The Turkey Club Shawarma Sandwich With Pork Belly and Enhanced Mayo Recipe

This left-field riff on the classic may tempt you to join a new, exciting club that lauds flavor, eschews toothpicks, and shuns that superfluous slice of bread.

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Ideas in Food
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Aki Kamozawa and Alex Talbot are the voices behind the website Ideas in Food and the bakery Curiosity Doughnuts. They are chefs, food writers, photographers, educators, and culinary consultants, and they are here to make your food better.
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Updated December 20, 2023
Half of a turkey club shawarma sandwich with pork belly and enhanced mayo on a cutting board. A few stray pieces of sandwich filling are strewn on the cutting board.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

Why It Works

  • Using turkey thighs instead of breast, marinating them, and roasting them shawarma-style with pork belly produces far more juicy and flavorful meat than what is typically served on a club sandwich.
  • Pounding slices of pork belly and turkey thigh until thin allows you to layer more closely and tenderizes the meat.
  • Incorporating rendered bacon fat into the mayo adds tons of smoky flavor.
  • Combining the bacon fat with peanut oil helps keep it smooth and spreadable even when the mayo is cold.

The turkey club is one of those iconic sandwiches on deli, diner, and country club menus everywhere. In its classic form, it has three slices of white bread with lettuce, tomato, bacon, sliced turkey, and mayonnaise. There are arguments about how to assemble the sandwich and whether or not to add cheese, but there is no argument that a great turkey club is a sandwich to remember. The question is: How often are you actually served a great turkey club?

Some people think the turkey club sandwich is special because it has three slices of toasted white bread, a triple-decker beast that usually comes to the table with toothpicks holding each piece together. Those people would be wrong. In our minds, the two things that define the turkey club are the turkey and the mayonnaise. The bacon is very important, but without great turkey and great mayo, the sandwich is a bust. We decided to tackle these two elements, working on the idea of bacon as inspiration. We hit a few obstacles along the way, and used them as learning experiences to help us make a better sandwich.

Turkey Talk

Let's start with the turkey: Most of the time the turkey is either from those plastic-wrapped deli cuts, or from freshly roasted turkey breast that is so dry it cries out for mayonnaise just to make it palatable. We wanted to see what we could do with turkey thighs instead.

Closeup of a pair of raw, boneless turkey thighs in a mixing bowl.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

As it turns out, in our neck of the woods, whole bone-in, skin-on turkey thighs require a special order. So we defaulted to the boneless, skinless thighs that were available at our local grocer.

As fate would have it, there was fresh pork belly (AKA unsmoked bacon) for sale at the butcher's counter, so we picked that up too. A turkey club is topped with bacon anyway, why not incorporate some pork belly right into the roasted meat? Its natural fattiness should help keep our turkey moist and tender as it cooks.

We are fascinated by the idea of the vertical rotisseries used for Greek gyrosMexican al pastor, and Middle Eastern shawarma. The idea of layering meats on a spit and rotating them as they brown, with juices running down the sides and pooling below just sounds automatically delicious, plus it makes for more intense browning around the entire surface of the roast. So we decided to apply that idea to the turkey to see if we could create something even more flavorful.

Pork belly is packed with connective tissue and can be quite tough unless cooked for a long time or tenderized with mechanical means. Pounding was the way to go. We pounded the turkey thighs and pork belly into thin slices, approximately 4 inches in diameter, tenderizing them and allowing us to stack them closer. This also produced slices with a larger surface area and thinner thickness, making for easier absorption of marinade.

Closeup of the pieces of turkey thigh, pounded flat in a zip-top bag.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

Our marinade is intense, featuring the classic deli flavors of brown mustard and ketchup, along with, miso, garlic, and onion to intensify the meaty flavor of the turkey thighs and pork belly, and buttermilk to help tenderize the meat.

Closeup of marinade-coated slices of turkey, stacked in a plastic storage container.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

After marinating for several hours, we stacked the meat in alternating layers, and skewered it together. We don't have a vertical rotisserie, but we still wanted to get all-around browning. Turned out an onion came to the rescue. By sticking skewers into a large, flat-bottomed onion, we could then layer the meat and get the whole thing to stand up in a large roasting pan, shawarma-style.

It can be a little tricky to skewer the slippery slices of meat, but we found that by layering the meat in a quart-sized deli-style plastic container, then sticking the skewers into and inverting it, we could get a nice, tight cylinder with minimal effort.

