The Cranky Consumer: Talking Turkey: A Test Of Toll-Free
Hotlines
The Basting Backlash
By Katy McLaughlin, The Wall Street Journal, 1242 words
Nov 24, 2004
Document Text
Copyright (c) 2004, Dow Jones & Company Inc. Reproduced with permission
of copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited
without permission.
THANKSGIVING CAN BRING plenty of tensions -- from annoying relatives, to
bone-dry slabs of breast meat. But while you're on your own with the
in-laws, toll-free help is available for your turkey.
A flock of turkey companies provide phone therapy for anxious roasters
seeking advice before Thanksgiving or emergency help on the day itself. The
granddaddy of helplines, Butterball, has been at it for nearly a quarter
century, but now there are rivals including Perdue Farms, Empire Kosher
Poultry and Jennie-O Turkey Store. During recent years, even niche players
like Lobel's of New York, a high-end butcher shop, and Mary's Turkeys in
Fresno, Calif., a supplier of "heritage" rare-breed birds, have started help
lines.
We tested eight lines, asking detailed questions about food safety (for
instance, can you half-cook your turkey the day before -- a big no-no), and
about a variety of traditional and newfangled cooking techniques.
Some were more helpful than others. Rather inconveniently, Empire Kosher
Poultry's consumer hotline, (800) 367-4734, closes at noon today, Eastern
time, and is shut on Thanksgiving. The woman who answered the phone at
Jennie-O, a Hormel Foods unit, had to look up almost every question we
asked, and repeatedly tried to pitch us a new product, the "Oven Ready" bird
that requires no preparation.
The biggest surprise: Nearly everyone advised against frequent basting, a
revered but apparently wrongheaded Thanksgiving staple. Current orthodoxy
calls instead for rubbing the bird with butter or oil before roasting, then
keeping the oven door shut. Opening the oven to baste lets hot air out of
the oven, which means it takes longer to cook and causes the meat to dry
out, most of the hotlines said.
Turkey processors, of course, see the hotlines as a marketing tool. While
chicken sales have taken off, turkey consumption has been flat for five
years, remaining stubbornly at about 17 pounds per capita -- with nearly a
third of that devoured during the holidays, according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. Having a chat with customers lets companies extol the
virtues of their brands, as well as tell consumers about new products and
direct them to their Web sites, which are packed with ideas on how to enjoy
turkey for breakfast (think turkey sausage and creamed turkey on English
muffins), lunch and dinner.
The hotlines are especially useful with the emergence of trendy, somewhat
complicated techniques like brining -- soaking the turkey in salt water --
and deep frying. In addition, raising the stakes when cooking goes afoul,
consumers are increasingly opting for more expensive free-range and organic
birds, as well as heritage breeds (which can be trickier to cook because
they have less breast meat).
Our most impressive experience came from the adviser at Butterball, which
is a brand of ConAgra Foods. She explained the science behind brining (the
salt causes the muscle cells to absorb water) and also authoritatively
discussed the secret to crispy skin and moist breast meat. A key point:
Drape a piece of aluminum foil across the breast late in the game to keep it
from drying out.
We asked each hotline if we could partially cook the bird the day before,
and finish cooking the next day. While all the helplines gave the right
answer (which is "no," because bacteria can breed), the Butterball adviser
was one of only two to explain in detail an alternative approach. She
suggested we fully cook the bird the day before, carve it, and then reheat
the slices after sprinkling them with chicken stock. The other to suggest
this method was the Foster Farms hotline, (800) 255-7227.
Mary's Turkeys gets top marks for the personal touch: Mary herself
answered the phone. The downside to the family-style operation (Mary's
husband and three sons will be joining her on the phone bank on
Thanksgiving) was that we left a message one day and never got a call back,
and Mary sounded very busy once we finally got her on the phone.
We were also hoping for a comforting bedside manner -- key when your
turkey goes up in flames as hungry relatives are banging their forks and
knives. But while the service from Foster Farms and Perdue Farms was
competent, both our advisers were perfunctory: We felt the answers sounded
canned, and that the staff seemed eager to get us off the phone.
