Louis's recipe is right on. I usually smoke cook at a lower temp, and at
a higher temp. at the end to bring the thigh up to 165F. That is all a
matter of preference. You might want to search alt.food.barbecue on
google and listen to the screeching noises. There was also a recent
thread about that. Again, you won't find anything that works better than
Louis's.
Kent
Louis Cohen wrote:
>
> Prepare a brine of:
>
> 1 cup kosher salt (or 1/2 cup table salt)
> 1 cup sugar (or molasses, maple syrup, whatever)
> other seasonings you like
>
> per gallon of water (You might need about 1.5 - 2 gallons for that size
> turkey).
>
> Put the turkey in the brine in a non-reactive container and keep it
> refrigerated for 24 hrs.
>
> On the day you are going to cook, drain the turkey, rinse, and pat dry.
> Re-season as you like but no more salt.
>
> Different cooking temps will produce different results:
>
> - 220-240° will give you a nice smoky flavor and a somewhat drier texture,
> but rubbery skin unless you increase the temp at the end
> - regular oven temp (375-400° for this size bird) is my favorite - it will
> still be smoky, but moist and juicy with crispy skin
>
> Use a vertical stand with the bird neck down if you can.
>
> The bird is done when the temp is 160° touching bone in the breast
>
> Let it rest 45 minutes before carving.
>
> --
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
> ----
> Louis Cohen
> Living la vida loca at N37° 43' 7.9" W122° 8' 42.8"
>
> "Janet Bostwick" > wrote in message
> ...
> > I have a smoker and a 15 pound turkey. I've never done a turkey in the
> > smoker before. What is a recommended rub for turkey? or do you inject?
> or
> > both? What temperature for the smoker? The temperature must be higher
> for
> > doing a turkey than doing butt or ribs??? Help please--planning on
> smoking
> > it on Sunday.
> >
> > Janet
> >
> >
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