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The Herbal Dry Brine (#HerbalForeplay)
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Blog Posts Fall Sage USA

The Herbal Dry Brine (#HerbalForeplay)

October 31, 2024

The Herbal Dry Brine (#HerbalForeplay)

October 30th, 2024

#HerbalForeplay is a term I coined while learning to navigate a smoker during my time in southern Missouri. In my smoked meat learnings, I watched smoker gurus (mostly men) slapping some salt and pepper on some meat as the ‘pre-seasoning” before smoking. Sometimes, the seasoning was premixed dried herbs and salts, often preservative laden and what I consider extra salty. Very few, if any ever added any fresh seasoning, let alone herbs. If you know me, you know that essentially #herbalforplay is my style of cooking and it certainly is my go to with meats well before I started smoking and always with my birds. (You can learn more about one of my first #herbalforeplay smoked meat endeavors here.)

No doubt we can all agree a little foreplay goes a long way. #HerbalForeplay is the art of using fresh herbs to tease and awaken flavors in ingredients before they’re fully cooked. Just like traditional foreplay, it builds anticipation and depth, layering aromas and tastes that hint at the final dish. Seasoning, marinating, macerating, and, of course, brining with fresh herbs help set the stage for a more aromatic, flavor-filled food experience. It’s all about letting the herbs set the mood and coax out the essence of each ingredient before the main cooking event. Yes, your Thanksgiving turkey needs/deserves #HerbalForeplay!

My herbal salt brines were crafted to make #herbalforeplay with your bird efficient and flavorful, think of it like a super in-depth quickie if you know what I mean. And just so we are clear I am on team dry brine! My herbal salt brines are crafted for dry brining, which I believe is  superior the a messier wet brine—(which s should never go in your bathtub FYI).

I prefer herbal dry brining over wet brining because it enhances the turkey’s flavor and penetrates the meat more deeply—from bone to skin. By applying my herbal salt brine along with some added fresh herbs and orange zest directly to the turkey, dry brining allows flavors to infuse deeply, creating richly seasoned, succulent meat. The process draws out moisture, which dissolves the salt and is reabsorbed back into the turkey, naturally tenderizing it without adding excess water. This results in a juicier turkey with a satisfying, non-mushy texture. Additionally, dry brining encourages the skin to dry out in the fridge, leading to beautifully crisp, golden skin when roasted. Unlike wet brining, which requires a large container and gallons of liquid, dry brining is simple, space-saving, and mess-free—making it a favorite among chefs and home cooks alike.

HerbalForeplay not only enhances flavor and texture but also creates an aromatic and flavorful experience tailored to your palate. The salt on the skin draws moisture from the turkey, mingling with the herbs and spices, and gets reabsorbed back into the meat, resulting in flavorful, succulent, and juicy bites. The salt and air dry out the skin, allowing it to become extra crispy when roasted, while the herbs and spices embed themselves into the chicken skin via the chicken fat as it cooks.

If you’re lucky enough to snag a jar of my Herbal Salt Brine in time for Thanksgiving, you’ll need to know how to use it. And if you didn’t get one (which is likely, as I made limited quantities this fall), you can still create your own using the formula listed below. For more details on my dry brining technique plus a few recipes see  my past post on My Herbal Roots  The Dry Brine.

#HerbalForeplay Dry Brined Turkey

Brines 1 turkey up to 18 lbs

Dry brining a bird is easy. You just need to plan ahead and figure about 1½ tablespoons of herb salt per 4 pounds of turkey; so the 2.5 ounce jar of salt will accommodate a turkey up to 18 pounds. If you have a bigger turkey, add a bit more kosher salt to the mix.

You’ll need to dry brine your turkey or chicken 2 days prior to cooking which means you need to have your bird totally thawed out 2 days prior to cooking. Rinse it off and pat it dry. Make sure to get the salt mixture under the skin and leave it uncovered in the refrigerator until you cook it. The skin will get dried out which is good. This yields a crispy skin.

Ingredients

1 turkey (12-18 lbs.)
1 2.5 ounce jar of Herbal-Roots Herbal Salt Brine
1 cup fresh fall herbs of: sage, rosemary, marjoram, thyme
2 tablespoons orange zest

Directions

Two days before cooking, ensure the turkey is thawed, rinsed, and patted dry. Loosen the skin from the flesh. Mix salt, herbs, and zest. Apply some of the mixture under the skin and in the cavities, then cover the entire bird with the remaining mixture, pressing it onto the skin.

