debodun
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- Location
 - way upstate in New York, USA
 
I remember my mom, my gramma and a couple of aunts sitting around the dining table at the old farmhouse jotting down notes in their old cookbooks so that the recipes would work ok with modern ovens. It was hours of one argument after another.@Murrmurr, I agree that new stoves aren't what the used to be. I would still love to have an Aga stove, but I know that won't happen. If your not familiar with one: https://www.agarangeusa.com/classic/ranges
I have a roast chicken recipe that you put herb butter under the skin & cook it breast side down. Every 30 minutes you baste with more melted butter. During the last 30 minutes or so, you turn the bird breast side up to brown. Keeping the breast down I found out helps keep the white meat more moist. I've done the same recipe with a turkey & it has helped keeping the breast juicier, but I think part of the problem is how they breed the birds today.
In the spring Hubby brined a skin-on bone-in turkey breast & it came out very juicy. I think I'll try that recipe for Thanksgiving. If you or anyone is interested, I'll find the recipe in the book.



Sounds logical to me. Modern ovens lack the humidity of pre-WWII ones, so you're probly onto something there.Just a thought, do you think a pan of water in the oven would add some moisture in the oven when a bird is roasting?
I LOVE baked ham. I like it a lot more than turkey and it goes better with mashed potatoes, too. My mom always covered our ham with pineapple rings and used long-stemmed cloves to pin a cherry in the center of each ring. So freaking good!Turkey became a Thanksgiving tradition due to a combination of practical, historical, and cultural factors: it was an abundant, native, and large bird suitable for feeding groups; its association with early American feasts grew through historical accounts and 19th-century media; and it was promoted as the centerpiece of the holiday by influential figures like Sarah Josepha Hale. Modern commercial farming and 20th-century marketing campaigns further solidified turkey's place at the Thanksgiving table.
It's alleged that about 90% of Americans have turkey for their Thanksgiving dinner. Other choices are ham and prime rib. Vegans have tofu turkey.
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