Posts Tagged ‘traditional Thanksgiving recipes

23
Nov
09

Thanksgiving IS ~ and ALWAYS will be, my favorite holiday

It’s Monday evening and I finished all my grocery shopping for Thanksgiving this afternoon.  Tomorrow I’ll prepare the Braunschweiger Paté and Roquefort Cheese Ball for Thursday. Wednesday, I’ll brine the turkey and make all the desserts. Thanksgiving morning, I’ll be up at 5:00 am, prepping the turkey, side dishes and putting the finishing touches on the day’s festivities.  All the groceries are put away and I’m relaxing with a glass of white wine, some of THAT cheese and a few crackers.

Someone asked me earlier this week here on my blog, if I’d be willing to share my favorite Thanksgiving traditions.  I don’t know where to start.  There have been so many over the years, but they’ve changed…with beloved family members passing away and others, growing up and moving away.

Years ago, when I was a little girl, we spent our Thanksgivings with my mom’s side of the family.  Her family and all her extended family, moved here to Southern California from Arkansas in the 50s.  They spread out, throughout the southland to Los Angeles, San Diego, with a large percent of them setting up digs in Yucaipa, CA.

Each year, the families took turns hosting Thanksgiving, so we were usually driving somewhere early that morning.  I remember being so excited each year, to see all my cousins and aunts and uncles, who we hadn’t seen throughout the year.  All my cousins were my age and we looked forward to proving to each other, how much we had grown the past year!  When we became teenagers, it became even more important to prove how many street smarts we had acquired and how “cool” we had become.

My dad, brother, all my uncles, second uncles, and pretty much all the males of the family used to participate in the annual “Turkey Bowl,” a “touch football” game (that inevitably ended in “tackle football”) played at the local high school football field.   The women and all the girls, used to stay home and cook, gossip and worry about which man would get hurt – Every year there were injuries and trips to the E.R.!

My mom and her three brothers adapted to the California lifestyle easily, as they were young when they came here. By the time they were adults they had all but lost their southern accents, but the older family members never lost sight of their southern roots.  Some bought farms in Yucaipa (when it was mostly farmland), raised pigs (for Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners), had fruit orchards AND secretly made “moonshine” behind the back barn!  I remember many a Thanksgiving in Yucaipa, when moonshine got the better of one or more of my great uncles. Once, a fistfight broke out between them and my mom and dad swooped me up and into the car… making a mad dash home.  Once, my great uncle, Johnny, imbibed a bit too much and drove his car into the screened-in porch of my Granny’s house! Again, mom and dad swooped me up in their arms, into the car…and made a mad dash home!

Years later, after many of those family members had passed, my mom took over Thanksgiving hosting duties.  These were some of my favorite memories.  I had a young family of my own by then and we would load up the kids and make the drive to her house early Thursday morning.  There was always a store-bought cheese ball on the table upon our arrival and the smell of Thanksgiving was everywhere!  My mom was remarried by then and her husband, Paul, made the most divine dressing ever!  He would come around the corner and signal for us to come into the kitchen to sample a taste. He would always ask, “does it need anything?” KNOWING already it was perfection…. he knew how good it was, he just wanted to show off – a tradition AND recipe I stole from him and use every year!

After an amazing dinner, we’d settle in for “game time” – usually Poker or Trivial Pursuit, my mom at the head of the table, Paul at the other head, both of them a little toasted from all the wine, ecstatic to have all their family surrounding them….”conducting” music to the soundtrack of “Amadeus.“  Those were the happiest days of their lives, I suspect.

Now it’s Thanksgiving 2009 – I have no idea where the time went, because it was just yesterday that I was running through the orchards in Yucaipa, with my cousins, stopping every so often to play a game of “Truth or Dare.”

I’ve had the honor of hosting Thanksgiving for about 20 years now. Both my parents and my husband’s have passed to the other side, many other family members, as well – including some amazing and beloved dogs!  I don’t dwell on those losses very much throughout the year, but on Thanksgiving they are all here with me….I feel my Mom’s approval, as I’m cleaning the bird at 5:00 in the morning, my Dad winking at me for a job well done, my stepfather guiding me as I chop chicken livers for “his” dressing recipe, my father-in-law, who used to sneak in and eat all the dressing, before it ever made it to the Thanksgiving table; and my adorable dog, Calvin, who once jumped on the table, stole a turkey leg, hid in the laundry room to eat it, then turned into “Cujo”, when I tried to get it back!

