Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regular turkey
Regular cornbread or sourdough stuffing depending on which camp you're in
Mashed potatoes (skin off, milk, butter, salt, I do sour cream)
Basic gravy
Green bean casserole or steamed French green beans (depending on what camp you're in, again)
Cranberry in a can
Rolls
Then have other things that are fun:
a fun veggie like an adventurous corn dish
a fun cranberry sauce recipe
a salad with roasted butternut squash, nuts, cheese, spicy vinaigrette, pepitas, dried cranberries
OP here. Thanks this is helpful. I’m not sure anyone eats stuffing. Maybe I’ll buy bread and bake cornbread. I could boil ears of corn bc I know most of my guests will love that. I like the ricer machine idea another poster had. I’ve actually never made gravy! Is store bought gravy gross?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Regular turkey
Regular cornbread or sourdough stuffing depending on which camp you're in
Mashed potatoes (skin off, milk, butter, salt, I do sour cream)
Basic gravy
Green bean casserole or steamed French green beans (depending on what camp you're in, again)
Cranberry in a can
Rolls
Then have other things that are fun:
a fun veggie like an adventurous corn dish
a fun cranberry sauce recipe
a salad with roasted butternut squash, nuts, cheese, spicy vinaigrette, pepitas, dried cranberries
OP here. Thanks this is helpful. I’m not sure anyone eats stuffing. Maybe I’ll buy bread and bake cornbread. I could boil ears of corn bc I know most of my guests will love that. I like the ricer machine idea another poster had. I’ve actually never made gravy! Is store bought gravy gross?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from Indiana. My brother is a well-known chef. Both sides of my family of origins are good cooks and adventurous eaters. Maybe your particular in-laws are not, but please don't make ignorant, sweeping generalizations.
That said, we like traditional Thanksgiving meals. I do have a vegetarian cousin, but we've got her covered. Our mixed-bag menu is:
Turkey
Gravy
Mashed potatoes
Dressing (I make it in the crock pot; vegetarian)
Cranberry sauce
Vegetable Wellington
Burgundy mushrooms (vegetarian recipe)
Green beans
Homemade Parker house rolls
Roasted Brussels sprouts with pancetta and balsamic glaze
Musubi (SIL family tradition)
Pork and scallion dumplings (SIL family tradition)
Salad with pomegranates and goat cheese
Pumpkin pie
Pecan pie
Ginger cheesecake
A variety of non-alcoholic beverages, plus beer and wine
Recipe for burgundy mushrooms?
Anonymous wrote:Regular turkey
Regular cornbread or sourdough stuffing depending on which camp you're in
Mashed potatoes (skin off, milk, butter, salt, I do sour cream)
Basic gravy
Green bean casserole or steamed French green beans (depending on what camp you're in, again)
Cranberry in a can
Rolls
Then have other things that are fun:
a fun veggie like an adventurous corn dish
a fun cranberry sauce recipe
a salad with roasted butternut squash, nuts, cheese, spicy vinaigrette, pepitas, dried cranberries
Anonymous wrote:I'm from Indiana. My brother is a well-known chef. Both sides of my family of origins are good cooks and adventurous eaters. Maybe your particular in-laws are not, but please don't make ignorant, sweeping generalizations.
That said, we like traditional Thanksgiving meals. I do have a vegetarian cousin, but we've got her covered. Our mixed-bag menu is:
Turkey
Gravy
Mashed potatoes
Dressing (I make it in the crock pot; vegetarian)
Cranberry sauce
Vegetable Wellington
Burgundy mushrooms (vegetarian recipe)
Green beans
Homemade Parker house rolls
Roasted Brussels sprouts with pancetta and balsamic glaze
Musubi (SIL family tradition)
Pork and scallion dumplings (SIL family tradition)
Salad with pomegranates and goat cheese
Pumpkin pie
Pecan pie
Ginger cheesecake
A variety of non-alcoholic beverages, plus beer and wine
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just make regular mashed potatoes without the skins. If people like mashed potatoes, they like mashed potatoes. Mashed potatoes with skin does not equal adventurous eating by the way. I'd keep the kale salad and serve it along with whatever traditional items the elderly like.
