Thanksgiving Food Part II: Soaking the Capon in Cherry Tea

Last entry I discussed our choice of bird this year: a capon.

Today I immersed the bird into concentrated cherry tea.

Why cherry tea? Because it made sense last year, it worked and people loved it. Sometimes my cooking instincts jump out and give me an idea that is off the wall. About 90% of the time they work very well...we won't talk about the other 10%. Those suck.

For example, the first time I sat around watching Iron Chef (a Food Network show we obsessed over for about a year then got tired of), the idea popped into my mind to bread a meatloaf. Meatloaf often sucks. But there are ways to make a meatloaf wonderful. One is to marinate the hell out of it in something very flavorful. I have done that successfully. Another, which I picked up from a former landlady in Los Angeles, is to wrap the meatloaf in bacon. The bacon fat saturates the meatloaf and you KNOW (assuming you aren't Kosher or Hallal) that tastes good. I came up with the idea of breading the meatloaf as a way of making it moist and delicious. It works. And it was an inspiration that came out of nowhere while watching some really good chefs get creative.

Last year, as I was contemplating a horde descending on our house for Thanksgiving and feeling the need to do something notable, my taste instincts went into overdrive. I have a knack of being able to imagine how flavors will go together. And something about a particular tea blend we had seemed to go well with turkey...or other poultry. I extrapolated on the idea of brining a bird (soaking it in a flavorful, salty solution for a day to add flavor and moisture) and came up with the idea of "teaing" a bird.

I had no idea how it would work. I just instinctively knew that that particular tea would add a good flavor to the meat.

The tea in question, and it isn't the only tea I suspect would work, but it is the one that I KNOW works, was a black tea/cherry blend from Wissotzkt Tea company. It isn't sweet like some fruit based teas. It is a solid black tea with a distinct, but not overpowering, flavor of cherries. I imagined the combination of this tea with poutry having an almost smoky wood undertone which I thought would work.

So, a day prior to brining my bird last year, I soaked it in about triple strength Wissotzky Cherry tea. I poured the hot tea over the bird and then let it sit in the tea in the refrigerator. I used about as much triple strength tea as would cover a little over half the bird. Midway through I turned the bird to soak the other side. I knew my idea was probably working when I noticed that the side of the bird that had been soaked half a day in the tea had taken on a tea-colored tinge, indicating that it was soaking up the tea.

Ultimately, this tea soak was only the first of multiple layers of soaking, brining, dry rubs and glazes I used. But in the end there was a noticable, but subtle, almost woody tea/cherry flavor that infused the meat. The technique worked exactly the way I had imagined it would. It also seemed to add moistness. A couple of guests declared it the moistest turkey they had had and were excited this year when they heard I was planning on applying the tea technique to a capon this year. They may come for leftovers this year.

The bird is sitting in the same Wissotzky Cherry tea right now. I just turned the bird and it had taken on that beautiful tea-tinge I remember from last year.

Sometimes when I sip a tea I try to imagine what meat it would complement if soaked into it. I have some ideas...mint teas, spice teas...chicken, beef, lamb. But I haven't tried any of them. So far it has been the cherry tea with poultry that has been reliable. Someday I think I will get the right lamb and try a particular spice tea (Good Earth) or a particular mint tea (Wissotzky again) because I think both would work well with lamb, though yielding a very different result.

mole333's picture

|

brought to you by


Current weather

NY - New York City, Central Park

day-clear
  • Clear sky
  • Temperature: 42.8 °F
  • Wind: Variable, 5.8 mph
  • Pressure: 30.24 inHg
  • Rel. Humidity: 39%
  • Visibility: 10 miles

Visit Our Sponsors

Premium Advertisers


Help Obama Win!

Upcoming events

  • no upcoming events available

Subscribe to our daily digest

In keeping with the "city that never sleeps" tradition, keep up to date with our daily syndication digest.



Powered by FeedBlitz


culturekitchen Media

The Publisher
Liza Sabater

Fresh dissent served daily
culturekitchen

Grassroots News and
Activism for New Yorkers

Daily Gotham

Feminist Bloggers Network
BlogSheroes

A new kind of voyeurism
Voogling

Art + Code + Philosophy
Potatoland.blog

Got any dirt, tips, leads or money for us? Then drop us a line or two at editors [at] dailygotham [dot] com or use our general contact form to reach everybody in the editorial team ASAP.


Poll

Only in New York

The lengthy lead story in the Real Estate section [of the NY Times] credited Lopez with sparking a massive rebuilding effort in Bushwick, way back when he was a graduate student in 1971, and then carrying it through. The story also mentioned that Angela Battaglia's agency is the developer for a $20 million component of the rebuilding effort. It even pictured [Vito] Lopez and Battaglia standing together in front of new housing construction. But the story omitted that Battaglia is Lopez's girlfriend. Does that connection at least deserve mention? Might the article have explained why there was or wasn't a conflict of interest present? Was it a coincidence that Lopez's girlfriend's outfit was put in charge of the $20 million deal? Inquiring minds would like to know. It may well be that everything was done on the up-and-up. But given Lopez's tendency to do favors for his friends-for example, he helped make his girlfriend's brother Jack Battaglia a Civil Court judge-the Times should have explored the question.

Lambda Independent Democrats (bottom articles)

Who's online

There are currently 6 users and 1198 guests online.

Blogroll

Editors and Contributors

Mole's Progressive Democrat
Alien and Sedition
Dan Jacoby

The Indies

Adirondack Musings
The Albany Project
Angry Brown Butch
Atlantic Yards Report
Blue Spot
Buffalo Pundit
Buffalo Geek
Bike Blog
Brooklyn Rail
The Community Alliance
Danger Democrat
DDDB
DragonFlyEye
EverythingNY
Gowanus Lounge
Hell's Kitchen Online
Joshing Politics
Mamita Mala
Mamapalooza blog
More Gardens
Nassau GOP Watch
New York Games
No Land Grab
NY 13
On NY Turf
Peter King Watch
Politics on the Hudson
Open Orleans
Prometheus6
Room Eight
Steve Gilliard RIP
The Oil Drum
Troy Polloi
Rochester Turning
Simply Left Behind
Time's Up
The Working Families Party Man
Power from Truth by Chris Owens

The little big media

Capitol Confidential
Gotham Gazette
Daily Politics
Wonkster
New York Blade
NYC Bloggers
NYC Indymedia
The Politicker
EmpireZone
Power Plays
Spin Cycle

The big little media

Curbed
Gawker
Gothamist
The Politico
City Limits

Everybody Party! blogs

New Democratic Majority
Stonewall Democrats
Working Families Party's WFPBlog

The Brains

The Brennan Center
Reform NY
The Century Foundation
Center for American Progress
Drum Major Institute's DMIblog
edwize
TortDeform

The Movement

New Democratic Majority
Democracy for NYC
DL21C
Act Now
Capitol D Group
New York Democratic Lawyers Council

The Loyal Opposition

Alarming News
News Copy
Ragged Thots
Suitably Flip
Urban Elephants
Serf City

Fun Stuff

City Rag
Jossip
Overheard in New York
Cobalt 6

This list is a work in progress. Are there blogs you believe should be included (maybe your own)? Please leaves us a message through our contact page. Or drop us a line at :

editors(at)
dailygotham(dot)com


Progressive Districts

Progressive States

Alabama
Arizona
California Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
Florida
Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Louisiana
Maine
Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
New York
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Pacific Northwest
Sunbelt