil
  • sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 clementine , halved
  • a few sprigs fresh rosemary
  • 2 onions , peeled and roughly chopped
  • 2 sticks celery , roughly chopped
  • 2 carrots , roughly chopped
  • For the stuffing
  • olive oil
  • 2 onions , peeled and finely chopped
  • sea salt
  • freshly ground black pepper
  • ½ teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • a few sprigs fresh sage , leaves picked and roughly chopped
  • 300 g higher-welfare pork mince
  • 1 large handful breadcrumbs

Tap For Method

The cost per serving below is generated by Whisk.com and is based on costs in individual supermarkets. For more information about how we calculate costs per serving read our FAQS

Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (4)

Recipe From

Jamie Cooks Christmas

By Jamie Oliver

Tap For Ingredients

Method

  1. If you’re worried about cooking the perfect Christmas turkey because you’re afraid you’ll get it wrong, don’t be. This recipe is nice and simple and will help you achieve brilliant results for your Christmas meal.
  2. Take your turkey out of the fridge about an hour before you’re ready to cook it so it comes up to room temperature before roasting. Give it a good rinse then pat it dry with some kitchen paper, making sure you soak up any water in the cavity. Drizzle the meat with a good lug of olive oil, add a few good sprinkles of salt and pepper and then rub this seasoning all over the bird, making sure you get in to all the nooks and crannies.
  3. Preheat your oven to full whack then get started on your stuffing. Pour a lug or two of olive oil into a large pan on a medium heat and fry off your chopped onion for about 10 minutes or until softened. Stir in a good pinch of salt and pepper, the ground nutmeg and your chopped sage leaves, then continue to fry and stir for another minute or two.
  4. Spoon the onion mixture into a large bowl and let it cool completely. Once cooled, add your pork mince and breadcrumbs and use your hands to really scrunch everything together. Once it’s mixed really well, bring the stuffing together into a ball, then cover and chill until you’re ready to stuff your turkey.
  5. Pull the skin at the neck-end back so you can see a cavity and push about half of your stuffing inside your turkey. Not too much: you don’t want to pack it so tightly it slows down the cooking. Once done, pull and fold the skin over the opening and tuck it under the bird so it looks nice.
  6. Turn the turkey around and drop a few small pieces of stuffing into the larger cavity along with your clementine halves and a few sprigs of rosemary. Place your roughly chopped veg in the bottom of a roasting pan and lay your turkey on top. Cover the turkey with tin foil then put it in the hot oven and immediately turn the temperature down to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Cook for about 35 to 40 minutes per kilo. The 5kg bird in this recipe will take about 3 to 3½ hours.
  7. Check on your turkey every 20 minutes or so and keep it from drying out by basting it with the lovely juices from the bottom of the pan. After 2½ hours, remove the foil so the skin gets golden and crispy.
  8. When the time is up, take your turkey out of the oven and stick a small sharp knife into the fattest part of the thigh. If the juices run clear and the meat pulls apart easily, it’s ready. If not, pop the turkey back in the oven to cook for a bit longer then check again. When you're confident it's cooked, rest the turkey for at least 1 hour, preferably 2 hours for bigger birds. Meanwhile you can get your veg and gravy ready.

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Recipe From

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© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

© 2024 Jamie Oliver Enterprises Limited

Christmas Turkey | Turkey Recipes | Jamie Oliver Recipes (2024)

FAQs

How to cook Christmas turkey with Jamie Oliver? ›

Place your roughly chopped veg in the bottom of a roasting pan and lay your turkey on top. Cover the turkey with tin foil then put it in the hot oven and immediately turn the temperature down to 180°C/350°F/gas 4. Cook for about 35 to 40 minutes per kilo. The 5kg bird in this recipe will take about 3 to 3½ hours.

Should I put butter under the skin of my turkey? ›

There are four essential steps for a perfectly roasted Thanksgiving turkey: brining, stuffing with aromatics, rubbing with herb compound butter, and roasting to perfection. The herb butter does double duty. Part of it is rubbed under the skin and over the meat of the bird for a major boost in flavor.

