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Turkey with backbone removed in preparation for spatchcocking Spatchcocked turkey. Poultry is often butterflied. Butterflying makes poultry easier to grill [3] or pan-broil. [4] The more specific term spatchcocking refers to a variation on butterflying that also removes the backbone and possibly the sternum, typically from a smaller bird.
How to Spatchcock Turkey Ingredients. 1 turkey (12 to 14 lbs.) 3 Tbsp. kosher salt. 2 tsp. coarsely ground pepper. 1 Tbsp. minced fresh rosemary. 1 Tbsp. minced fresh thyme. 1 Tbsp. minced fresh ...
The proof is in the poultry: the Salt and Pepper Spatchcocked Turkey and Sesame-Ginger Spatchcock Turkey are fully cooked after about one hour and 10 minutes in the oven compared to two-plus hours ...
The lawn ornament, popular in certain parts of the United States and Canada in years past, [1] was a cast replica, usually about half-scale or smaller, generally of a man dressed in jockey's clothing and holding up one hand as though taking the reins of a horse. The hand sometimes carries a metal ring (suitable for hitching a horse in the case ...
J. W. Fiske & Company of New York City was the most prominent American manufacturer of decorative cast iron and cast zinc in the second half of the nineteenth century. [1] In addition to their wide range of garden fountains, statues, urns, and cast-iron garden furniture, they provided many of the cast-zinc Civil War memorials of small towns ...
Cast-iron sculptures (27 P) U. Iron sculptures in the United Kingdom (10 P) Iron sculptures in the United States (21 P) ... Iron Man (Buddhist statue) R.
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This cast iron version, exhibited at the Great Exhibition of 1851, is now held at the Museum of Childhood, Bethnal Green, London. Bell's America on the Albert Memorial. John Bell (1811–1895) was a British sculptor, born in Bell's Row, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. His family home was Hopton Hall, Suffolk.