For years, we've enjoyed a roast pork loin recipe titled "Roast pork loin with roasted apple compote" that was originally published in Barbara Kafka's cookbook "Roasting-A Simple Art
".
Much of Kafka's book involves roasting at high heat - typically 500 degrees - and her recipe of coating the pork loin in mustard, salt and pepper at the start and then roasting with apples at that high temperature has always worked out well for us. Sometimes (depending upon how clean your oven is), roasting at that high a temperature can result in some smoking - so it takes some care.
On this Christmas Day, though, we're trying some variations - something a bit different.
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For our Christmas family dinner this year, we roasted a 12-lb turkey that turned out delicious. For the first time, we tried a new technique consisting of roasting the bird upside down (breasts down) and high-heat kickoff followed by a two step heat reduction while roasting (a total of 3 different temperatures are used). All you do is manage time and temperature - nothing could be simpler.
In the past, we've done brining and that works well to yield a moist bird. But the high-heat upside-down approach used here delivered just about the best, most moist turkey we've tasted - without the hassles of brining. Note: I kind of had to give up brining - my wife just can't stand the thought of open bowls of water and poultry in our refrigerator - she sees salmonella dancing everywhere around! Besides, as she says, there's never enough room in the 'frig anyway at this time of year!
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