How I took an organic/hormone-free, family-farm-raised turkey
sold at 99 cents a pound ($9 to $11) * and turned it into meals for a week and beyond.
First, I roasted the turkey. I saved the juices and made gravy. (I can use the gravy for casseroles or future ground turkey made into turkey Salisbury steaks.)
Then I broke down the bird into legs, wings, thighs, and breasts. I further de-boned the meat and saved.
I then threw the carcass. bones, and roasted neck with onions, garlic, parsley, one plum tomato, one green pepper, salt & pepper into a stock pot and made 3 to 4 quarts of stock.
I had about 8 cups of meat. I kept the breast sections intact for sandwiches or a couple of slices in the double-boiler with roasted Brussel sprouts and beets. The thighs and the legs are cubed and saved for casseroles.
I'm uncertain but I kind of believe I'm down to 50 cents or less per portion of the original turkey.
* And BTW, this turkey originally sold at T-day/Xmas for $4.99 a pound. I saved $40 just by buying it off season.

magicarpet
(18,029 posts).... saving a boat load of money in the average kitchen.
That is how you do it.
no_hypocrisy
(51,157 posts)Example: our store sells filet mignon steaks. Weight is less than a pound at $27.99. And it's gone once you eat it. No bones, no fat, nothing. That's no investment. It's frivolity.
Clouds Passing
(4,354 posts)Roasted chicken dinner with rice and broccoli
Chicken broth
Chicken salad
Chicken soup
Diamond_Dog
(36,595 posts)We demolished one already (4 men can do that, Lol). I did make gravy and the leftovers were used for hot turkey sandwiches.