Mashed potatoes with skin and pepper would be adventurous for the older in-laws.
Is cornbread or dinner rolls "safer"?
Part of the problem here is that I grew up eating non-american food (parents are immigrants) so I'm not sure what is "standard." But I know the inlaws will not want to eat anything "different."
Presumably you know how to Google, and you still can't figure out what a "standard" American Thanksgiving meal typically entails?
Honestly I don't think there is a standard. There are regional differences, for sure. Some areas will put sausage or oysters in their stuffing. Some will use cornbread instead of bread. Some will insist on calling it dressing.
Some will insist on having mac & cheese on the table.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from Indiana. My brother is a well-known chef. Both sides of my family of origins are good cooks and adventurous eaters. Maybe your particular in-laws are not, but please don't make ignorant, sweeping generalizations.
That said, we like traditional Thanksgiving meals. I do have a vegetarian cousin, but we've got her covered. Our mixed-bag menu is:
Turkey
Gravy
Mashed potatoes
Dressing (I make it in the crock pot; vegetarian)
Cranberry sauce
Vegetable Wellington
Burgundy mushrooms (vegetarian recipe)
Green beans
Homemade Parker house rolls
Roasted Brussels sprouts with pancetta and balsamic glaze
Musubi (SIL family tradition)
Pork and scallion dumplings (SIL family tradition)
Salad with pomegranates and goat cheese
Pumpkin pie
Pecan pie
Ginger cheesecake
A variety of non-alcoholic beverages, plus beer and wine
Salad with pomegranate seeds and goat cheese sounds good. What kind of greens do you plan to use?
Independent of "where you are from" pomegrantes dont mix with dentures and partials
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just make regular mashed potatoes without the skins. If people like mashed potatoes, they like mashed potatoes. Mashed potatoes with skin does not equal adventurous eating by the way. I'd keep the kale salad and serve it along with whatever traditional items the elderly like.
Mashed potatoes with skin and pepper would be adventurous for the older in-laws.
Is cornbread or dinner rolls "safer"?
Part of the problem here is that I grew up eating non-american food (parents are immigrants) so I'm not sure what is "standard." But I know the inlaws will not want to eat anything "different."
Presumably you know how to Google, and you still can't figure out what a "standard" American Thanksgiving meal typically entails?
Honestly I don't think there is a standard. There are regional differences, for sure. Some areas will put sausage or oysters in their stuffing. Some will use cornbread instead of bread. Some will insist on calling it dressing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm from Indiana. My brother is a well-known chef. Both sides of my family of origins are good cooks and adventurous eaters. Maybe your particular in-laws are not, but please don't make ignorant, sweeping generalizations.
That said, we like traditional Thanksgiving meals. I do have a vegetarian cousin, but we've got her covered. Our mixed-bag menu is:
Turkey
Gravy
Mashed potatoes
Dressing (I make it in the crock pot; vegetarian)
Cranberry sauce
Vegetable Wellington
Burgundy mushrooms (vegetarian recipe)
Green beans
Homemade Parker house rolls
Roasted Brussels sprouts with pancetta and balsamic glaze
Musubi (SIL family tradition)
Pork and scallion dumplings (SIL family tradition)
Salad with pomegranates and goat cheese
Pumpkin pie
Pecan pie
Ginger cheesecake
A variety of non-alcoholic beverages, plus beer and wine
Salad with pomegranate seeds and goat cheese sounds good. What kind of greens do you plan to use?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just make regular mashed potatoes without the skins. If people like mashed potatoes, they like mashed potatoes. Mashed potatoes with skin does not equal adventurous eating by the way. I'd keep the kale salad and serve it along with whatever traditional items the elderly like.
Mashed potatoes with skin and pepper would be adventurous for the older in-laws.
Is cornbread or dinner rolls "safer"?
Part of the problem here is that I grew up eating non-american food (parents are immigrants) so I'm not sure what is "standard." But I know the inlaws will not want to eat anything "different."
Presumably you know how to Google, and you still can't figure out what a "standard" American Thanksgiving meal typically entails?
Honestly I don't think there is a standard. There are regional differences, for sure. Some areas will put sausage or oysters in their stuffing. Some will use cornbread instead of bread. Some will insist on calling it dressing.