Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understood mac and cheese at thanksgiving. Never served it, never been served it (except at a potluck Friendsgiving).
Same. Never actually even heard of it on thanksgiving menus until DCUM. I assumed it was for picky kids but interesting that adults seem to want it too.
It's certainly not from our WASP tables. It's ridiculous. You can make macaroni cheese any day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understood mac and cheese at thanksgiving. Never served it, never been served it (except at a potluck Friendsgiving).
Same. Never actually even heard of it on thanksgiving menus until DCUM. I assumed it was for picky kids but interesting that adults seem to want it too.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t care if you ask for contributions or store buy anything or everything, but to me, the “bare minimum” a host should organize (not “provide,” but organize) would be:
Turkey
Gravy
Mashed potatoes
Dressing
Cranberry sauce
Something green, whether it is asparagus, green beans, or salad, whatever
Pumpkin pie
One not-pumpkin dessert
Drinks (alcoholic and non-alcoholic)
What would you add or subtract?
Anonymous wrote:Cookies is not a thanksgiving staple???
Anonymous wrote:Gosh DCUM has such high standards!
I would say if you’re not having turkey, gravy, some kind of potatoes, and at least one other thanksgiving-y food (cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, or stuffing would all count), I would warn guests that it’s a non-traditional thanksgiving just because the traditional food is so important to some folks, give them a chance to decide on other plans.
There is no minimum! You can invite people over for a Thanksgiving dinner of Chinese takeout, and if you are fun and good company, sounds great! But yes, worthy of a heads up in case someone prefers a more traditional option.
You people make life so complex. I can’t imagine being invited to thanksgiving, being served turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, and a slice of pie, and judging the hosts as inadequate?? Because they dared leave off the cranberry sauce?? You folks are missing the point!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understood mac and cheese at thanksgiving. Never served it, never been served it (except at a potluck Friendsgiving).
Same. Never actually even heard of it on thanksgiving menus until DCUM. I assumed it was for picky kids but interesting that adults seem to want it too.
It's certainly not from our WASP tables. It's ridiculous. You can make macaroni cheese any day.
Not everyone is white. Get out of your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whipped cream to go with pie
Coffee and tea to go with dessert
Not asparagus, unless you live in the southern hemisphere! That's a spring vegetable.
My dh would agree with you, but for some reason specifies COOL whip from the tub for the pie instead of the spray kind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understood mac and cheese at thanksgiving. Never served it, never been served it (except at a potluck Friendsgiving).
Same. Never actually even heard of it on thanksgiving menus until DCUM. I assumed it was for picky kids but interesting that adults seem to want it too.
It's certainly not from our WASP tables. It's ridiculous. You can make macaroni cheese any day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understood mac and cheese at thanksgiving. Never served it, never been served it (except at a potluck Friendsgiving).
Same. Never actually even heard of it on thanksgiving menus until DCUM. I assumed it was for picky kids but interesting that adults seem to want it too.