Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New Englander here - I even have a crystal relish tray from my grandmother. Canned black olives and celery were on her table - we still do those for tradition but add good olives and nice pickles.
+10 to all this, including new england. Canned black olives are still amazing! And those who sneer at the celery, you had to stuff it. It was just a delivery vehicle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not wasting stomach real estate on a relish tray.
Ditto! No rolls, no relish tray!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not wasting stomach real estate on a relish tray.
Ditto! No rolls, no relish tray!
Anonymous wrote:I'm not wasting stomach real estate on a relish tray.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New Englander here - I even have a crystal relish tray from my grandmother. Canned black olives and celery were on her table - we still do those for tradition but add good olives and nice pickles.
+10 to all this, including new england. Canned black olives are still amazing! And those who sneer at the celery, you had to stuff it. It was just a delivery vehicle.
I just saw a recipe for homemade pimento cheese stuffed celery. It looked amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cousin got married a couple of years ago and his wife always includes pickled okra. It’s really good!
what an excellent addition to the family lineage. your cousin picked wisely!
can I say I never heard that a "relish tray" is a thing but I AM SO IN LOVE now. Probably don't have time to pull off something elaborate, but I'll at least do cornichons, black olives, celery.
op, what do you do with the cottage cheese?
There’s a weird problem going on with DCUM over the past day that deleted the original post in the thread, and makes it look like a pp was the op. I’m OP but haven’t ever put cottage cheese on a relish tray.
Growing up we had a paltry relish tray spread (on a really nice dish that was handed down to me) and now I look to mix it up every year. Love olives, will probably have some Spanish marcona almonds (roasted in olive oil and salted), and a pp included a marinated button mushroom recipe that I’ll try. I also love spicy pickled okra so that might round out the tray for me.
I’m glad you said that OP because I could have sworn your post had weirdly gotten bumped down to the middle of the thread and I was so confused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cousin got married a couple of years ago and his wife always includes pickled okra. It’s really good!
what an excellent addition to the family lineage. your cousin picked wisely!
can I say I never heard that a "relish tray" is a thing but I AM SO IN LOVE now. Probably don't have time to pull off something elaborate, but I'll at least do cornichons, black olives, celery.
op, what do you do with the cottage cheese?
There’s a weird problem going on with DCUM over the past day that deleted the original post in the thread, and makes it look like a pp was the op. I’m OP but haven’t ever put cottage cheese on a relish tray.
Growing up we had a paltry relish tray spread (on a really nice dish that was handed down to me) and now I look to mix it up every year. Love olives, will probably have some Spanish marcona almonds (roasted in olive oil and salted), and a pp included a marinated button mushroom recipe that I’ll try. I also love spicy pickled okra so that might round out the tray for me.
I’m glad you said that OP because I could have sworn your post had weirdly gotten bumped down to the middle of the thread and I was so confused.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:omg. what is a relish tray.....is this a southern thing?!
X1000
I love you. OP - dafuq is a relish tray?
This just looks so random. I'd honestly just rather eat nothing until the real food comes along!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cousin got married a couple of years ago and his wife always includes pickled okra. It’s really good!
what an excellent addition to the family lineage. your cousin picked wisely!
can I say I never heard that a "relish tray" is a thing but I AM SO IN LOVE now. Probably don't have time to pull off something elaborate, but I'll at least do cornichons, black olives, celery.
op, what do you do with the cottage cheese?
There’s a weird problem going on with DCUM over the past day that deleted the original post in the thread, and makes it look like a pp was the op. I’m OP but haven’t ever put cottage cheese on a relish tray.
Growing up we had a paltry relish tray spread (on a really nice dish that was handed down to me) and now I look to mix it up every year. Love olives, will probably have some Spanish marcona almonds (roasted in olive oil and salted), and a pp included a marinated button mushroom recipe that I’ll try. I also love spicy pickled okra so that might round out the tray for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My cousin got married a couple of years ago and his wife always includes pickled okra. It’s really good!
what an excellent addition to the family lineage. your cousin picked wisely!
can I say I never heard that a "relish tray" is a thing but I AM SO IN LOVE now. Probably don't have time to pull off something elaborate, but I'll at least do cornichons, black olives, celery.
op, what do you do with the cottage cheese?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love this and it sounds so quaint. I've never seen or had one in real life. We don't even have appetizers at any thanksgiving I've ever been to (one of my favorite parts!)
PP whose family takes the homemade pickles/relish seriously--our appetizer spread is legendary. In addition to the pickles, we order cheeses and charcuterie, order seafood (Crab dip, shrimp, stone crab claws), make a few hot appetizers, and make vintage punch in huge punch bowls and cocktail recipes. My dad is in charge of the appetizers/cocktails and he goes ALL OUT. Some people get full before the turkey dinner!
This sounds so great! I would enjoy this much more than the sit down part of the dinner!
The hot apps are usually pretty good, too, like scallops, fried shrimp, arancini, etc.
Sometimes he also does cold sliced steak, like a carving station.
It's kind of crazy. But that's his thing.
Arancini are like my favorite thing in the world. wow!