Open-Faced Hot Turkey Sandwiches

Open-Faced Hot Turkey Sandwiches
Johnny Miller for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Hilary Robertson.
Total Time
1 hour 15 minutes
Rating
4(122)
Comments
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Sometimes life requires an open-faced turkey sandwich with gravy and mashed potatoes, alongside a glop of cranberry sauce. It is neither a Thanksgiving meal nor a Christmas one, but simply a low-fi American reminder of diners and TV dinners and blankets and comfort itself: soft meat and rich, salty gravy over tight-crumbed bread, with buttery mash and a tang of cranberry. My recipe calls for roasting buttered turkey thighs in the oven while the potatoes were cooking, skin-side down to crisp the skin and allow the fat to render into the pan, creating sticky bits of fond you’ll use to build a base for gravy. Pile the sliced meat onto lightly toasted bread, drench it with gravy and serve alongside the potatoes and peas. Adding canned cranberry sauce, in this application, is no sin.

Featured in: In Defense of a Diner Classic: the Open-Faced Hot Turkey Sandwich

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Ingredients

Yield:2 servings
  • 2turkey thighs
  • 4tablespoons unsalted butter
  • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
  • 1tablespoon chopped fresh sage
  • 1tablespoon lemon zest
  • 1cup dry white wine
  • 2 to 3cups turkey or chicken stock
  • 4tablespoons instant flour, or all-purpose flour
  • 2tablespoons cream, milk or half-and-half
  • 2slices bread of your choosing, traditionally white sandwich bread
  • Buttered peas, mashed potatoes and cranberry sauce, for serving
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Remove turkey and butter from the refrigerator an hour or so before cooking, so that they are approaching room temperature when the turkey goes into the oven.

  2. Step 2

    Heat oven to 400. Rub turkey with butter, using your fingers to slide butter under the skin. Season the turkey with salt, pepper, sage and lemon zest.

  3. Step 3

    Place turkey thighs, skin-side down, into a cast-iron skillet or medium-size oven-safe gratin pan, and roast in the oven for 30 minutes. Turn turkey thighs over, add the wine to the pan or skillet and continue roasting for another 30 minutes or so, basting occasionally, until the turkey is cooked through, golden and crisp, and an instant-read thermometer inserted in the turkey’s thickest part reads in the neighborhood of 165 degrees. Remove turkey thighs from the pan, and allow to rest on a cutting board while you make the gravy.

  4. Step 4

    Heat the stock in a small pot. Drain off all but four tablespoons of the fat in the pan or gratin dish. Place pan or dish over low heat on the stove, and whisk the flour into it to make a roux. Stir the roux for 3 to 4 minutes, and then slowly start to add the stock to it, whisking as you do, until the mixture is smooth. Cook, continuing to stir, until the gravy has thickened, approximately 8 to 10 minutes. Add the cream, milk or half-and-half, stir and allow the gravy to thicken again, 2 to 3 minutes more. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

  5. Step 5

    To make the sandwiches, carve meat and skin from the turkey thighs, and assemble two separate piles. Toast the bread, and lay one slice on each plate. Put a pile of the meat on each piece of toast, spreading it across the surface of the bread. Absolutely drench each sandwich with the gravy, and serve alongside buttered peas, mashed potatoes and a dollop of cranberry sauce. For this application, canned cranberry sauce is, by etiquette, required.

Ratings

4 out of 5
122 user ratings
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Comments

Sam Sifton takes a real old-hat term like "open-faced" and makes it new again. Too many people bad-mouth American cooking, but you just have to do it right with good ingredients and balance - like Mr. Sifton. I might have to eschew the bread if I go with the mashed potatoes because of the carbs. Nonetheless, this is a grand idea. I must take exception to the canned cranberry sauce imperative. If fresh are available, one can make them easy with spices and liquor family favorites for zing.

I'm surprised this overlooks the obvious: the more the bread can approximate stuffing, the better... dash of sage & thyme, fine chop celery and onion for a garnish, etc... And of course, here in Tennessee we serve on cornbread. (As in cornbread dressing: skillet savory cornbread, NO SUGAR ADDED EVER.)

Don't nitpick the details, just do it. Dark or white meat? Either. Want stuffing? Knock yourself out, but this turkey and gravy over whatever toasted bread you have is great. (Brioche?) Cranberry sauce from a can? Fine, too. Does your liquid post-cooking seem like too much? It's okay. If you have good stock you will still have gravy that you want to drink from a glass. So relax. This is a great way to have the best of a turkey dinner w/o cooking a whole turkey. Plus, you've opened the wine so...

Just now seeing this, thanks to Sam's 10th Anniversary notes! Reminds me so much of when my mom took me shopping "downtown" and we would stop at Woolworth's for lunch. My go-to was ALWAYS their hot turkey sandwich - white bread, gravy, mashed pot's AND stuffing, and of course the infamous canned cranberry sauce (don't think anyone made their own in the 50's - lol). Thank you for the fabulous memories, and the inspiration to immediately go find turkey thighs!!

This is perfect as written and does indeed remind me of joyous tv dinner memories.

Just great! Made with supermarket thighs and followed recipe exactly with two exceptions. Firstly, took Melissa Clark’s suggestion to generously salt and pepper thighs and let them rest in refrigerator uncovered for as many hours as you can to find ensure crisp skin. When the thighs were done, I realized I had forgotten to add the wine so I removed them from the pan, added the wine and basically deglazed the pan, then continued cooking and reducing the liquid till I had just 4 Tbsp for gravy.

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