Foster Farms also made a mistake by telling us that yes, we could brine
our turkey in a trash bag. Later, when we called the company to comment on
our experience, a representative said that's incorrect, because all food
should be prepared in materials made specifically for food preparation. (The
company is reviewing food-safety procedures with the phone staff, a
spokeswoman says.)
Some of the hotlines were of limited use. Shady Brook Farms (888)
723-4468 and Honeysuckle White (800) 810-6325, both brands of Cargill Inc.,
don't have live hotlines; instead, they both offer prerecorded thawing and
cooking tips.
We expected gold-plated service from Lobel's of New York, which sells
expensive gobblers -- free-range, organic turkeys cost about $5 a pound, and
smoked turkeys roughly $6 a pound. But on two separate days, we filled out
forms on the Web site, lobels.com, requesting that a customer-service
representative call us, and we never got a call back. The company says two
of its five phone-bank workers abruptly quit the week we conducted our test.
Service is now back to normal, the company says.
---
Andrea Petersen contributed to this article.
---
Copyright (c) 2004, Dow Jones & Company Inc. Reproduced with permission
of copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited
without permission.
THANKSGIVING CAN BRING plenty of tensions -- from annoying relatives, to
bone-dry slabs of breast meat. But while you're on your own with the
in-laws, toll-free help is available for your turkey.
A flock of turkey companies provide phone therapy for anxious roasters
seeking advice before Thanksgiving or emergency help on the day itself. The
granddaddy of helplines, Butterball, has been at it for nearly a quarter
century, but now there are rivals including Perdue Farms, Empire Kosher
Poultry and Jennie-O Turkey Store. During recent years, even niche players
like Lobel's of New York, a high-end butcher shop, and Mary's Turkeys in
Fresno, Calif., a supplier of "heritage" rare-breed birds, have started help
lines.
We tested eight lines, asking detailed questions about food safety (for
instance, can you half-cook your turkey the day before -- a big no-no), and
about a variety of traditional and newfangled cooking techniques.
Some were more helpful than others. Rather inconveniently, Empire Kosher
Poultry's consumer hotline, (800) 367-4734, closes at noon today, Eastern
time, and is shut on Thanksgiving. The woman who answered the phone at
Jennie-O, a Hormel Foods unit, had to look up almost every question we
asked, and repeatedly tried to pitch us a new product, the "Oven Ready" bird
that requires no preparation.
The biggest surprise: Nearly everyone advised against frequent basting, a
revered but apparently wrongheaded Thanksgiving staple. Current orthodoxy
calls instead for rubbing the bird with butter or oil before roasting, then
keeping the oven door shut. Opening the oven to baste lets hot air out of
the oven, which means it takes longer to cook and causes the meat to dry
out, most of the hotlines said.
Turkey processors, of course, see the hotlines as a marketing tool. While
chicken sales have taken off, turkey consumption has been flat for five
years, remaining stubbornly at about 17 pounds per capita -- with nearly a
third of that devoured during the holidays, according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture. Having a chat with customers lets companies extol the
virtues of their brands, as well as tell consumers about new products and
direct them to their Web sites, which are packed with ideas on how to enjoy
turkey for breakfast (think turkey sausage and creamed turkey on English
muffins), lunch and dinner.
The hotlines are especially useful with the emergence of trendy, somewhat
complicated techniques like brining -- soaking the turkey in salt water --
and deep frying. In addition, raising the stakes when cooking goes afoul,
consumers are increasingly opting for more expensive free-range and organic
birds, as well as heritage breeds (which can be trickier to cook because
they have less breast meat).
Our most impressive experience came from the adviser at Butterball, which
is a brand of ConAgra Foods. She explained the science behind brining (the
salt causes the muscle cells to absorb water) and also authoritatively
discussed the secret to crispy skin and moist breast meat. A key point:
Drape a piece of aluminum foil across the breast late in the game to keep it
from drying out.
