I was in the Publix Grocery Store in Greenville, SC and they have an excellent deli/sandwich section. Just for the heck if it, I tried turkey pastrami. I was shocked how good it was. I've made QVQ brisket pastrami (thanks Troutman and Jerod Broussard!) and thought it was fantastic, but I gotta say the turkey pastrami was really good. As I'm getting older and trying to cut some fat and calories out of my diet, I was hoping someone on AR has a good recipe for turkey pastrami they're willing to share. Thanks much!
The OmegaDog
Last edited by OmegaDog12; February 21, 2020, 07:29 AM.
@Potkettleblack..the Kosherdosher site is interesting and informative. Gonna try it by their method What brand/type of gram-scale do you have/recommend?
The OmegaDog
I’ve done it a bunch. I generally follow the Amazing Ribs cure recipe, using my own version of pickling spice, and find it takes about 5 days to cure a normal boneless, skinless turkey breast. Then I desalinate for a few hours, tie into a cylinder shape, rub with a pastrami rub and smoke until it’s 155 degrees.
Any leftovers get reheated by steaming the slices for a few minutes.
pic below is from a year or so ago. Went too light on the rub but otherwise was very good
Yep, wet brine. The reason I say to use the calculator is that you want to go on thickness of the breast, not weight.
I'd love to share the pickling recipe but... I have to confess that I use one from the bulk aisle of a local market. I think most pickling spice combos are similar with mustard seed, etc. This one does have some small dried chiles in it but honestly I don't notice heat.
Really, much of the flavor comes from the smoking with coriander and black pepper. mmmmm
One thing - before you smoke it, cut off a piece and cook it, then taste for saltiness. When I did my ~2lb section of breast for 2-3 days it was fine... but check. If the cooked piece is too salty, soak in water in the fridge for some time (8-24 hours...)
Also, Morton's kosher and sea salt are about 2x as salty per volume as Diamond Crystal due to shape. If you can, go by weight, not volume.
Last edited by rickgregory; February 23, 2020, 01:06 PM.
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I’ve never really thought of turkey for this. Interesting. I’m suddenly hungry.
I like it a lot. A turkey breast is big enough to take some flavor on during a cure and takes enough time in the smoker to also take on flavor there. But it's small enough that I've actually done the smoking step on my Smokey Joe because it really only takes 2-3 hour to get to the 165F internal temp.
Don't get me wrong... I love beef pastrami too. Yesterday's breakfast was a hash that incorporated some bavette pastrami. The turkey is a nice change though.
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