Place the bird on a tray or baking sheet and refrigerate uncovered for 36–48 hours, ideally leaving it uncovered to dry the skin for crispiness. Before cooking, let the turkey come to room temperature. Do not rinse off the brine; residual herbs will add flavor to the skin.

Blog Posts Fall Sage USA

The Herbal Dry Brine (#HerbalForeplay)

October 31, 2024
October 31, 2024
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NYC for 1 night and @prism84 

Plus secret surprise new west village place. See story
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Here is my lastest herb work, on my blog- My Herbal-Roots - I give you four new  seasonal fall recipes, same healthy herbaceous style I’m known for, plus some written words to explain how some of these things unravel from me and turn into growth and/or recipes, with a particular emphasis on Fall and the seemingly messiness of it.

How it pulls us in for the preparation becoming anew again, as  summer’s craving and striving fade, fall pulls us back to the ground — toward what’s real and present. Toward slower breaths, slower growth, slower everything, like tomatoes and eggplants stubbornly clinging to the vine as they sweeten and deepen into something transformed.

I’ve spent months tangled in a general disorientation — and as I made my way back to the garden, which seemed to mirror the disorientation inside me, I noticed how much beauty (and flavor) there is in this specific season and in particular the onset of the season.

As I get older, I feel an urgent, almost cellular pull to root more deeply — into place, into work that matters, into quiet connection. I crave fewer fireworks  and more slow, sustaining fire.

The fall garden — tangled herbs, collapsing tomatoes, the edges of things rotting so new life a can emerge — reminds me of the path fall always gets me back on: its mess, its patience, its unhurried wisdom, its acceptance of what is. 

It asks me to listen, to stay, to tend. Fall always shows me more clearly that wisdom doesn’t arrive polished, and in that re-realization I find my recipes reflecting that same brilliance.

These four recipes — Fire Roasted Caponata, Millet Corn & Basil Salad, Zucchini & Eggplant Bolognese, and Fresh Fig Rosemary Butter Cookies — were born from this pause between what is and what will be, in my new Healdsburg garden. They are the product and beauty of disorientation!

Link in story or 
www.MyHerbal-Roots.com
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Fresh Fig, Rosemary Brown Butter Cookies… my new #geniusrecipe for @myherbalroots 

#wholegrain 💃

#whatdoidowithallthesefigs
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I could have picked about 8,000 more ripe figs - but I can only do so much - today I’m finally creating the recipe of my fig dreams that’s been swirling around in my head for a few weeks. If it unravels that way it’s supposed to, I’ll post on @myherbalroots blog.
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Today’s version of @gwynethpaltrow s boyfriend breakfast but for myself…

Grated zuchinni and torpedo onion scramble with @mt.eitan.cheese Tamar cheese, @mediumfarm wild arugula and my gardens radishes, mint and dill. Slice of @quailandcondor siciliano ….

Pinch of my spring collections -  Spring Washed Persian Dill Salt

New herbal salt collection for fall will come out in early November
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Lemon verbena season! My favorite. Blend blackberries with lemon verbena and lemons and a little honey for a lovely herbal elixir!
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Mango (@crespoorganic ) ice, honey, lime and fresh lemon verbena - blended into an icy summer delight- the best in a super hot day.
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Let this serve as 2 reminders/facts 

1. Put fresh mint in your salads. 
2. Sapa is the loveliest  cat ever.
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No matter what this new world order brings- dumb AI recipes and food ideas. Influencers that could care less about food, more processed goods (just somewhat healthier and smarter than the last wave of manufactured foods - but not really. ) business’s more concerned with scale than ethics, environmental destruction et and doing food for communities- or you know saying you’ll do good things later, once you get rich from taking. 

I’ll (@picoypero ) be here always under the pretense of learning and sharing not just how to cook but how to match what’s grown with what to eat. For me this still the healthiest way to exist if you’re looking at the planet and people as one.  Obviously I’m going to continue to shout about how healthy and flavorful herbs are and how their use allows for less—sugars, fats, salts, processed foods etc- things we generally use in excess. 

