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Thread: Thanksgiving!

  1. #16
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    Sep 2008
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    San Diego, CA
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    Forget the roasted veggies. I want that pumpkin butterscotch cheesecake recipe, Kacie!

    I just bought a cheesecake pan. I've never made one. Anyone got a healthy cheesecake recipe?

    Roxy, currently enjoying leftovers from my mom's traditional Thanksgiving dinner that we had on Sunday because DD and I are here with her in Florida and leaving on Wednesday. I love her dressing and my grandmother's sweet potato casserole. Yum.
    Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
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    2,545
    I cannot tolerate the smell of roasting turkey, so I'm planning my favorite holiday tradition -- going to a restaurant with a close, sympathetic friend.

    I hope the turkey smell will be cleared out of my apartment by the time we get back. Unfortunately, one of the guests who is coming won't tolerate the windows being open even a little bit.

    Ah well, the whole thing gives me a good excuse for biking all day Thursday and Friday while the place airs out.

    I love Brussels sprouts and beets, by the way.

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Quote Originally Posted by PamNY View Post
    I love Brussels sprouts and beets, by the way.
    I've seen a recipe on roasted brussel sprouts with pistachios.
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle, WA
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    2,208
    We're doing the usual....

    Turkey, possibly brined, possibly not. We do the Martha Stewart 90 minutes breast-side down and the remainder of the time breast-side up to keep the breast from drying out.
    Quorn roast for the veg among us (I have alternated between Quorn, Tofurky, and Field Roast, back to Quorn this year)
    Cranberry sauce
    Stuffing/dressing (made with veg stock and finished in the oven)
    Green beans with cranberries
    A small sweet potatoes sweet dish (no marshmallows, but pineapple)
    Mashed potatoes - sweet and boring varieties (I pretty much don't eat potatoes, but my siblings are picky)
    Gravy - tofurky for the veg, and turkey gravy made fresh from the turkey

  5. #20
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    DE
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    1,210
    TG is at my sister's and the menu has not varied one iota in 20 years, or more. PRobably 12 people and a couple of dogs will feast on

    hors d'oeurves & crudites
    Roast turkey, stuffing, gravy
    Mashed potatoes, a very sweet sweet potato casserole
    Brocolli casserole (I love it but am sooooo tired of it)
    Green salad with grapefruit, avocado slices, and cream cheese balls w/ chives
    2 kinds of cranberries
    Spiced peaches (I make these, home canned)
    Home made rolls (I bring these as well)
    Apple, pumpkin, and probably another pie
    Sour cream cookies
    Spiced sugared pecans
    various wines and champagne

    It's getting to be so much food that I am almost sickened by it all. But everyone wants to bring something and when you have 12 people - well you end up with a ton of food. It will all be home made, some home-grown, and all delicious, (well if you like sweet potato/marshmellow/syrupy casseroles that is - LOL) but I sure would like to lighten up the menu.

    What I would like to see earn a place on the menu is roasted sweet potatoes and brussels sprouts. So much so that Tues and Wed my dinner will be just that.

    But it will be fun to see everyone and visit over the weekend. I'm bringing my bike though and hoping the weather holds out so I can go for a ride on Fri or Sat, or I may stop in St. Michael's for a ride on my way home.

    Happy Thanksgiving!

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
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    Canada has its Thanksgiving in Oct. Our home meal:

    squash-carrot soup
    roasted beets, parsnips and celery root
    gourmet sausages (bison, venison)
    heirloom tomatoes marinated in some oil, vinegar and garnished with fresh basil
    salmon fillet lightly sauteed with orange sauce and herbs
    dessert focaccia (embedded fresh cut figs, plums, grapes and blueberries. Dessert was my contribution. He added wine-flavoured whipping cream as topping.)
    red & white wine
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Little Egypt
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    It's so interesting to see what other's serve for Thanksgiving in other parts of the country. Ours is a pretty traditional dinner. I'm doing the cooking and my parents, in-laws, children and grandchildren will be here---it's my grandson's 7th birthday on Thursday, too.

    Turkey
    Ham
    Sweet Potato Casserole
    Stuffing
    Gravy
    Cranberry Salad
    Apple-grape Salad
    Broccolli
    Pumpkin Pie
    Pecan Pie
    and Ice Cream cake for the birthday boy!

