Poultry
Marinated Chicken Kebabs with Lemon Pepper Yogurt Sauce
We've added an editor's note about broiling the chicken rather than grilling it.
If you use regular skewers without decorations, feel free to skewer the chicken before you place it on the grill.
Grilled Cornish Game Hens with Lemon, Sumac, and Date Relish
This recipe yields two extra portions for second helpings. The hens are brined for at least six hours, so be sure to plan ahead. To make things easier, ask the butcher to halve the hens for you.
Calf's Liver with Scallions Sherry, and Pancetta
We gave the old liver-and-onions routine a contemporary twist with mild scallions and crisp pancetta. Sherry-butter sauce adds finesse and roundness of flavor.
Turkey Neck and Giblet Stock
To make the most of the turkey's giblets and neck, we first brown them to give the resulting stock (and later, gravy) depth of flavor.
Quick and Rich Turkey Stock
No matter how fast you prepare Thanksgiving dinner, you must have gravy, and you must have stuffing. And both need homemade turkey stock. This one is fast, even with the time it takes to brown the giblets, neck, and wing tips. You can mostly ignore it while it simmers, but you wont be able to deny its enriching, ennobling presence in your finished gravy and stuffing.
Extra-Moist Turkey with Pan Gravy
The secret to this succulent bird is an inexpensive metal pan. We used the kind of old-fashioned oval roaster found in most supermarkets, not fancy cookware stores. These lightweight enameled pans with lids simultaneously roast and braise the turkey, so it stays moist even as it cooks quickly. Simply uncover it at the end to crisp the skin. Ample pan juices add a fragrant richness to our easy gravy.
Gorgonzola Chicken Breasts
Dont worry if it looks like some of the Gorgonzola disappeared in the oven. It actually soaks into the chicken, keeping it moist and enriching its flavor.
Adobo Turkey with Red-Chile Gravy
This is no ordinary turkey. Food editor Lillian Chou blended toasted guajillo and ancho chiles with a range of spices and aromatics to create a brick-red adobo sauce that seasons both the bird and its gravy. After a long marinate, the adobo permeates the bird's juicy meat during roasting. The resulting turkey features a savory complexity heightened by the accompanying red-chile gravy.
Turkey Jook
Chinese Rice Porridge with Turkey and Ginger
Foie Gras Toasts with Sauternes Geleé
These little stacks of toasted and buttered bread, foie gras terrine, and Sauternes gelée—crisp, creamy, cool—will make you swoon and sigh. They provide such a rich reward for so simple an assembly: The only thing you make from scratch is the gelée; its like a sip of dessert wine on top of this extraordinary first bite.
Roast Turkey with Black-Truffle Butter and White-Wine Gravy
When food editor Shelley Wiseman was asked to develop a recipe for an over-the-top turkey, she began by rubbing truffle butter under its skin. "Its a cheap shot," she admitted, "but its damn delicious." We all agreed—its the best turkey most of us have ever tasted. The butter, an excellent carrier of that unmistakable truffle flavor, moistens the turkeys meat and crisps its skin during a high-heat roast. For this splendid centerpiece, a nuanced French shallot-wine sauce is just the thing.
Roasted Turkey Breast with Corn Bread-Sage Stuffing and Brandy Gravy
The Thanksgiving turkey conundrum: How to keep the breast meat from drying out while the dark meat finishes cooking? By roasting a bone-in turkey breast by itself, we've eliminated the stress and cut the cooking time by several hours. What you get is perfectly moist, tender white meat with crisp, salty skin—all in under an hour. If you don't have time to make the gravy, skip it. This succulent bird doesn't need it.
Chicken with Tomatillo and Cilantro Sauce
Known as the Mexican green tomato, tomatillos supply vitamin A.
New Coq au Vin
Celery—often dismissed as one of the produce world's poorest relations—contributes an intriguing earthiness to moist chicken infused with the flavors of white wine and garlic.
Confit Duck Legs
As convenient as store-bought duck confit is, we find that its quality tends to vary. Making your own allows you to control the spicing and the cooking time to produce a velvety piece of meat. This ancient preservation method has three parts: First you cure the duck legs in salt (drawing out the water in which microorganisms can live), then you slowly cook them in fat, and finally you store them fully covered in the cooking fat so air can't get in.