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Event Details

Time: November 22, 2009 from 9am to 5pm
Location: Yestermorrow Design/Build School
Street: 189 VT Rte 100
City/Town: Warren, VT 05674
Website or Map: http://www.yestermorrow.org
Phone: 802-496-5545
Event Type: workshop
Organized By: Kate Stephenson
Latest Activity: Oct 22

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Event Description

This day-long workshop at Yestermorrow Design/Build School covers wind power on a macro scale in the morning and moves to residential and community scale applications in the afternoon. The morning section will include; wind power basics, world resources, technology types, economics, policy, transmission, regulation, portfolio discussion and regional siting, with a focus on utility scale wind projects. The afternoon session builds on this by covering what to look for in a site, assessing resources, economics, permitting, incentives, off-grid applications, net metering, and interconnection. This course will provide a solid platform with which to pursue a residential or community wind project, and students will leave with a broad understanding, and ability to converse comfortably in wind energy topics. All Levels. Tuition $150. Scholarships and discounts available.

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Staff Recipes: Roasted Heritage Breed Turkey


KariEven though my Thanksgiving will be a party of two, I like to prepare for the possibility of ten! When I heard Wendy was getting a Lilac turkey from Wells Tavern Farm in Shelburne, Massachusetts I jumped on board for a bird.

Wells Tavern has raised about 30 of their turkeys for fresh Thanksgiving birds. They are selling heritage breed birds that have had access to pasture throughout the spring and summer, eating natural Vermont grain and scratch feeds – with no antibiotics or added hormones. The turkeys are kept in large fenced pastures, which allows them to naturally scratch and forage, and provides them with protection from predators.

Wendy has been talking about her delicious turkey for a while now, and I am excited to see if I can find success with my first attempt at making Thanksgiving dinner.

Here is her recipe from last year:

Whether fresh or frozen, bring the bird to room temperature before cooking.

Cover the breast with a piece of brown paper cut from a shopping bag, rub it with cooking oil, and tie it in place with cotton string. Alternatively, soak a piece of cotton cloth in unsalted oil, such as corn oil. Remove the covering about 30 minutes before the turkey is done so the breast will brown.

Roast heritage turkeys in a hot oven pre-heated to 425F-450F and cook until an internal thigh temperature of 140F-150F is reached. Don't let the tip of the thermometer touch the bone. (Note: The USDA recommends turkeys be cooked to 160F-180F, but these temperature will dry out a heritage turkey. Heritage birds are much more free of disease and bacteria, unlike commercially-raised birds, and do not need extreme temperatures to make them safe for consumption).

Truly the thought of cooking at such a high heat terrified me but it worked out great. We had a 17lb turkey that cooked in 1 1/2 hours.

Cook any stuffing first and put inside the heritage turkey before roasting. Due to the reduced cooking time, stuffing won't become fully cooked. Alternatively, try adding a quartered orange, apple and/or pear inside the cavity instead of stuffing.

Let the roasted bird rest 10-15 minutes before carving.

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