Whatever you do, use more herbs. I will continue to be here teaching people how easy they are to use, until the end, I will. 

Here is today’s lesson - a reminder of how fresh fruit in season and herbs create drinks that are better than what you can buy. 

This one inspired by my @frontporchfarmer #blackberries I bought yesterday and smashed some on the way home. 

Blackberry Lemon Verbena Peaceful Spirit Sparkling Ice Tea

5 blackberries
2 tablespoons raw honey 
Juice of one lemon
Handful of lemon verbena leaves 
2 peaceful spirit tea bags (@flyingbirdbotanicals )
4 cups hot water
 Sparkling water 

Blend blackberries, verbena, honey, lemon juice and a little hot water. Pour into a pitcher. Add tea bags and hot water. Steep and allow to cool. Strain. Pour half  full into glass of ice top with sparkling water. 

This concept can be used however you want. Strawberry basil lemon ginger tea, peach bergamot (bee balm) bergamot tea - cherry lime white tea etc etc etc etc etc etc
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One of my favorite recipes for summer cherry tomatoes. Romano Bean, Cherry Tomato Feta Salad. This recipe dates back to my early 20’s in Eugene, OR

It’s so easy slice cherry tomatoes season with salt and torn basil leaves add cooked green beans. Cover let cool completely-dress with a little olive oil and feta. (@mt.eitan.cheese in this case and the last of my Andy 😭

The salmon is local, pan fried and the stuff on top I’m pretty sure is something I picked up from @ottolenghi - Bridget jones salsa??

It’s celery, capers, pine nuts, green olives, parsley currants sauted up into magic.
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You can put herbs in EVERYTHING!

Fresh fruit and herb “jam” is how I sweeten and flavor my granola!
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Believe it or not, these pretty herbs are going into a granola! (Lemon verbena, anise hyssop and French lavender)

If you haven’t had one of my herbal flavored fresh fruit granolas, you are missing out. Today’s is extra heart healthy. 

The main sweetener is the fresh fruit and some maple syrup. The herbs add complexity that alleviates some need for sweetness (replaces sweet taste with interesting) tahini is mixed in with a saucy fruit jam concoction/maple mixture and that’s mixed with rolled oats, quinoa, amaranth, black and white sesame seeds, flax and spices like cinnamon, vanilla powder, mace, malab and cardamom. Freeze dried blueberries and dried currants with almonds and hazelnuts!

When I made the strawberry maple mixture I also added cardamom, vanilla and almond extracts as well as the fresh herbs. 

The whole house smells like heaven.
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Remember Tang?

A random thought about it led me here- to my marigold sugar - limeade 

It’s so good - the floral vegetal notes from the marigold flavor is really nice. And it has a tang-esque quality to it that is fun. 

@mediumfarm giant marigolds that I dried 
@covillibrandorganics limes that were gifted to me by the head honchos themselves. 😀
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Local ocean trout crudo….

Marigold Calabrian Chili Oil 
Lemony Pesto 
Vietnamese Coriander 
Coriander Flowers 
Persian Dill Salt (Spring 2025  @myherbalroots )
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Dried Marigold Calabrian Chili Oil
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Dried marigold petals. 

Fresh marigold petals can be too pungent for any culinary use beyond minor accent flavor, in my opinion, which is why I like to use them in my herb salts. 

But if you dry them- (which is what happens in my salts) some magic happens- the flavor morphs into an extremely pleasant flavor that has much greater use and versatility. They are so easy to sun dry- these sat outside on a table for a week!

Earthy, floral, slightly citrusy- a little vegetal - as if a carrot and an orange combined—-Peppery and slightly (pleasantly) bitter. 

Add them during sauté phases in cooking  to add flavor and color-  use in baking and syrups- they create lovely deep golden color when used plus the lovely flavor. Lovely in frittatas. 

I’m going to use these in a Calabrian and marigold chili oil for a Crudo as well as a yogurt marinade for chicken. 

I’m working on expanding my herbal salt line to offer  seasonal dried herbs, herb seasonings and dried herb petals and mixes….. 

You’ll be happy! Lots of changes all encircling  my own passions and goals - a nice change of tides.
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