Thanksgiving Dinner
Shameless self-promotion . . .
One of our photos from Italy has been entered in a photo contest. We are currently 21 out of 373 photos. You can vote by clicking here.
Remember a 10 is good!
*smile*
In my family we celebrate Thanksgiving on the Sunday rather than the Monday. I think it was so that the cook had a day to recover. It works for me!
This morning I got up and had my usual secret Turkey, stuffing, cranberry sandwich held together with a bit of may and gravy. YUM The things Paul misses because he sleeps in. I didn't want to be too piggy so I only made myself half of a sandwich!
There is nothing low-fat or dietary about our Thanksgiving dinner. It is meant to be an indulgence . . . and it was!
We cooked dinner for six. By noon the table was set and a good deal of the cooking was done. I selected recipes which could be made ahead of time and warmed up. This was a great idea, allowing for a more relaxed dinner.
We started off with cheese and crackers in the living room:
We had to keep everything wrapped because 'you-know-who' pictured above was eager to get into anything. We served five cheeses: a 4 year old white cheddar from the Empire Cheese Company, a brick cheese with jalapeno peppers, horseradish cheddar, and two cheeses from the Upper Canada Cheese Company (Comfort Cream and Niagara Gold).
With the cheese we served an assortment of crackers, antipasto, white bean dip, and kielbasa sausage. After our trip to Italy we have started serving jellies with cheese so last night we put out our strawberry jam with cracked black pepper and balsamic vinegar, our fig jelly with rosemary and balsamic, and a pear jelly. Paul rounded out the tray with some roasted pumpkin seeds.
The first course at the table was Cauliflower Soup with 7 year-old Cheddar. I confess that I don't have a recipe for this. I chopped up 2 large cauliflowers and cooked it in about 8 cups of chicken sock until it was tender. After it had cooled I pureed it in the blender. I then made a cheese sauce with the aged cheddar (about 300 g or cheddar and 1 l of milk) to which I added nutmeg. The cauliflower puree and the cheese sauce was combined to make the soup.
Just before serving I heated it up. It was a little thick so I added some more milk to thin it down a bit. We served it in our pumpkin bowls (which we only use once a year! LOL And I wonder why I need a larger home) topped with some of the aged cheddar grated on top and some roasted pumpkin seeds.
We were going to serve a Fennel Apple Salad with Blue Cheese and Candied Pecans but at the last minute we decided that it would be too much food so this is saved for tonight. Paul originally made this salad a few months ago. I blogged about it here. Believe it or not it is low-fat!
For the turkey I did our traditional thing which is to stuff it, and cover it with bacon before it goes into the oven. I have the fondest memories of sneaking into the kitchen to pick off pieces of the bacon after my grandmother had taken the turkey out of the oven when I was a child. Needless to say I could never change this part. I did attempt a different cooking method:
This method for roasting differs from others because it is done on a high heat. I do not recommend cooking more than a 16-pound (7-kilogram) turkey this way. For larger birds, start at 400 F for the first hour and then turn down the oven to 350 F for the remainder of the time. The turkey is cooked when an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the turkey reads 165 F.
To truss the turkey, the perfect thing is the new Food Loop Lace: an ingenious silicone needle and thread you can use to sew up chicken and just about anything else. Just wash and reuse. Available at kitchen stores.
1 14-pound (6 kilogram) turkey
Stuffing of your choice
Olive oil to coat skin
Salt and freshly ground pepper
Preheat oven to 400 F. Bring the bird to room temperature and stuff and truss.
Place on a rack over a roasting pan and rub skin with butter, salt and pepper. Roast for 15 minutes a pound for the first 10 pounds (4.5 kilograms) and 7 minutes a pound (500 grams) for each succeeding one. Add an extra pound (500 grams) for the stuffing. After one hour, turn heat to 375 F.
Baste every half-hour if you remember.
Remove from oven when ready and let sit on a carving board, loosely covered with a tea towel, for 15 minutes to allow juices to retract. While it sits, make the gravy.
As you can see from the pic below, it worked!
Our family has always enjoyed a stuffing made with sausage meat. A few years ago I tried a new recipe: Sausage Stuffing with Leeks and Apple. It was a scary time, imagine trifling with tradition! However, everyone loved it and I have been making it ever since.
INGREDIENTS
12 cups white bread cubes
1 pound sweet Italian sausage, casings removed
1/4 cup butter
6 cups coarsely chopped leeks
2 tart green apples - peeled, cored and chopped
2 cups chopped celery
4 teaspoons poultry seasoning
2 teaspoons dried rosemary, chopped
1 cup dried cranberries
1 1/3 cups chicken broth
salt and pepper to taste
DIRECTIONS
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Spread bread cubes in a single layer over two baking sheets. Bake until slightly dry, about 15 minutes.