    I'll be so sick of it all by the time we eat that I won't want to look at it much less eat any of it.
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  8. #23
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    Nov 2009
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    10,889
    Going to a friend's house and they always have a TON of food. I will be taking the beer

  9. #24
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    Jun 2003
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    MI
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    The last few years I've made a vegetarian dish to share at Thanksgiving, usually a recipe from 101Cookbooks.com

    This year I was assigned dinner rolls. ONLY DINNER ROLLS (they were very specific). I guess if it isn't deep fried turkey, mashed potatoes w/ gravy, and cheese with some broccoli--they aren't happy

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Newport, RI
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    Quote Originally Posted by limewave View Post
    The last few years I've made a vegetarian dish to share at Thanksgiving, usually a recipe from 101Cookbooks.com

    This year I was assigned dinner rolls. ONLY DINNER ROLLS (they were very specific). I guess if it isn't deep fried turkey, mashed potatoes w/ gravy, and cheese with some broccoli--they aren't happy
    That's obnoxious. So because they don't want it, you can't have it? What, is there no room in the house for one more dish?

    Being who I am, I'd somehow fill the rolls with spinach, just to bug them.
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  11. #26
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    Sep 2006
    Location
    Central Indiana
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    I am so jealous of all these wonderful dishes. DH and I are going to my parents on Thanksgiving. My mom is a decent cook, but a couple things work against her on Thanksgiving: (1) A blind adherance to the dishes she's been making for the past 50 years of married life; and (2) a tendency to overcook things. Her dishes are not exactly inventive or fresh tasting. Think green bean casserole and lifeless peas and carrots.

    I've offered over the years to contribute some dishes, but my mother is also a control freak and will have none of that. DH and I will try some things for our New Year's dinner together instead.

    At least it's what I'm used to. DH and I spent the last two Thanksgivings with his family and family friends, and they don't do much more than microwave premade food. It's a crime against humanity. The first year I actually found myself pretty offended by it. Nothing says the holidays like Stovetop Stuffing.

    Anyway, Happy Thanksgiving to all. Enjoy the day!
    Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.

    --Mary Anne Radmacher

  12. #27
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Denver
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    1,942
    I'm going to make a pecan pie and green bean casserole but I'm probably going to get dinner to go from the Chili's up the street. It's just me, and I'm trying to clean the house to put up Christmas decorations, so I don't feel like cooking for myself!

  13. #28
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    Jun 2003
    Location
    MI
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    Quote Originally Posted by redrhodie View Post
    That's obnoxious. So because they don't want it, you can't have it? What, is there no room in the house for one more dish?

    Being who I am, I'd somehow fill the rolls with spinach, just to bug them.
    Lol. Good idea!
    It wouldn't be the holidays without obnoxious relatives
    Last edited by limewave; 11-23-2010 at 08:31 AM. Reason: typo

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Nebraska
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    1,192
    I'm not cooking this year, just going to a friend's house. I'll be taking butterhorn rolls.

    On the years I do cook, the menu is very specific - I am NOT allowed to get creative. My family has decreed that there be:

    Turkey with a chorizo/veggie corn bread stuffing - I make the bread a few days before, it's a raised bread with a lot of corn meal and whole corn in it.

    Mashed 'taters and gravy. It is almost impossible to make enough.

    Cranberry Chop-Chop Good Stuff - that is, cranberries chopped with jalepenos, red onion and lime juice. Sounds like it should be awful, but we eat it plain by the spoonful.

    Brussels sprouts with mustard lemon sauce

    Butterhorns - complete with a call to my brother bragging about how my butterhorns are better than his. (They are)

    Cranberry pound cake. I think it weighs in at 1,000 calories a crumb, but it is so worth it.

    Wine. In the cook. In the stuffing. In the gravy. In the icing on the cake. In glasses on the table. (Oops, I think I spilled some. That's OK, have another glass.)

    That's what I have no choice but to serve. Guests are free to bring any dishes that make them happy.
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  15. #30
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    May 2010
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    Denver
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    Quote Originally Posted by MomOnBike View Post
    Wine. In the cook. In the stuffing. In the gravy. In the icing on the cake. In glasses on the table. (Oops, I think I spilled some. That's OK, have another glass.)
    My family makes wine Jello for holidays. Pretty good

 

 

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