Anonymous wrote:Our Christmas goose turned out wonderful. It was a 12 lb young goose and we roasted it stuffed at 350 for 4 hours. The cost was just over $6 a pound.
Anonymous wrote:Alright ladies you've convinced me. Just bought a goose at wegmans today for 30% off (today's special). Goose and lobsters for New Year's Eve! Wish me luck!
Anonymous wrote:Alright ladies you've convinced me. Just bought a goose at wegmans today for 30% off (today's special). Goose and lobsters for New Year's Eve! Wish me luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done it on a gas grill?
Prepare for flare ups like non you have ever seen.
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone done it on a gas grill?
'Anonymous wrote:Agreed. Don't do it. A horrible mess of fat; ruined my new oven. Didn't taste very good either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Super easy to cook a goose. You just need a deep pan to collect all the fat. Here's what I did:
washed and dried the goose
mixed up some herbs, salt and pepper and olive oil and smeared it all over the goose
put goose in the oven at 425, cooked for 30 minutes uncovered
took goose out, put foil over it, turned heat down to 350, cooked for another hour or two (depends on size of the goose)
check periodically while cooking, and use a turkey baster to siphon out some of the fat, so it doesn't splatter all over your oven
test for doneness with an instant-read thermometer.
let it sit, covered, for 30 minutes before serving
SAVE the fat in glass jars, put in freezer for another use. Goose fat is wonderful for baking, frying, whatever. It's precious!
To the PP who asked about temperature and cooking time. This is pretty much exactly how we made our goose yesterday!
Anonymous wrote:Super easy to cook a goose. You just need a deep pan to collect all the fat. Here's what I did:
washed and dried the goose
mixed up some herbs, salt and pepper and olive oil and smeared it all over the goose
put goose in the oven at 425, cooked for 30 minutes uncovered
took goose out, put foil over it, turned heat down to 350, cooked for another hour or two (depends on size of the goose)
check periodically while cooking, and use a turkey baster to siphon out some of the fat, so it doesn't splatter all over your oven
test for doneness with an instant-read thermometer.
let it sit, covered, for 30 minutes before serving
SAVE the fat in glass jars, put in freezer for another use. Goose fat is wonderful for baking, frying, whatever. It's precious!
Anonymous wrote:Super easy to cook a goose. You just need a deep pan to collect all the fat. Here's what I did:
washed and dried the goose
mixed up some herbs, salt and pepper and olive oil and smeared it all over the goose
put goose in the oven at 425, cooked for 30 minutes uncovered
took goose out, put foil over it, turned heat down to 350, cooked for another hour or two (depends on size of the goose)
check periodically while cooking, and use a turkey baster to siphon out some of the fat, so it doesn't splatter all over your oven
test for doneness with an instant-read thermometer.
let it sit, covered, for 30 minutes before serving
SAVE the fat in glass jars, put in freezer for another use. Goose fat is wonderful for baking, frying, whatever. It's precious!