Closeup of the skewered meat affixed to the onion and erected in a roasting pan.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

We put those in a roasting pan onion-side down for stability and roasted them in a hot convection oven to maximize the amount of caramelized roasted bits on the outside.

After roasting, here's what we got:

Overhead closeup of a finished shawarma skewer, laid on its side on a cutting board. The exterior looks crispy and well-browned.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

As an added bonus, rich juices dripping from the meat collected in the bottom of the roasting pan, then boiled and steamed in the oven's heat, adding moisture to the skewered meats—a little bit of white wine added to the roasting pan before cooking enhanced this effect.

We sliced the turkey shawarma vertically into very thin strips, the way a shawarma vendor would do with their skewered meat.

The shawarma skewer, partially sliced into strips of meat.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

This helps to further tenderize the meat. To keep things extra moist and flavorful, we then combined the sliced turkey and some of the sliced onion with the pan drippings, letting the meat re-absorb some of the juices it lost during the roast.

Overhead view of the sliced shawarma meat in a bowl, swimming in pan juices.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

With the turkey cooked and sliced, we turned our attention to the other important elements: the mayo and the bacon.

Makin' Bacon (Mayo)

When it was time to make the mayo, we were again influenced by what bacon could do for us here. We'd already added some pork belly to our turkey, why not make it a running theme?

Closeup of solid chunks of bacon fat in a small saucepan.

Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

At first, we thought about making a turkey mayonnaise, flavored with the fat, bones, skin, and trimmings of the bird. But since we had no turkey bones or skin, we used bacon fat for flavor instead, blending it with peanut oil so the mayonnaise would remain spreadable when cold. (Check out a bit of the science of animal fat mayo in this Food Lab article.)

Because it was such a rich mayo, we balanced it out with a heavy dose of mustard and sherry vinegar, which cuts through the fat and accents the flavor of the turkey-pork belly shawarma.

Putting It All Together

When we were assembling the sandwiches, we broke with one of the primary traditions of a turkey club, and decided to ditch that middle layer of bread. Putting aside how it "should be," we couldn't get past the feeling that the extra bread only made the sandwich more difficult to eat, and didn't contribute anything great that the other two pieces of toast already had. Hasta la vista, bready!

We slathered on the rich bacon mayo—so rich, in fact, that we ended up not even needing actual bacon slices (though of course, you can always add them if you'd like)—then some of the dressed moist turkey and pork belly, and finally some fresh sliced tomato and peppery baby arugula to act as a counterpoint to our enhanced turkey meat and incredibly flavorful mayo.

And then it was lunch.

This recipe is a bit of a project, so we've scaled it to make 12 sandwiches. If you're going to make it, might as well invite some friends over to enjoy. If sandwiches aren't your thing, this also makes an amazing turkey salad. Add some freshly cooked short pasta and toss it with the carved meats, juices, and mayonnaise. Refrigerate for at least an hour so the flavors can blend and then add diced tomatoes and baby arugula just before serving.

Aki Kamozawa and H. Alexander Talbot, the great minds behind the influential blog Ideas in Food and the cookbooks Ideas in FoodMaximum Flavor, and Gluten-Free Flour Power, share their wisdom and clever cooking ideas here on Serious Eats as they reinvent classic dishes with the aim of getting the most flavor out of them.

August 2014

Recipe Details

The Turkey Club Shawarma Sandwich With Pork Belly and Enhanced Mayo Recipe

Prep 30 mins
Cook 75 mins
Active 45 mins
Marinating Time 4 hrs
Total 5 hrs 45 mins
Makes 12 sandwiches

Ingredients

  • For the Turkey Shawarma:
  • 2 boneless skinless turkey thighs, about 1500g (3 pounds 6 ounces total)
  • 1000g (2 pounds 3 ounces) fresh pork belly, skin removed
  • 260g (about 1 cup plus 1 tablespoon) buttermilk
  • 100g (about 1/3 cup) brown mustard
  • 100g (about 1/3 cup) ketchup
  • 100g (about 1/3 cup) miso paste, preferably barley miso
  • 1 medium yellow onion peeled and quartered, plus 2 large yellow onions peeled and left whole
  • 1 head of garlic peeled
  • 500g (about 2 cups) dry white wine
  • For the Bacon Mayonnaise:
  • 250g (about 1 cup) rendered bacon fat, from about 1 pound of bacon (reserve cooked bacon for another use)
  • 200g (about 3/4 cup) peanut oil
  • 2 large egg yolks, plus 1 large egg
  • 50g (about 3 tablespoons) brown mustard
  • 50g (about 3 tablespoons) sherry vinegar
  • 15 dashes (shakes) hot sauce
  • Kosher salt (about 6g, or to taste)
  • To Assemble the Turkey Clubs:
  • Sliced bread, such as potato bread, toasted
  • Lightly salted thick tomato slices
  • Baby arugula

Directions

  1. For the Turkey Shawarma: Cut turkey thighs into roughly 2-inch pieces, following along the natural seams of the meat when possible. Discard any fat and sinew. Set aside.

