Cook your turkey perfectly every time - cooking instructions

Cook your turkey perfectly every time - cooking instructions

CONVENTIONAL OVEN

  • Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C).
  • Do not wash your Turkey.
  • Remove giblets and neck.
  • If stuffing the turkey, do so while the oven is preheating. Spoon stuffing lightly into turkey instead of packing firmly because stuffing expands while cooking. (Allow ½ cup (125 ml) of stuffing per pound (500 g) of turkey.)
  • Place turkey breast-up on a rack in a shallow roasting pan.
  • Roast uncovered, or loosely covered with foil. If you choose to baste your turkey, limit the number of times you open and close your oven (once per hour is sufficient).
  • Turkey is cooked when the meat thermometer reads 165°F (77°C) for an unstuffed turkey, or 175°F (82°C) for a stuffed turkey and the juices run clear. Insert meat thermometer in the thickest part of the inner thigh, but not touching the bone.
  • When roasting, any stuffing placed in the cavity of the bird should read and internal temperature of at least 165°F (74°C).  
  • Remove the turkey from the oven when cooking is completed and let stand 20 minutes to allow the juices to set.
  • Cooking times may vary depending on: the temperature of the bird going into the oven, the accuracy of the oven’s thermostat, how many times the oven door is opened during roasting, the type and size of roasting pan used and the size of the turkey in relation to the size of the oven.

CONVECTION OVEN

  • Preheat oven to 300°F (149°C).
  • Do not wash your Turkey.
  • The result of roasting a turkey is the same in conventional or convection ovens in that the turkey is done when the endpoint temperature is reached. Your turkey is done when a meat thermometer inserted into the thigh reads 180°F (82°C) for a stuffed turkey or 170°F (77°C) for an unstuffed turkey. 
  • The drumsticks should also move easily in the joints at this point.
  • Avoid overcrowding in the oven when roasting in a convection oven as crowding may inhibit air circulation and slow cooking.