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The Thanksgiving Turkey Steven Raichlen will be Making This Year – With a Twist!!

Planning Thanksgiving on the grill opens up a whole new world of flavor, and this year we’re taking you through it step by step. The Barbecue Bible Complete Thanksgiving Guide is a three-part series designed to help you build your entire holiday meal outdoors—from the main turkey, to the sides, to the show-stopping alternatives if you’re ready to try something different.

Each post digs into the techniques, gear, and recipes that make live-fire Thanksgiving cooking not just possible, but deeply satisfying. Whether you’re chasing crisp skin, smoky depth, or dishes that bring a spark to the table, this guide walks you through the essentials so you can create a feast that feels fresh, fun, and full of flavor.


The Thanksgiving Turkey Steven Raichlen will be Making This Year

Over the years, I’ve written a lot of recipes. More than 4000 by recent reckoning!

And over the years, as Thanksgiving approaches, I’ve written a lot of turkey recipes. Dozens, if not more.

I’ve marinated turkeys Miami-Cuban style, with adobo (cumin, garlic, and sour orange), and served them with mojo (fried garlic lime sauce)

I’ve stuffed turkeys under the skin with truffles and butter.

Truffle Stuffed Smoked Turkey

I’ve blasted turkey breasts with pastrami spice and cured them with citrus and rock salt.

I’ve cooked turkeys on the rotisserie, on beer cans, on the grill, and in my smoker.

But there’s one turkey I keep coming back to: bourbon-brined turkey smoke-roasted in a kamado.

It’s the turkey I’ll be preparing for Thanksgiving this year, and it never fails to bring down the house.

Bourbon-Brined Turkey

So let me break it down for you.

First, the bird. I always buy an organic bird—ideally around 12 to 14 pounds. Organic, because I know it was cleanly and humanely raised. Twelve pounds because it’s easier to stay on top of the cooking. If I have a lot of people to feed, I buy two birds that size. I don’t like cooking 20-pound monsters—it’s too hard to insure even cooking and accurate doneness.

D'artagnan Turkey

Next the brine. Turkey breast is intrinsically dry. Brining adds moisture. I like to flavor my brine with bourbon, which adds a sweet, woodsy flavor. (Bourbon is aged in charred oak barrels. Wood + fire? It’s the liquid equivalent of barbecue.

I also flavor my brine with lemon zest, cloves, and bay leaves). Turkey needs salt, so the salt in the brine provides flavor too.

Brining Turkey

As for the cooking, I use a method I call smoke-roasting. You do it at a higher temperature than traditional smoking, and that helps cook and crisp the skin. (Traditional smoking produces great tasting meat, but rubbery skin.)

As for the smoke component, turkey is one of those meats that just begs for the soulful tang of woodsmoke. I typically use oak or hickory, but any hardwood will do. Except, possibly, for mesquite, which produces a stronger smoke than the other hardwoods. But, hey, if you like mesquite, smoke your bird with that.

As for the cooker, I typically use a kamado (like a Primo or Big Green Egg). I like how the thick ceramic walls and felt gasket between the cook chamber and lid seal in moistness. But I’ve also smoke-roasted turkey on a charcoal kettle grill and in a pellet grill. All will produce admirable birds.

This year, I’m adding one new twist to the traditional Raichlen bird. I’m taking a page from the fried turkey school. Smoke-roasting produces a turkey skin that’s crisper than traditional smoking. But not as crackling crisp as a fried turkey.

So once my bird comes off the grill, I’m placing it on a wire rack over a roasting pan. I’ll heat a couple cups of vegetable oil to 350 degrees in a saucepan. And I’ll CAREFULLY ladle the hot oil over the bird—carefully—to crisp the skin just before serving.

Bourbon-Brined Turkey Recipe

Smoke-Roasted Turkey for Beginners

Get The Recipe »

It’s the best of all possible worlds.

Cooking turkey this year? I’d love to see how YOU do it! Post pix on my social media pages. Happy Thanksgiving to all!

Thanksgiving Turkey: Frequently Asked Questions

Why brine a turkey before smoking or roasting?
Turkey breast can dry out fast. Brining helps it pull in moisture and seasoning so the meat stays juicy and flavorful.
What size turkey cooks most evenly on a grill or smoker?
A 12–14 pound bird is ideal. It cooks more predictably, holds moisture better, and avoids the uneven doneness big birds often have.
What wood works best for smoke-roasting turkey?
Oak, hickory, apple, or pecan pair well with poultry. Mesquite works too, but has a stronger flavor that not everyone loves.
How do I get crisp skin when smoking a turkey?
Use higher “smoke-roast” temps and finish by ladling hot oil over the bird. It adds a fried-style crackle without deep-frying.
Can I make this recipe on a kettle or pellet grill?
Absolutely. A kamado holds moisture best, but kettle and pellet grills can produce great results with the same method.