    Closeup of raw boneless turkey thighs, cut into 2-inch pieces.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  2. Cut pork belly into 1/2-inch thick slices and then into 3-inch lengths. Set aside.

    Closeup of raw pork belly, cut into thick slabs.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  3. Put 4 or 5 pieces of turkey meat into a large zipper-lock bag, press out as much air as possible, and seal the bag. Using a meat pounder, pound turkey to 1/4-inch thickness. Remove flattened turkey pieces from the bag and transfer to a large bowl. Repeat with remaining turkey meat. Pound pork belly the same way and set aside in a separate bowl.

    Overhead view of the pork belly slices, sandwiched between layers of a zip-top bag and pounded flat.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  4. Combine buttermilk, brown mustard, ketchup, barley miso, quartered onion, and garlic in a blender and blend starting at low speed and gradually increasing speed to high. Purée until it becomes a smooth paste, about 30 seconds. Turn the blender off and pour marinade over turkey and pork belly, tossing to coat evenly. Cover each bowl and refrigerate for at least 4 hours and up to 24.

    Closeup of the finished marinade in the blender.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  5. Preheat the oven to 425°F (220°C) with convection if you have it. If no convection is available, preheat oven to 450°F (230°C). Cut the ends off of remaining whole onions to make 2 flat sides on each. Set aside.

  6. Remove turkey and pork belly from the refrigerator. In a deep plastic quart-sized deli-style container, alternate layers of turkey and pork belly until half of both meats have been used. Push 4 skewers in a square pattern through the stack of meat. Set 1 onion on a work surface so that it is sitting on a flat side. Push the skewers all the way through the top side of the onion so that the skewered meats stand vertically with the onion as a base. Remove the container so the meat stands on its own. Repeat with remaining turkey, pork belly, and onion.

    Overhead view of the skewered, marinated meat.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  7. Stand each set of skewers up in a medium roasting pan and pour white wine into the bottom of the pan. Roast turkey shawarma for 30 minutes. Rotate the pan (if the meat has fallen over, turn it over so the bottom side roasts and caramelizes). Continue roasting until browned and crisp, about 30 minutes longer. Let rest for at least 15 minutes before carving. Carve turkey shawarma in vertical slices, discarding skewers, then remove and slice the onion. Combine sliced turkey shawarma and onion in a bowl, add several spoonfuls of roasting juices and gently mix everything together. Season to taste with salt if necessary.

    Closeup of the finished skewers. The edges of the layers of meat are crispy and well-browned.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  8. For the Bacon Mayonnaise: While the turkey roasts, combine bacon fat and peanut oil in a pot and heat over low heat just until the bacon fat melts. Pour it into a large heatproof measuring cup. Combine egg yolks, egg, mustard, sherry vinegar, hot sauce, and salt in a blender. Turn blender to low speed and gradually increase speed to medium-high until smooth. Turn the blender off and, using a rubber spatula, scrape down the sides. Turn blender to low speed and slowly drizzle in the bacon fat and peanut oil mixture in a thin stream. Increase blender speed to medium and continue to drizzle fat into the blender in a thin stream. As the mayonnaise thickens, increase blender speed while continuing to drizzle in fat. When all the fat has been added and mayonnaise is uniform and creamy, turn off blender. Season to taste with salt if necessary. The mayonnaise can be refrigerated for up to 3 days.

    Closeup of the finished mayonnaise in a blender.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

  9. To Assemble the Turkey Clubs: Spread bacon mayonnaise on each slice of toast. Layer a generous portion of carved turkey shawarma on bottom half of each sandwich. Top with sliced tomato and baby arugula, then close sandwiches. Serve additional bacon mayonnaise and hot sauce on the side so each sandwich can be seasoned to taste.

    Overhead view of the sandwich before final assembly. A large slice of tomato and a small pile of arugula crown each slice of bread.

    Serious Eats / H. Alexander Talbot and Aki Kamozawa

Special Equipment

Blender, eight 12-inch skewers, meat pounder

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