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Hippie asked a question in another thread about deboning a whole turkey.

In honor of Turkey Month, and the inevitable Turkey questions, I'll make a few posts to help.

Any other requests Big Grin

This is from another post, sorry no photos, I know it would help.

TO DE-BONE A TURKEY
Place the turkey, breast down, on a flat surface. Make an incision the entire length of the spine through the skin and flesh. Starting from the neck end and using the tip of the knife, follow as close to the bone as you can cut, carefully teasing the skin and meat away from the frame. Toward the neck end, cut through the meat to expose the shoulder blade (feel for it first and cut through small amounts of meat at a time if you have trouble locating it); cut the meat away from around the bone and sever the bone at the joint so you can remove the blade.
Disjoint the wing between the second and third joint; free the heavy drumstick of the wing and remove it, being careful to leave the skin intact. Continue teasing the meat away from the backbone, heading toward the thighbone and being careful to keep the �oyster� (pocket of meat on the back) attached to the skin instead of leaving it with the bone.

Cut through the ball-and-socket joint to release the thighbone from the carcass; you should now be able to open up the bird more in order to better see what bones are still left to deal with. Continue teasing the meat away from the carcass until you reach the center front of the breastbone. Then, very carefully separate the skin from the breastbone at the midline without piercing the skin (go slowly because the skin is very thin at this point).

Repeat the same de-boning procedure on the other side (left or right) of the turkey, with the turkey still breast down. When both sides are finished, carefully remove the carcass. Then remove the thighbone and leg bone on each side as follows. Being careful not to break through the skin, use a small hammer to break the leg bone completely across, about two inches from the tip end. Then manipulate both ends of the bone with your hands to be sure the break is complete. Leave the tip of the bone in, but remove the leg bone and thighbone as one unit. To do this, cut the meat away from around the thighbone first, using the knife tip; then, holding the thighbone up with one hand, use the other hand to carefully cut the meat away from around the leg-thigh joint. (Don�t cut through this joint, and don�t worry if it seems as if you�re leaving a lot of meat around the joint - - it can�t be helped and, besides, it will add flavor when you make the stock with the bones!) Then use the blade of the knife to scrape the meat away from the leg bone; remove the leg-thigh bone. With your hands or the knife, one by one remove as many pin bones from the leg meat as possible; then, if necessary, pull the tip of the leg bone to turn the meat to the inside (so the skin is on the outside and it looks like a turkey again). Lay the de-boned turkey on a sheet pan and immediately place in the coldest part of the refrigerator. Reserve the bones and neck for making the Poultry Stock. Reserve and refrigerate the giblets for making the Cornbread Dressing.
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I have never de-boned a turkey, but I have de-boned whole chicken. Do it a bit differently, because I want the skin intact. Start at the rear end and cut off the tail. With a very sharp filet knife, separate the skin from the bones, rolling the skin & meat back as you go. I just cut the thigh bone joint and wing joints free from the main body bones. Sometimes the thigh bone is removed, sometimes not. When finished there's a whole chicken to stuff. Tie the legs together to hold stuffing in the back end. I'll have to try it with a turkey...
if you don't like the flat lookwhat might be fun after doing the boning work is to go to epicuruious.com and look up farce or forcemeat recipes or chicken gallotine or ballontine recipes (they are the same except one is poached and the other baked) for some ideas.
get a big old sewing needle and some 100% cotton thread and stuff and sew and voila no bones but it sits up just like it has some.
okie the directions were great!!!!!!!!!
and you are right there is nothing like saying "i can do this myself" when watching the food network Big Grin
jack

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