We asked each hotline if we could partially cook the bird the day before,
and finish cooking the next day. While all the helplines gave the right
answer (which is "no," because bacteria can breed), the Butterball adviser
was one of only two to explain in detail an alternative approach. She
suggested we fully cook the bird the day before, carve it, and then reheat
the slices after sprinkling them with chicken stock. The other to suggest
this method was the Foster Farms hotline, (800) 255-7227.
Mary's Turkeys gets top marks for the personal touch: Mary herself
answered the phone. The downside to the family-style operation (Mary's
husband and three sons will be joining her on the phone bank on
Thanksgiving) was that we left a message one day and never got a call back,
and Mary sounded very busy once we finally got her on the phone.
We were also hoping for a comforting bedside manner -- key when your
turkey goes up in flames as hungry relatives are banging their forks and
knives. But while the service from Foster Farms and Perdue Farms was
competent, both our advisers were perfunctory: We felt the answers sounded
canned, and that the staff seemed eager to get us off the phone.
Foster Farms also made a mistake by telling us that yes, we could brine
our turkey in a trash bag. Later, when we called the company to comment on
our experience, a representative said that's incorrect, because all food
should be prepared in materials made specifically for food preparation. (The
company is reviewing food-safety procedures with the phone staff, a
spokeswoman says.)
Some of the hotlines were of limited use. Shady Brook Farms (888)
723-4468 and Honeysuckle White (800) 810-6325, both brands of Cargill Inc.,
don't have live hotlines; instead, they both offer prerecorded thawing and
cooking tips.
We expected gold-plated service from Lobel's of New York, which sells
expensive gobblers -- free-range, organic turkeys cost about $5 a pound, and
smoked turkeys roughly $6 a pound. But on two separate days, we filled out
forms on the Web site, lobels.com, requesting that a customer-service
representative call us, and we never got a call back. The company says two
of its five phone-bank workers abruptly quit the week we conducted our test.
Service is now back to normal, the company says.
---
Andrea Petersen contributed to this article.
---
HOTLINE: Butterball (800) 288-8372 butterball.com THANKSGIVING HOURS: 7
a.m. to 7 p.m. Eastern time BEST TIP: To cook a bird in advance: Roast and
carve it the day before,
refrigerate, then reheat the slices sprinkled with chicken stock. GAFFE:
Said it's OK to "brine" it in a trash bag. (USDA says only food- grade bags
should be used in food preparation.)
COMMENT: Answered our queries in great detail -- even explaining how
brining (soaking in salt water) works at the cellular level.
HOTLINE: Jennie-O Turkey Store (800) 887-5397 jennie-o.com THANKSGIVING
HOURS: 24 hours a day BEST TIP: When we showed interest in in-the-bag
cooking, she raved about a
new Jennie-O freezer-to-oven, in-the-bag turkey called "Oven Ready."
GAFFE: Suggested roasting the bird breast-down, then flipping it when
half-done. But it's tricky to flip a big, hot bird. COMMENT: Had to put us
on hold to look up many answers. She said much of
her advice came from her own recipes, which contradicted company advice.
HOTLINE: Perdue Farms (800) 473-7383 perdue.com THANKSGIVING HOURS: 7
a.m. to 3 p.m. Eastern BEST TIP: Took down our address to mail a free
booklet with recipe ideas,
which arrived a week later. GAFFE: Encouraged frequent basting,
contradicting other experts who say too much is bad because the oven
temperature drops each time the door is opened.
COMMENT: Answered most of our questions, but had no suggestions for how
we
could prepare our bird the day before and still serve it hot.
HOTLINE: Mary's Turkeys (888) 666-8244 marysturkeys.com THANKSGIVING
HOURS: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Eastern BEST TIP: Told us that because heritage
turkeys have smaller breasts than conventional birds, they cook faster.
GAFFE: We left a message and never got a call back. When we called the next
day, Mary answered, but she tried to end our call quickly because she was
busy. COMMENT: Mary says she's a tiny operation and consumers need to keep
calling until they reach a live person, or check the Web site.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction
or distribution is prohibited without permission. |