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How to Smoke Turkey Legs, Disney Style

Couple enjoying a smoked turkey leg

You’ll feel like the king of the court, wielding your giant smoked turkey leg like a scepter. 

Curing meats such as turkey, bacon, ham, or pastrami is fun and the results are often better than storebought. But curing is very different from any other recipe because you are using a preservative, sodium nitrite. You must read and thoroughly understand my article on the Science Of Curing Meats before attempting to cure meat or before you ask any questions.

Visit any of the Disney parks and you will see folks stumbling around delirious with huge smiles and monster turkey legs (actually they are drumsticks, since technically legs include the thigh). These pterodactyl-sized drums have spawned fan pages, scores of videos on YouTube, and rumors (no they are not emu legs). They have become so popular that they were featured on page one of the New York Times once. They are not hard to make at home once you crack the secret recipe, and I have.

How Disney makes their turkey legs

Anyone can simply smoke turkey legs and they are wonderful, BUT, the turkey legs served on Disney properties are cured and this is a special process that produces a special taste. Disney legs are injected with a curing solution with a special curing salt that gives it a pink color. Then it is smoked. No wonder most folks say it tastes like ham. That’s how they make wet cured ham. And that’s how they sell more drinks!

Curing is very different from any other recipe because it uses a preservative, sodium nitrite. You must read and thoroughly understand my article on the Science Of Curing Meats before attempting to cure meat or before you ask any questions. That said, do not use the Curing Calculator on this recipe. It doesn’t work for such a small piece of meat with a bone. And don’t use this recipe for turkey breasts or whole turkeys. If you wish to do them you must use the curing calculator on the Science Of Curing Meats  page.

two people enjoying turkey legs

For reference, Disney’s supplier, Uncle John’s Pride, uses Tom turkeys, male birds that can grow up to 50 pounds (22.7 k), with legs that run about 1 1/2 pounds (680.4 g). Most legs I have seen in stores are closer to 1 pound (453.6 g) each. This recipe brines/cures in a zipper bag for a few days so you don’t have to inject and so you can make a small quantity. You just need to move the legs around in the bag periodically to make sure the cure is in contact with all parts of the meat.

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disney turkey legs.

Smoked Disney-style Turkey Legs Recipe

4.14 from 330 votes
Rate this Recipe
There's no need to travel to Disney (or pay the extraordinarily high ticket prices to get inside) for your very own giant smoked turkey leg thanks to this recipe and tutorial.
But please note, this recipe is only for turkey legs not other cuts.
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour 30 minutes
Curing time 1 day
Servings: 1 drumstick
Course: Dinner, Lunch, Main Course
Cuisine: American
Difficulty: Moderate

Ingredients
 
 

Method
 

  1. Cure. Dissolve the salt, Prague powder #1, and the sugar in the water and then pour it in a 1 gallon (3.8 l) zipper bag. Add the meat and refrigerate in the cure for about 24 hours, and not much longer or it can get too salty. While they are curing, move them them around a few times to make sure all parts are covered with the liquid.
  2. Rinse. Remove the meat from the cure, rinse it so the exterior will not be too salty, and pat the skin dry with a paper towel. You can take them out of the cure and hold them in the fridge uncooked for a day or two until you're ready to smoke them, but I wouldn't push beyond that.
  3. Fire up. Set up the grill for 2-zone smoking or fire up your smoker. Shoot for 325°F (162.8°C) on the indirect side.
  4. Smoke. Smoke the turkey leg for about 1 hour until the thick part of the meat reaches at least 160°F (71.1°C).
  5. Serve. Serve the smoked turkey leg immediately.

Notes

About the salt. Remember, kosher salt is half the concentration of table salt so if you use table salt, use half as much. Click here to read more about salt and how it works.

Tried this recipe?

Let us know how it was!
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Published On: February 1, 2015
Last Modified On: February 1, 2015

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