Jokes1 min ago
Easter Sunday
We have visitors from overseas visiting and I'd like to do a roast turkey dinner on Easter Sunday, with all the trimmings, much like a Christmas dinner. I'm finding it difficult to find a whole turkey though so may have to find an alternative.
What do you do, if you make an Easter Sunday roast?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Vagus. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would normally do a leg of lamb.
You may find whole turkeys in the frozen section of supermarkets. If you have a butcher local to you, you could go for a cockerel. Also do look online.
I swear by our local butcher's free range chickens. I have often done a couple of those when I need a large bird roast.
Lamb and a decent chicken are the two alternatives I've considered.
I hesitate about lamb simply because I can't remember the last time I cooked a whole leg and don't feel confident I wouldn't mess it up 🙄
Dont think I've ever seen a cockerel for sale, must go and ask our local family butcher, he seems to stock most things. 🐔🐓
If you slow cook a leg in the oven (for anything up to around 7 hours) it is melt in the mouth tender and it needs very little chef involvement. If you have an Instant Pot or a Ninja you can do it in 90 mins (although most IPs or Ninjas will not take a whole leg, but I do half a leg in mine).
How many are you catering for? I had a 9lb cockerel on Christmas Day for 7 of us and I was sick of cockerel by 28th December.
Only four of us probably Barmaid, maybe six, depending.
I had no idea about capons/cockerels, and that capons are illegal to produce in this country, you certainly live and learn.
One of our visitors is very keen to have pigs in blankets, and multiple stuffings, so I think I'm going to go with either cockerel or a couple of decent chickens, I don't think lamb would go with the accompaniments.
Thanks people, you've focussed my choice 👍🙂