Besides heating up a spiral ham (in the oven) today, I wanted to smoke a 6lb. turkey breast on the Weber 22 using my newly arrived SnS. I'm looking for recipes here and have had no real luck. I do have Meathead's book and need to take a look, but I was wondering if anyone here had any experience, positive or negative.
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Smoking a turkey breast question
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I've only done whole turkeys in th' smoker; never tried jus' a breast. Must remedy that!
I always jus' rub mine down with butter, add whatever seasonin' I select, plop it rather unceremoniously into a foil pan, an' smoke th' double hockey sticks out of it.
If there's anything more specific that I can help ya' with, please tell me. Jus' gettin' coffeed up here...
Personal fave, an' best reviews always come from my Cajun seasoned turkeys, real crowd pleasers...I get comissioned to do a LOT of them every year.
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Club Member
- Oct 2016
- 572
- Nebraska
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I've just done whole breasts, (bone-in). Dry rub a few hours before smoking. Light rubbing of olive oil, then season. Cooked at 350F until internal temp of 160F. Carry-over cooking takes you to the 165F internal temp required for safe consumption. I prefer cooking poultry at higher temps, as low-n-slow tends to make rubbery skin, and dry meat, (at least at my house.) You may want to watch the salt, as many poultry products are injected at the manufacturer with salt solution.
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It is a bone in breast. I buttered under the skin and used a Cajun rub as Mr. Bones suggested. Lighted the SnS and figuring I'll go with a higher temp of maybe 280°+ and see how it goes. I can always finish it in the oven. Using pecan chunks. Thanks for the great suggestions.
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NortheastAl, I Won't Claim to Be an Expert but The Last Turkey Breast I Smoked was On A Steve Raichlen Beer Can Chicken Rack the Can had a Concoction of Everything But Beerâ“ Turkekey was Dry Brined with Coarse Kosher Salt, and Garlic Powder Inside and Out! Just Before Going on the Weber I added More Kosher Salt, Garlic Powder, Tones Rest. Grind Black Pepper, Jack Daniels Poultry Rub and Slathered It With Wishbone Honey
Mustard and Spice Salad Dressing! 325* F on the Weber and S 'n S for +- 3 Hrs, with Hickory and Apple Wood for Smoke! I Won't Tell You How Good It Was Let it Suffice to Say Eunice and My Nephew Were Growling at Each Otherâ“
Eat Well and Prosper! From a Backyard Cremator in Fargo ND, Dan
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- Jul 2014
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Started Low-N-Slow BBQ in 2012. Obviously, it's taken hold (in chronological order:
1.) A pair of Weber Smokey Mountain 22.5's
2.) #LilTex, a 22" Expensive Offset Smoker (looks like a Yoder Witicha)
3.) #WhoDat1, a HUGE Gravity Fed Insulated Cabinet Smoker (cooking chamber 3'x2'x6')
4.) A Full Size Commercial Dryer/converted to Vertical Smoker.
5.) Jambo Backyard stickburner (my FAVORITE Pit so far)
6.) GrillMeister, a huge 24"x48" Adjustable, Charcoal Grill from Pitmaker.com
7.) 22" Weber Kettle with Slow-N-Sear
8.) Vault insulated reverse-flow cabinet smoker from Pitmaker
9.) BarbecueFiretruck...under development
10.) 26 foot BBQ Vending Trailer equipped with HUGE Myron Mixon 72xc smoker is HERE, Oct 2016!
11.) Opened www.PaulsRibShackBarbecue.com Food Trailer officially in March 2017
12.) Austin Smoke Works 500 Gallon Propane Tank Offset Smoker, named "Lucille" as travel pit for PaulsRibShack, Oct 2018.
12.) Opening Brick & Mortar location at 4800 Nelson Rd, Spring 2019. Had a pair of 1,000 Gallon Austin Smoke Works pits, both in RibShackRed for our new place!
Fabulous Backlit Thermapens, several Maverick Remote Thermometers (don't use any remotes anymore), Thermoworks Smoke, Other Thermoworks toys, Vacuum sealer, lots and lots of equipment...
I'm loving using BBQ to make friends and build connections.
I have #theRibList where I keep a list of new and old friends and whenever I'm cooking, I make 1 to 20 extra and share the joy.
Turkey breast is fantastic!
Show us your pics and tell us how it came out?
I have been getting them from the food wholesaler, frozen. Some cases are 8 pound breasts, some 5. Still refining, but I think I like cutting the breasts into 3 inch wide chunks before smoking. The greater surface area gives more bark, and having more of the meat in similar size pieces allows for more uniform cooking temp (no overcooked thinner parts). A whole 8 pound breast takes something like 2.5-3 hours at 275 degrees.
I could eat smoked turkey breast every day for 2 weeks and smile the whole time! This is my favorite turkey breast picture...I'm hungry!
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