The hours from 5:00 am to 7:00 am on Thanksgiving morning are the most precious of my whole year, every year.  It’s still and dark outside and my kitchen is filled with the spirits of ALL my departed loved ones.  I reflect on all my treasured memories of an era that will never be again – at the same time, anticipating the sheer joy when my kids will walk through the door!

We’ll eat cheese balls and patés; I’ll lure everyone into the kitchen to tease them with a “sample” of Paul’s famous dressing; we’ll recite lines from our favorite Thanksgiving movie, “Avalon” (which isn’t technically a Thanksgiving movie – just a beautiful film about the importance of family). My son will “Cut the Toykey” (a line from Avalon), we’ll eat way too much; clear the dishes and make room for the most important part of the day – “game time.”  I’ll be a little toasted, sitting at the head of the table, “conducting” to whatever music is on my iPod playlist – happier than I’ve been all year, surrounded by my family and all the people I love!  That’s why Thanksgiving IS ~ and ALWAYS will be, my favorite holiday.

13
Nov
09

sometimes you’re the louisville slugger…sometimes you’re the ball

:)

“failure is the opportunity to begin again more intelligently” ~ Henry Ford

:)

So, “no book Book Group” was really fun the other night.  If you read about it, I made Pasta Primavera Alfredo – a perfect one-pot meal for everyone and it’s vegetarian (for one of our special members who no longer eats meat at all.)

We started with an easy cheese platter of assorted French and Italian cheeses and everyone’s favorite crackers — “Pita Bites” from Trader Joe’s.  My dessert was completely incongruous with the Italian theme of the evening, but I wanted to make my “Chocolate Angel Pie”…mostly because I wanted to feature it on my blog, for upcoming Thanksgiving Day dessert ideas.

I mentioned the Chocolate Angel Pie on my blog’s Thanksgiving menu, the other day.  I LOVE this pie!  The shell is a cooked meringue and the filling is a chocolate mousse, topped with more whipped cream!  I think it’s a perfect addition to the Thanksgiving dessert table, along with all the other pies made with “traditional crusts.”

I made the pie early in the afternoon and chilled it for several hours.  I took it out when dinner was finished, topped it with fresh whipped cream I made earlier, dusted it with cocoa powder and brought it to the table to serve.  I was hoping to get a couple of nice photos once it was sliced.

Unfortunately, that didn’t happen.

Though the pie looked beautiful, something went amok while making it, because as I started slicing, it just fell apart in globs all over the place!   No biggie for my “no-book Book Group” ladies – everyone was well liquored up by then, so they didn’t care that it looked like chocolate goulash on a plate….it tasted delicious, just the same.

I’ve made this pie dozens and dozens of times and have never had this happen.  The only thing I did differently, was that I used Pam to grease the pie plate….I usually use butter.

I have no idea if that’s what made the difference, but just in case, I recommend you “grease” the pie plate with a light coat of butter…. and remember, ANY dinner party disaster can be solved with another glass of wine…or three!

:)

Angel pie

Chocolate Angel Pie

A 9-inch glass pie pan

Meringue Pie Shell

5 large egg whites
pinch of salt
1/2 teaspoon Cream of Tartar
1 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup coarsely chopped pecans


Chocolate Filling

5 ounces Semisweet Chocolate (Scharffen Berger is always best, IMO)
1/4 cup milk – heated
1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
a pinch of salt
1 cup heavy cream
2 tablespoons powdered sugar

1 cup Whipped cream for garnishing (I like to make mine – but you can easily use Reddi-Wip)

Preheat oven to 275 degrees

Prepare the Meringue Shell

wire attachemnt for egg whites and cream

In your standing mixer, with the whisking attachment, beat the egg whites, cream of tartar and salt, on high speed,  until they resemble “soft peaks”  Gradually add the sugar and continue beating until the mixture becomes stiff….about 4 minutes

Grease the glass pie plate and spread the meringue mixture over the bottom and spread it up the sides – creating a “well” for the filling.  Sprinkle the pecans pieces in the “well” and bake for 1 hour.  Turn your oven off and allow the “shell” to remain inside to cool – about 20 minutes.   Remove it and let it cool completely.