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Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Mesquite Smoked Turkey

Smoked Thanksgiving Turkey Recipe – brined with sweet tea, spatchcocked, injected and seasoned with Texas flavors, then smoked over mesquite wood for a flavorful, beautiful, juicy, smoked turkey.

WHAT MALCOM USED IN THIS RECIPE:

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Mesquite Smoked Turkey


Description

Smoked Turkey Recipe using a Sweet Tea Brine, Texas Flavors and Mesquite Wood.


Ingredients

Turkey Injection


Instructions

  1. Place turkey in a large container and add the full bottle of bird brine and the lemons. Pour in the sweet tea and make sure the turkey is fully submerged in the brine. Place in the refrigerator or a cooler with ice for 24 hours.
  2. Remove turkey from brine and pat dry. Spatchcock the turkey by flipping it over breast side down. Use kitchen shears to cut along the back bone on each side removing it from the bird. Cut the breast bone with a chefs knife and press down on the bird until it pops. Flip the turkey over breast side up and tuck the wing tips behind the neck.
  3. Brush peanut oil over the skin and season with Holy Gospel Rub followed by a light layer of TX Rub. Inject the breast, thighs, and legs with the injection.
  4. Prepare stick burner pit for indirect smoking at 275°F using lump charcoal and post oak splits for fuel. (Do not add the mesquite wood at this point)
  5. Place the turkey on the pit and add 2-3 chunks of mesquite wood to the fire for smoke flavor.
  6. At the 1 hour mark insert a probe thermometer into the breast of the turkey. Set the thermometer to 160°F. Add a couple more chunks of mesquite to the hot coals.
  7. Monitor the internal temperate of the turkey and hold the pit at 275° the entire cook. Once the thermometer alarm sounds carefully remove the turkey from the pit and let it rest for 10 minutes before carving.

Keywords: Mesquite Smoked Turkey, Mesquite Turkey, spatchcock turkey, smoked spatchcock turkey, smoked turkey, smoked turkey recipes, smoked whole turkey, best smoked turkey, smoked thanksgiving turkey

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Smoked & Fried Turkey Recipe

Smoked & Fried Turkey Recipe

Smoked Fried Turkey

I brined this 12lb bird, then smoked it on a pellet grill until it hit around 150° internal, then I dropped it in 350° peanut oil until the breast was 165° in the breast. And as soon as it came out of the hot oil, I gave it a good shake of my cajun seasoning….

This turkey can our with a super crunchy, crispy skin on the outside and some seriously juicy and lightly smoked meat on the inside!

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Smoked & Fried Turkey Recipe


Description

Smoked Fried Turkey – whole turkey brined and smoked with pecan wood,  then deep fried it in peanut oil for a juicy, smoked turkey with a crispy turkey skin.  


Ingredients


Instructions

  1. Remove thawed turkey from packaging be sure to check the cavity and neck area for giblets.
  2. Place the turkey in Meat Bag or large container and pour in the bottle of Bird Brine. Add 2 gallons of water (enough to completely submerge the bird) and place in the refrigerator or in a cooler on ice for 24-48 hours.
  3. Remove turkey from brine and allow to drain. Place on a wire rack over a sheet pan and place in the refrigerator for 2 hours to dry the skin. (It helps to pat the excess moisture off the skin with paper towel)
  4. Prepare pellet grill for indirect smoking at 275°F using pecan pellets.
  5. Spray the skin with the cooking spray – or another oil – and season with AP seasoning on all sides.
  6. Place the turkey in the smoker breast side up until an internal meat probe hits about 150° F.
  7. Set up a turkey fryer for deep frying at 350°F using peanut oil for best flavor. Any clear frying oil will work.
  8. Remove the turkey from the smoker and insert the turkey frying rod/hanger through the cavity.
  9. Leave the meat probe inserted in the thickest part of the breast to monitor internal temperature while frying.
  10. Carefully lower the turkey breast side down into the hot oil. Use extreme caution and follow the turkey fryer directions carefully.
  11. When the internal temperature reaches 165°F in the breast, carefully remove the turkey from the hot oil allowing it to drain. Place the turkey immediately on a cutting board breast side up and remove the turkey frying rod/hanger.
  12. Season the outer skin with King Craw Cajun Seasoning and let the bird rest for 5-10 minutes before carving.

Malcom Reed
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