I could however cook my sweet potatoes the day before and then incorporate them into the recipe the next day right? That saves huge time roasting and mashing. |
I think cooking and mashing/ricing the sweet potatoes the day before is fine and makes no difference if you are going to make a casserole. |
Cooking and mashing sweet potatoes the day before is fine and makes no difference if they are being incorporated into a casserole/pudding/pie. In fact, this you could do several days ahead. I've even cooked and mashed and frozen sweet potatoes a month ahead when I had found them on sale. |
These are the things I can and often do make ahead of time:
cornbread two days before, to dry out before it is mixed into the stuffing sausage browned the day before, to be mixed into the stuffing pecan pieces toasted the day before, to be used in the stuffing and in pies cranberry sauce the day before orange fluff the day before, a Jello-based salad of canned fruits -- a Southern thang sweet potatoes cooked and mashed up to a week before, which will go into a sweet-potato pudding (can also be frozen up to a month or two before) pie crusts up to a week before, formed into discs and wrapped in plastic wrap, ready to roll out (can also be frozen up to a month or two before) a complete unbaked apple or pear pie, to be frozen until the time of baking -- Oh, wow, this makes me want to get in the kitchen and make my crusts today. |
I peel and cook mashed potatos the night before. 1 hour before the meal I add whatever and mix it up. The mashed potatos go into a casserole dish with butter [or lactose free ] and paprika on top and enter the oven. That gives a nice crusty top. I put in stuffing and vegetables to roast 1.5 hours before the meal. The night before i also cook cranberries with some orange pieces and sugar. Also do the chopping of celery and onions for stuffing. the turkey is in a brine mixture [water, salt, sugar] overnight [6-8 hours]. Since I'm lazy the turkey is in the roasting pan in the brine. Why wash 2 big things? I then dump the turkey in a clean sink and hose it off sticking it back in the pan. Each of my children have assumed special Thanksgiving food prep tasks. They're older now but it still is special to them. |
Here's an article from the NYT suggesting prep/cooking tasks for the week before--
http://dinersjournal.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/11/14/what-can-i-prepare-before-the-actual-day-of-thanksgiving/ |
This is what I do the day before:
Prepare the stuffing and place in pan ready to bake (I cook it outside of the turkey) Prepare cranberry sauce (actually can be done up to 2-3 days ahead of time) Prepare the sweet potato puree and place in par ready to bake (add any toppings, like nuts or marshmallows, right before baking) Brine the turkey Prepare pie dough (can be done weeks ahead of time and frozen) |