Hey folks... I recently slow roasted a couple turkey breasts , that were... well to be honest, they may have been the most juicy and flavorful turkey breast I've ever had...
I started my PG500, got the upper shelf area where I intended to cook the two turkey breasts, up to right around 335F, the grill was set to get up towards 375F. I put the two thick turkey breasts on, with a Fireworks meat probe in the thickest part , of the thinnest breast. I left the breast cooking at that moderately high temperature until the turkey's internal temperature went from 50F on through 100F... this 50F increase took just 15 minutes. I then lowered the temperature of the grill to around 225F and continued to monitor the temperature of the breast , another 15 minutes had passed, before the grill's temperature had dropped down to 225F, by this time the internal temperature of that breast had hit 130F, and was continuing to rise. After another 15 minutes, with the grill temperature at 225F, the turkey had gone up to 130F ( this after a total of 45 minutes had passed ). My target temperature for this breast was 145F, and I intended to hold that temperature for at least 15 minutes, but didn't want to go much above that temperature, so I lowered the grill temperature a bit further, down to about 200F and continued to monitor progress.. after the 4th 15 minute interval, that turkey breast was at 142F ( 1 hour total cooking time at this point ). I double checked the turkey's temperature using a Thermoworks Thermopop and found that the Fireboard probe and the Thermopop both agreed that the breast had achieved 142F. Growing a little concerned that my breast's internal temperature rise had slowed too much, I increased the grill temperature to 225F again. I pulled the probe from the thinner breast and moved it to the thicker breast, the temperature of that breast was a little cooler, but not by more then 2F total.... I continued to monitor the grill temperature and now the thicker breast's temperature... 20 minutes later I pulled the thinner breast after verifying it had indeed reached 145F, I left the thicker breast on the grill... I continued to monitor the temperature of the thinner breast by leaving the Thermopop in the breast...
The thinner breasts held that 145F for another 10 minutes as it sat on my counter... at this point it had been above 141F for at least 30 minutes and right around 145F for 15 minutes... I cut open the breast, and ate some of it... then put it in a zip-lock bag then placed it in the refrigerator to cool down... I intended this to be lunch meat...
The thicker breast remained on the grill for another 15 minutes, during which time, it's internal temperature went from 141F to 147F, when I brought this breast in the house, I again left a Thermopop in the breasts and watched as the breast's internal temperature continued to rise, before eventually peaking at 150F about 8 or 9 minutes later... this breast immediately went into the refrigerator after it's resting temperature had peaked.
So... Am I crazy to do this?
I think the method I used, achieved at least 7-log lethality of Salmonella, based on information in the FSIS Salmonella Compliance Guidelines for Small and Very Small Meat and Poultry Establishments that Produce Ready-to-Eat (RTE) Products and Revised Appendix A June 2017 document.
The only doubts that I have, at all , related to the fact that I did not use any method to keep humidity up at very high levels ( 90%)... That FSIS document talks about using 90% humidity to control evaporative cooling and germs's resistance to heat in drier environments, etc... My doubts are actually mostly over ridden, by the fact that my turkey breast was far from being dry, with the only possible exception being right at the skin itself... Now, being that I started the process above 300F, it is my belief that the likely hood that that outer surface had not reached the 165F needed to kill Salmonella in under 10 seconds, not more then 30 minutes into my cooking process. Given the fact that the center of these breasts easily hit 140F within one hour of being on the grill, it seems almost unimaginable to me that the surface of these breasts would not have gotten up to 165F much before that.
So, anyway... if I were to do this again, I would probably not cut it so close on time/temperature... I would very likely use 155F as my target temperature... and I would only lower the grills temperature to right around 250F. On page 17 of that FSIS document, it clearly states that the addition of humidity is unnesesary if the oven maintails at least 250F throughout the process of achieving the time/temperature combinations in the charts... I'd go for the 155F, simply because that leaves a good margin of error... after all with 12% fat turkey ( which my breast was WAY bellow ), one needs only hit 155F for 1.3 minutes to achieve 7-log lethality of Salmonella... I mean there's no particular reason I really need to eat Turkey that's just 145F...
I will say... that 145F temperature turkey was, about the best turkey I ever had... Very moist... and the flavor and texture was excellent.
On a Facebook group I belong too... the majority of folks had some serious doubts about my sanity... some in fact ridiculed me. All to be expected I guess... But, hey I do believe my thoughts on this are sound, and at the very least, I think a lot of people would be better at cooking poultry if they realized that you don't REALLY need to take poultry up to 165F and beyond to have safe to eat poultry. But, clearly it's hard to convince people that that 165F that the USDA touts so much , is not the only way to be safe. I'm sure folks here, have a better grasp on things, so I certainly do not fear ridicule from this group.
I do intentionally bring it up here, because I do think it's important , for people who want to improved there cooking skills to understand there is more than one way to cook safely...
FYI - here is a link the the FSIS document I mentioned...
https://www.fsis.usda.gov/wps/wcm/connect/bf3f01a1-a0b7-4902-a2df-a87c73d1b633/Salmonella-Compliance-Guideline-SVSP-RTE-Appendix-A.pdf?MOD=AJPERES Some who've seen the photo of the meat remarked they would never eat poultry that was this color... I can understand that some may never be comfortable