Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you all use the fat separating pouring thing to make your gravy? I used mine for the first time this year and totally worth the purchase. Made great gravy and no grease slick on top. I think it was six bucks at tjmaxx.
No. But I sure wish that I had thought to try it. I'll see if I can pick one up at TJ's for next time.
Anonymous wrote:Did you all use the fat separating pouring thing to make your gravy? I used mine for the first time this year and totally worth the purchase. Made great gravy and no grease slick on top. I think it was six bucks at tjmaxx.
Anonymous wrote:Flop: Used Reynold's bag and stuffed it. Food poisoning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was setting a piping hot dish onto a trivet on the dining room table and managed to accidentally touch and melt a little spot on the fabric of my brand new tablecloth.
How do you melt fabric? Plastic you mean?
No. It's a nice, red holiday fabric tablecloth. There is a shiny spot where the hot casserole dish touched it. I put it in the wash but I'm pretty sure that the fabric actually melted a little. Didn't hurt the table - thank goodness!
K. Then your "fabric" is polyester. Ergo plastic. Real fabric doesn't melt. Geesh.
Welcome To The Tablecloth Fact Channel! Tonight our experts will discuss whether fabric can, in fact, melt or merely burst into flames. Our first caller is from Akron, Ohio. Go ahead, Akron:
My holiday flop - my ultra expensive linen napkins and placemat set. I spent a small fortune on them and spent another small fortune to get the. pressed. They seemed flimsily and wrinkled right away. So forget the linen. PP - where did you get the beautiful polyester tablecloth? I'm going that way next year!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was setting a piping hot dish onto a trivet on the dining room table and managed to accidentally touch and melt a little spot on the fabric of my brand new tablecloth.
How do you melt fabric? Plastic you mean?
No. It's a nice, red holiday fabric tablecloth. There is a shiny spot where the hot casserole dish touched it. I put it in the wash but I'm pretty sure that the fabric actually melted a little. Didn't hurt the table - thank goodness!
K. Then your "fabric" is polyester. Ergo plastic. Real fabric doesn't melt. Geesh.
Welcome To The Tablecloth Fact Channel! Tonight our experts will discuss whether fabric can, in fact, melt or merely burst into flames. Our first caller is from Akron, Ohio. Go ahead, Akron:
Anonymous wrote:Found out that potatoes really do explode in the oven if you don't poke enough holes in them. The ones that survived mashed up really well, though!
I just found a petrified dinner roll in the oven from last night that somehow got left behind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too much salt in our dry brine. Not so bad for the turkey itself but pan drippings were inedible. Fortunately, we did the stuffing on the side. I also had made a stock from the neck before, so I could make gravy easily.
Any time you brine, the pan drippings are going to be salty. If you brine you should plan on making gravy from separate stock, not from the drippings.
I made stock with no salt from the neck and back ahead of time, then made gravy from that stock. I brushed the excess salt off of the turkey before baking it, and added a bit of water to the roasting pan several times. I added the drippings to the unsalted gravy, and it came out really well!
Anonymous wrote:Ha. Just wanted to update on my melted tablecloth. I washed it and the mark is not nearly as visible. If you didn't know it was there, you probably wouldn't notice it.
So, yay, I get to use my pretty, red, shiny, fabric looking plastic tablecloth again!