Skip to main content

I bought 2 turkeys weighing 14 lbs. each. I brined one and not the other. I figured about 8 hrs. on the former and 10 hrs. on the latter. Put them in the Cookshack smoker last night at 10, on 225*. Woke up at 4 a.m., just thought I'd check the temp, had the probe in the brined bird, and it was already on 188! Opened the door and both were 'splitting' done. Went ahead and took them off and carved them up, the dark meat is ok, the white meat is dry.

Any ideas why they got done so quick?

Thanks, Bart
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I got my timing from the blue Cookshack "Smoking at Home" that came with my smoker. 35 min/lb for brined and 45 min/lb for unbrined. My first bird was brined, the second wasn't.

Maybe I've been out of school too long. I figured 14# X 35 min = 490 minutes divided by 60 = 8.16 hrs. I used the same, except 45 min/lb., for the unbrined bird. Maybe I'm not figuring that right.
My 5 hrs for turkey to be done was with thermometer setpoint using amerique setpoint of 165 deg on breast to stop cooking and going into default holding temp of 140 deg. The best feature of amerique is to set it and forget it mode. Also the experts on this forum is to always go with temp and not with time in smoking anything.
here is a post by SmokinOkie back in 2010 hope he doesn't mind

SmokinOkie
On a Permanent vacation, seeing America by RV

posted November 18, 2010 03:25 PM
Probably the # on question I get. In class, in the forum, in emails, in person.

We've heard it for years (it's even on the turkey you buy).

Here's why. Read this list, just did a quick list of temp, time, pounds and you'll see the variations.

As I say all the time, there are too many variations in turkey size, shape, brining, smokers, methods, etc to just give a set time.

Now I did a QUICK (read that to mean I probably had a math error)
but there are rough times per # and I group them roughly

CONCLUSION? Cook on internal bird temp, not on time:

325-350 to 2 ½ to 3 hours (no weight listed)
325-360 for 2 ½ hours (17#) (8.8 min per #)
325-350 300 for 4 ¼ hours (13#) (19.2 min per #)
325 for 2 ½ to 3 hours (12#) (15 min per #)
325 for 4 hours (18#) (13.3 min per #)
325 for 6 ½ to 7 hours (21#) (20 min per #)
From 8.8 to 20 min per #

300 2 ¾ hours (17.5#) (9.1 min per #)
300 for 3 hours (15#) (12 min per #)
300 for 2 ½ hours (8# breast) (18.7 min per #)
300-335 for 4 ½ to 5 hours (no weight listed)
300 for 4 ½ hours (15# breast) (16.6 min per #)
From 9.1 to 18.7 min per #

275 for 7 ¾ hours (22#) (20.4 min per #)
275 for 3 hours (14#) (12.8 min per #)
275-280 for 3 hours (9.3#) (19.3 min per #)
275 for 2 ¾ (9# breast) (17.7 min per #)
275 for 2 ½ hours (13.72#) (10.9 min per #)
From 10.9 to 20.4 min per #

250 for 3 ½ hours (13#) (16.1 min per #)
250 for 6 hours and 220 for 3 hours (13#) (41 min per #)
250 for 3 hours and 325 for 1 ½ hours (16#) (15 min per #)
250 for 3 ½ hours (14#)250 for 3 ¾ hours (7 lb breast) (31.4 min per #)
250 for 4 hours (12.5#) (19.2 min per #)
250 for 6 hours (14½#) (24.8 min per #)
250 for 1.5 hours (11#) (8 min per #)
From 8 to 41 min per #

235 for 6 hours (8# breast) (45 min per #)
230 for 2 ¾ hours (13#) (12.3 min per #)
225-250 for 6 hours (12#) (30 min per #)
225-250 for 3.5 to 4 hours (10# bird and 6# breast) (24 min and 40 min per #)
225-275 for 3 ½ to 4 hours (no weight listed)
225 for 8-10 hrs (was partially frozen on purpose) (no weight listed)
225 for 4 hours and 350 for 1 ½ hours (21#) (15.7 min per #)
From 12.3 to 40 min per #
That's interesting, thanks.

Even more interesting, I just told my wife that the main thing that I've learned from this thread is that I need to upgrade to the next model. Set the oven temp, set the internal temp to whatever temp you want, and it cuts the oven temp back to 140* all by itself when it reaches that temp.

Her comment: "Sell this one and get the next better model!"

I have the SMO45, anyone looking for one of those?!

Add Reply

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×