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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Cornish Hens, Stuffed Two Ways...

Well, over the weekend, Hope and I were on the same wavelength for a Sunday dinner idea: smoked and stuffed Cornish hens.  I was thinking sort of a Greek style, rice stuffing.  She wanted home style, Thanksgiving stuffing, so we did both.

I looked for fresh Cornish hens, but I could not find them in my travels.  So, I settled for your standard 22 oz frozen hen from Tyson.

First, I made my standard poultry brine...


BOS's Chicken Brine:

Ingredients:
1 gallon Water
¾ cup Kosher Salt
¾ cup Brown Sugar
2 Tbsp Granulated Garlic
2 Tbsp Chili Powder
¼ cup Orange Juice
⅛ cup Worcestershire Sauce

... and put the hens in the pool for a 7 hour swim.  Make sure to fill the body cavity with brine so they sink and not float...


Next, the stuffing.  For the rice stuffing, I did the following:

Made one box of Uncle Ben's Wild Rice Blend.
Tore up a handful of fresh spinach leaves into quarters.
Added about 2 Tbsp of crumbled feta cheese.
Added 2 heaping soup spoons worth of wild rice mixture, then mixed well.



For the bread stuffing, Hope made a batch of her mothers homemade Thanksgiving bread stuffing.  You could use the same or, if you do not have a homemade recipe, boxed instant stuffing will work as well...


Next, we stuffed the hens.  Do not pack the stuffing into the hen tightly as the stuffing will not cook in the time that it will take the bird to cook...


Once stuffed, the hens get a coating of suntan lotion (olive oil) and healthy grind of sea salt and fresh black pepper...


The smoker was already pre-heated to 350 F.  So, I added four chunks of pecan into the ash pan.  Once I had nice blue smoke rolling out of the chimney, I put the hens on the third rack down on a four rack Stumps Baby.  Here they are after 30 minutes...


After 50 minutes total, the hens had reached 165 F internal.  So, time to pull...


Nice golden brown skin.  Just what we like.

For a side, I caramelized some sweet onion and garlic.  Then, added a bag of fresh spinach and covered with the lid.  Stir the spinach every 5 minutes or so while on low heat until cooked down...


A surely tasty meal for sure...


The Cornish hen had a nice nutty taste from the pecan.  Juicy and moist.  Not dried out at all.  The meat was so good, Hope even ate the dark meat!  But, the hen was a bit on the salty side.  Next time, I will reduce the time the hens have in the brine down to 4-5 hours down from the 7 hours in this instance.  The rice stuffing was nice and creamy due to the added feta with a slight, spinach taste.  A perfect accompaniment to this hen for sure.  We will definitely be making this again in the future.

Thanks for stopping by...

Bill

P.S.  Special thanks go to Chilebrown over at Mad Meat Genius for saying that you can smoke a stuffed bird...

2 comments:

  1. Those stuffed birds look fantastic. We are definitely brine fans. We do smoke stuffed turkeys on our Weber grill. If you do stuff it, it is important to make sure the stuffing is up to temp just as you pulled yours at 165.We are picking up our prime rib for Christmas Saturday.

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    1. They were just as good as they look. We pick up our rib roast on Monday. Can't wait for that...

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