Prepare the chocolate filling

In a double-boiler, or over VERY low heat, melt the chocolate.  Slowly stir in the hot milk, vanilla and salt and mix well.  Remove it from the heat, when smooth and let it cool – completely

In your standing mixer, with the “whisk” attachment again, whip  the cream (1 cup) until stiff and fold it gently into the cooled chocolate.  Pour it into the “well” of the cooled meringue shell and refrigerate the pie for at least three hours.

Before serving, spread the whipped cream over the top of the pie (as pictured).  Cheers!

:)

Angel pie

11
Nov
09

A Thanksgiving Day tradition…the Roquefort Cheese Ball

Roquefort Cheese Ball

:)

This menu is what Thanksgiving looks like at my house…the turkey and all the fixins are cooked almost exactly the way my mom made them growing up. That means all the veggies come from a can….the green bean casserole, the candied yams….It’s the one day of the year that canned veggies taste better than fresh – to me and mine!

There were a couple years I tried to incorporate new dishes into the day’s menu, but it didn’t take. I prefer our traditional Thanksgiving Day, old-fashioned meal – the same way my mom prepared it!

:)

Thanksgiving at the Ritz Carlson

Appetizers:

Braunschweiger paté
Roquefort Cheese Ball
Crackers

Beverages:

Mimosas or Pear Bellinis – appetizers
Wine – dinner
Coffee, espresso, assorted digestifs – after dinner

First course:

1 demitasse cup Cream of Walnut Soup (Thomas Keller’s recipe)

Dinner:

Roast turkey – stuffed with lemons, oranges, onion and garlic
Mashed potatoes
Gravy
Mrs. Cubbison’s Stuffing/dressing – made with onion, celery, garlic and chopped chicken livers
Candied Yams (canned) with butter and mini-marshmallows
Green Bean Casserole (canned)
Corn Pudding – I screw it up EVERY year, but still keep trying
Jellied Cranberry sauce (canned)
Kings Hawaiian Sweet rolls

Desserts:

Pumpkin pies
Chocolate Angel pie
Boysenberry Pie
Apple Crisp

I posted a recipe a few weeks ago for my Braunschweiger Paté - a Thanksgiving appetizer table staple. The only other dish that sits alongside the paté is a homemade Roquefort Cheese Ball.

My mom always had a delicious, store-bought, “cheese ball” sitting on the coffee table on Thanksgiving Day, but a few years ago, while perusing one of my favorite cookbooks, “The Plantation Cookbook,” I ran across a recipe for a “Roquefort Cheese Ball” that I made and loved! I’ve made it every Thanksgiving since!

:)

The Plantation Cookbook

Hubby, on the other hand, not so much (he has that whole “hating blue cheese” issue) so he noshes on the paté.

:)

Here’s the recipe from “The Plantation Cookbook” for a “Roquefort Cheese Ball,” rolled in chopped pecans ….if you like Roquefort – you’ll love this AND you can make it in advance and freeze, for Thanksgiving!

(the only thing I’ve changed about this recipe is the use of a food processor – the original used a hand blender – it was originally published in 1972)

:)

Roquefort Cheese Ball

Adapted from “The Plantation Cookbook”


8 ounces Philadelphia Brand Cream Cheese
8 Ounces extra sharp Cheddar cheese
3 ounces Roquefort cheese
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce
1 garlic clove, pressed
1/2 cup pecans, finely chopped
1/2 cup Italian parsley, finely chopped

Allow cheese to soften at room temperature.  Break into pieces.  Cream and thoroughly mix in your food processor with the Worcestershire sauce, garlic and 1/4 of the pecans.  Remove the mixture to a large piece of plastic wrap, form into a loose ball and chill until firm, about 1-2 hours.

When the cheese is firm, you can shape it into a ball or log.

In  a shallow dish, add the chopped parsley and remaining chopped pecans.  Roll the cheese ball (or log) to coat it.  Refrigerate until ready to serve – then take it out 30 minutes before, to allow it to soften before eating.  Cheers!

:)




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© Sandy Carlson and À la Sandy, 2009. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Sandy Carlson and À la Sandy with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

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