Can I butter and season my turkey the night before? ›

Yes! You can season, stuffed and butter up the turkey the night before and place it onto a roasting pan, then into the refrigerator. Can I make the garlic butter ahead of time? Yes, I recommend making the garlic butter ahead of time to save time the day of, especially if you have lots of other dishes to prepare.

How to cook Christmas turkey Gordon Ramsay? ›

Roast the turkey in the hot oven for 10–15 minutes. Take the tray out of the oven, baste the bird with the pan juices and lay the bacon rashers over the breast to keep it moist. Baste again. Lower the setting to 180°C/Gas 4 and cook for about 2 1⁄2 hours (calculating at 30 minutes per kg), basting occasionally.

How to cook the perfect turkey Jamie Oliver? ›

Preheat your oven to full whack, get the turkey in the roasting tray and cover with foil. As soon as it goes in the oven, immediately turn the heat down to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4. As a rough guide, you want to cook the turkey for about 35 to 40 minutes per kilogram, so a 7kg turkey will want about 4 to 4½ hours in the oven.

How often should you baste a turkey? ›

How Often to Baste a Turkey. Most recipes will tell you to baste your turkey every thirty minutes. But our rule of thumb is actually every forty minutes, and here's why. You don't want to open the oven too many times, or else the whole bird will take much long to cook, and that's a huge inconvenience.

Should I brush my turkey with oil or butter? ›

Fat is going to help the skin get brown and crisp, and contrary to what most might think, butter isn't better. Butter does an okay job, but because it contains a lot of water, oil is a better fat to rub on the skin to ensure it gets extra crispy.

Should I cover turkey with foil? ›

To achieve a perfectly golden, juicy turkey, let the bird spend time both covered and uncovered in the oven. We recommend covering your bird for most of the cooking time to prevent it from drying out; then, during the last 30 minutes or so of cooking, remove the cover so the skin crisps in the hot oven.

Should you rinse a turkey? ›

Wash your hands, but not the turkey! Many consumers think that washing their turkey will remove bacteria and make it safer. However, it's virtually impossible to wash bacteria off the bird. Instead, juices that splash during washing can transfer bacteria onto the surfaces of your kitchen, other foods and utensils.

What is the secret to a moist turkey? ›

Brine your turkey for the best juicy bird.

In recent years, brining has become more popular and can be done with either a wet or dry brine. A wet brine involves immersing the turkey in a salt-water solution for 12-24 hours. Dry-brining is where salt is rubbed over the turkey skin for 24-48 hours before cooking.

What should I do the night before my turkey? ›

You can dry brine your turkey the night before or as far in advance as two days.

How does Martha Stewart cook a turkey in the oven? ›

Roast 1 hour, then baste every 30 minutes with pan liquids, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of thigh (avoiding bone) registers 125°F, about 3 hours. Remove foil; raise oven heat to 400°F. Continue roasting, basting occasionally, until thigh reaches 180°F, 45 to 60 minutes more.

How does Ina Garten cook her turkey? ›

Roast the turkey for 2 1/2 hours, basting from time to time with pan juices, until the juices run clear when you cut between the leg and the thigh. Remove the turkey to a cutting board and cover with foil; let it rest for 20 minutes. Slice the turkey and serve hot.

What is a traditional Christmas turkey dinner menu? ›

Classic turkey dinner
  • Cocktail. Mulled wine sangria.
  • Main. Roast turkey with cider gravy.
  • Side. Pesto green beans. Creamy scalloped potatoes with crispy potato skins.
  • Dessert. Pomegranate posset.
Dec 21, 2021

What temperature to cook turkey jamie oliver? ›

Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4. You want to cook a higher-welfare bird for 25 to 30 minutes per kilo, and a standard bird for 35 to 40 minutes per kilo.

When should I start cooking my Christmas turkey? ›

Cook your turkey on Christmas Eve and start in the morning so that it has plenty of time after cooking to cool before chilling overnight. 3. Take the fresh or defrosted turkey out of the fridge about an hour before cooking to bring to room temperature.

When should I start cooking my turkey for Christmas? ›

If I'm hosting, I always cook the turkey the night before, it helps remove the stress on Christmas Day knowing it's cooked and it carves much better. Save some of the juices.

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