1. Pull apart any leftover turkey meat with your hands, really working the bones to find the remaining secret sweet meat.
2. Chop an onion, carrots and celery Plus another carrot - in a fine dice - for garnishing the nearly finished soup later on.
3. Then cook the onion, carrot and celery in olive oil over moderately high heat, stirring for 7 to 10 minutes or until vegetables are golden.
4. Add dry white wine and bring to a simmer
5. Add the turkey carcass, chicken stock, water, bay leaf and peppercorns
6. Make a bouquet garnish by tying fresh parsley and thyme in a little bundle – so that you can remove it easily later on.
7. Bring everything to a boil.
8. Then lower to a simmer and cook for about and hour.
9. Remove large pieces of carcass and strain the soup back into a skillet
10. Heat over a medium heat.
11. Add the turkey and diced carrots and season with salt and pepper
12. Simmer the soup and skim any froth or fat as it rises to the surface
This recipe has been added to the following public cookbooks:
pjskitchen,
billys notable cooking,
main meals in a hurry,
Bernard's Book For Cooks
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| Rating | Submitted by | Comment Summary |
|---|---|---|
| ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ | VirginiaMyhouse
01/05/09 09:06 AM | Turkey SoupYes, the ingredients call for flour but directions do not. I am as confused as you re: this item. Could it be used for a thickening agent or was it an error on the part of the submission. It is not my recipe. |
| ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ | AmazngGrnEyes
01/03/08 09:35 AM | What about the flour?Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't the ingredients call for flour? |
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Here's an easy, reliable way to ensure a moist and flavorful turkey...simply baste the turkey with chicken stock during roasting. When the turkey is done, use a bit more stock to make a quick and tasty gravy.
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