Anonymous wrote:WTH does one do with rutabegas? My DH says his grandmother used to feed them to her horses and refuses to allow them in the house.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up on real mashed potatoes a few years ago. I buy the packaged ones from Costco. They are the only ones I could find that used real butter and not a ton of other unwanted ingredients.
I also make my gravy ahead of time. I was not very good at making gravy when I first started hosting and the stress of making it right before serving the meal always drove me nuts. For a few years I roasted turkey legs or a small turkey breast a few days before. But even before that, when I was making the gravy with the actual drippings that day, I could never get the gravy flavorful enough for me. So now I do something people might think is sacrilegious. I make a chuck roast a few days before and combine those drippings with the ones from a chicken or turkey parts. It always turns out a very flavorful gravy. So my secret ingredient in my gravy that my family loves is beef drippings![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s THE best stuffing? Cornbread? Chestnut? Oyster? sausage?
I think the best is probably whatever you grew up eating.For me, Scot Peacock's cornbread dressing recipe comes closest to ideal.
I didn't grow up with any traditional dishes, so never developed a taste for anything specific! Just me and a single parent, so we typically got an invite somewhere different each year. I just loooove stuffing, and want to learn how to make the best haha!
Half cornbread half bread cubes, a ton of butter fried sage, sausage, a few boiled eggs. Follow a recipe but make those tweaks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Favorite cranberry sauce recipe?
I just boil a package of cranberries over medium with one cup of water and 3/4 cup of sugar until they start popping, then I lower/stir/eventually turn off the heat. I like my cranberry sauce really simple. I always do this one or two days before.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up on real mashed potatoes a few years ago. I buy the packaged ones from Costco. They are the only ones I could find that used real butter and not a ton of other unwanted ingredients.
I also make my gravy ahead of time. I was not very good at making gravy when I first started hosting and the stress of making it right before serving the meal always drove me nuts. For a few years I roasted turkey legs or a small turkey breast a few days before. But even before that, when I was making the gravy with the actual drippings that day, I could never get the gravy flavorful enough for me. So now I do something people might think is sacrilegious. I make a chuck roast a few days before and combine those drippings with the ones from a chicken or turkey parts. It always turns out a very flavorful gravy. So my secret ingredient in my gravy that my family loves is beef drippings![]()
That's brilliant. I may have to try that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You can also make the base of the gravy the day before and add the drippings after the turkey is done:
https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1015197-make-ahead-gravy
Roast the neck of the turkey and make stock from that. Then make gravy from that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gave up on real mashed potatoes a few years ago. I buy the packaged ones from Costco. They are the only ones I could find that used real butter and not a ton of other unwanted ingredients.
I also make my gravy ahead of time. I was not very good at making gravy when I first started hosting and the stress of making it right before serving the meal always drove me nuts. For a few years I roasted turkey legs or a small turkey breast a few days before. But even before that, when I was making the gravy with the actual drippings that day, I could never get the gravy flavorful enough for me. So now I do something people might think is sacrilegious. I make a chuck roast a few days before and combine those drippings with the ones from a chicken or turkey parts. It always turns out a very flavorful gravy. So my secret ingredient in my gravy that my family loves is beef drippings![]()
That's brilliant. I may have to try that.
Anonymous wrote:I gave up on real mashed potatoes a few years ago. I buy the packaged ones from Costco. They are the only ones I could find that used real butter and not a ton of other unwanted ingredients.
I also make my gravy ahead of time. I was not very good at making gravy when I first started hosting and the stress of making it right before serving the meal always drove me nuts. For a few years I roasted turkey legs or a small turkey breast a few days before. But even before that, when I was making the gravy with the actual drippings that day, I could never get the gravy flavorful enough for me. So now I do something people might think is sacrilegious. I make a chuck roast a few days before and combine those drippings with the ones from a chicken or turkey parts. It always turns out a very flavorful gravy. So my secret ingredient in my gravy that my family loves is beef drippings![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What’s THE best stuffing? Cornbread? Chestnut? Oyster? sausage?
I think the best is probably whatever you grew up eating.For me, Scot Peacock's cornbread dressing recipe comes closest to ideal.
I didn't grow up with any traditional dishes, so never developed a taste for anything specific! Just me and a single parent, so we typically got an invite somewhere different each year. I just loooove stuffing, and want to learn how to make the best haha!
Half cornbread half bread cubes, a ton of butter fried sage, sausage, a few boiled eggs. Follow a recipe but make those tweaks.
Oh dear God. No.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think I cross the threshold for low class and trashy per DCum, but I loved canned cranberry (and how it's a long blob that falls out of the can) and purposely slice it (cutting it, too, is satisfying) next to the mashed potatoes on my plate so that there's a happy harmony of subtle mixing.
Anyone else have secret indulgences (that may or may not be low class or gross to others)?
Cranberry bread from a mix. We had it every year. Now it’s hard to find but my mom has found a store near her that has it. I am not even sure I actually like it anymore, but I cannot imagine thanksgiving without it.
Anonymous wrote:If you don’t eat pecan pie for breakfast the next day, you’re not living life right. [/quote
I prefer apple pie for breakfast.