- In a large skillet over medium heat, cook sausage, crumbling coarsely, for about 10 minutes or until evenly brown. Drain off grease, and transfer sausage to a large bowl.
- Melt butter in the skillet; add leeks, apples, celery, and poultry seasoning. Cook, stirring frequently, for about 10 minutes. Stir in the rosemary and dried cranberries.
- Mix leek mixture and bread cubes with sausage in bowl. Spoon stuffing into turkey, packing loosely.
- Bake remaining stuffing in a buttered baking dish, covered, at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for about 45 minutes. Uncover, and bake another 15 minutes to brown top.
I'm not a huge fan of cranberry sauce but mom loves the stuff so I have to make it. Paul's idea of cranberry sauce is the lovely can-shaped 'mold' he had as a child. I few years ago I came upon this recipe in a Fine Cooking magazine so I have been using it ever since.
Rosemary Orange Cranberry Sauce
ingredients
how to make
Make Ahead Tips
This sauce can be made up to a week ahead and refrigerated in a covered container.
From Fine Cooking 74, pp. 46
Our vegetables consisted of Sage Mashed Potatoes with Aged White Cheddar, Balsamic Brussel Sprouts with Pancetta, and Butternut Squash with Tangerine and Sage Glaze. I have been making the potatoes for a number of years now. They are rich and decidedly HIGH-fat. This recipe was originally in Bon Appetit magazine in November 2003. You can link to the recipe here.
The Balsamic Brussel Sprouts with Pancetta are a favourite of mine. I love the way that the flavours come together in this dish. The recipe was originally in Fine Cooking as well. The have recently changed their web site so that certain recipes can only be accessed with a membership and this was one of them. Needless to say I immediately took out a membership!
ingredients
how to make
From Fine Cooking 74, pp. 30
The squash recipe was a new one. I wanted something that could be made ahead of time and this was the only one I could find. I am not a fan of squash so I never tried it but Paul tells me it was amazing . . . perhaps I should NOT have given the leftovers away! The recipe for Squash with Tangerine Sage Glaze originally appeared in Bon Appetit in November 2004.
And finally . . . dessert . . . Normally we have a pumpkin pie but I wanted something different this year. I decided to make this cheesecake: Pumpkin Cheesecake with Bourbon Sour Cream Topping It originally appeared in Gourmet magazine way back in November 1990. When the cheesecake was done I ran a knife through the sour cream topping to create a decorative checkerboard pattern. I also decorated it with rosettes of whipping cream to which I added Vietnamese cinnamon and a shard of pumpkin seed brittle. I must admit that I was quite impressed with how this turned out.









Hi Jerry,
Your table looks lovely and makes me want to speed up to our Thanksgiving. I've already printed your recipes. Thanks for all the graet recipes you take the time to post as I love trying them. I too get Bon Appetit and Gourmet for over 30yrs and sometimes the old, tried and true recipes are the best.
Ida
Posted by:Ida : > ) | October 08, 2007 at 05:00 PM
Thanks Ida. I am at a disadvantage because the annual edition of Food and Wine, Gourmet, and Bon Appetit magazine which features Thanksgiving ideas comes out AFTER Canadian Thanksgiving. I often have to save recipes for 11 months before I can try them out. Thank goodness for their well-designed web sites.
Posted by:Jerry | October 08, 2007 at 09:15 PM
I've been making that cheddar sage potato dish since 2003 too! DUH! The rest looks wonderful, even the squash! I'm not cooking THIS week. LOL
Posted by:Palma | October 09, 2007 at 02:51 AM
Good Lord Palma - we werre separated at birth! LOL
I think that you should give up cooking of any sort until after the GTG.
Posted by:Jerry | October 09, 2007 at 07:33 AM
Jerry, what a thoughtful entry. Thank you very much for all the recipes. I'm sure your feast was delicious and that among the many things your guests were thankful for was a big "Thank You" for Jerry being wonderful YOU!
Posted by:Barb Cabot | October 09, 2007 at 09:22 AM
Barb - there were even more thanks when I sent everyone home with leftovers. It is the dinner that goes on and on! LOL
Posted by:Jerry | October 09, 2007 at 09:47 AM
Jerry - looks like you went all out as usual. What a wonderful spread. I'm hoping that all appreciated your efforts. LOL
Posted by:Rose | October 09, 2007 at 05:58 PM
Paul did a great job didn't he? If you're lucky one day he will cook for you!
Posted by:Jerry | October 09, 2007 at 09:01 PM
Your thanksgiving dinner looks pretty amazing!
Posted by:Kevin | October 09, 2007 at 10:36 PM
Hi kevin
Thanks, it did turn out well. Most of what we made we've made before - it makes it easier! Tradition is a huge thing in our family!
Posted by:Jerry | October 10, 2007 at 07:58 AM