Sunday
Buy your turkey. Depending on how many people you are having, you can choose your size. You should allow 1.5 persons per pound of turkey. This will allow for leftovers. Remember, you need a covered roaster or cooking bag. And sometimes, it is better to roast 2 small turkeys, as opposed to one large one. Unless there is someone who likes dark meat, a turkey breast is fine. If you are buying a fresh turkey, do not buy it until Tuesday. Tonight, put the turkey in the refrigerator to thaw. Finalize your menu. Make any last trips to the grocery to avoid the rush. While you can certainly start preparing some of your food now and freeze, there is no doubt food is better done the day of.
Monday
Make my Mom's Cranberry Conserve, and store in a covered container until Thursday.
Martha's Cranberry Conserve
4 cups fresh or frozen cranberries
1 Tbsp grated orange peel
2 oranges, peeled sliced and quartered
1 cup raisins
1 1/4 cups water
1 cup chopped pecans
2 1/2 cups sugar
In large saucepan, combine cranberries, orange peel, oranges, raisins, and water. Simmer until cranberries are soft (this takes about 20 minutes, until they split). Add pecans and sugar, stir well, and simmer 10-15 minutes, stirring often. Cool, then spoon into containers and chill. Stays good for about 2 weeks.
Tuesday
Make the cornbread for the dressing, or start drying your bread cubes. Make a mental inventory of what dishes you plan to use, and make sure you will have enough ice, drinks, Today you can also make any cakes or pound cakes you plan to serve. Have someone come over and help you clean the house.
Wednesday
You can make several dishes today. Such as:
Macaroni and cheese
Hashbrown casserole*
Green Bean casserole
Whipped sweet potatoes with marshmallow topping*
Baked Beans
Pumpkin Pie*
Apple Cake*
Dumplings (just cut and place in refrigerator until you need them)
You can also chop the onions and celery for the dressing.
Catt's Hashbrown Casserole
1 - 2 lb bag frozen southern style hashbrown potatoes, thawed (I use cubed but you can use shredded if you prefer)
1 can cream of chicken soup
1 cup sour cream
1 stick butter or margarine
1/2 cup milk
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese (I use sharp, but use your own tastes)
1 tablespoon dried minced onion
salt and pepper to taste
1 cup (about 1 "row") crushed Ritz crackers
Preheat oven to 350.
Grease a casserole dish, a 7x11 works well, or a deep round dish. In a large mixing bowl, combine soup, sour cream, margarine, milk, cheese and onion, 1 teaspoon of salt and 1/2 teaspoon of pepper. Mix (I use a wooden spoon) stirring until creamy. Fold in potatoes until incorporated, making sure not to over mix so the potatoes will hold their shape. Pour into greased dish, top with crushed crackers and a few sprinkles of pepper (optional, I like the smell of the pepper) and bake for 45 minutes or until golden brown and bubbly. *For extra richness, mix the cracker crumbs with 1/2 stick melted butter thoroughly before topping the casserole. It gives the top a nice crunchy but still soft texture.
Catt's Sweet Potatoes
I start out with a large can of sweet potatoes. I boil them until they are hot, and then drain the liquid. In a large bowl, add the sweet potatoes, and a generous amount of butter, at least 1/2 a stick (or more if you prefer.) Add 1/4 cup of packed brown sugar and just a pinch of salt (it brings out the flavor of the potatoes.) As you whip the potatoes, start adding some heavy cream, until they are the consistency you prefer (we like ours firm.) Pour into a greased casserole dish, and top with marshmallows. Bake in a 400-degree oven, just until marshmallows are slightly brown. Serve. Very simple and delicious.
Last year I added Egg Nog instead of heavy cream - they were heavenly!
*You can use fresh sweet potatoes, just bake off 4 - 5 sweet potatoes until soft - peel, dice and proceed. Skip ahead to adding the ingredients and whipping.
This next method is very close to my heart. My mother made these as a newlywed, and she often told me my dad was so impressed. You prepare the potatoes, adding the butter, brown sugar but no milk. They need to be stiff. You take the potato mixture, and form it around a large marshmallow. Roll those in coarsely crushed cornflakes that's been tossed with melted butter, and place on a greased cookie sheet. Bake at 400 degrees, for just about 5 minutes or so. Watch carefully, because if you overcook, the marshmallow will disappear.
Catt's Pumpkin Pie
1 can (15 oz) pumpkin (not pie filling)
2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice
½ teaspoon salt
2 large eggs, plus 2 yolks
1-cup evaporated milk
1 can sweetened condensed milk
9 inch pie shell, baked
Preheat oven to 300 degrees. In heavy saucepan, heat pumpkin, salt and pumpkin spice to blend, just a few minutes. Add both milks - cook until heated through. Whisk eggs and yolks with a mixer. With the mixer running, add pumpkin, a spoonful at a time at first until you bring the eggs to temperature - then add the rest. Adding the filling too quickly will cause the eggs to cook. Mix until you have a silky texture. Pour warm filling into pre baked pie shell. Bake until set - a knife inserted in the middle will come out clean. Cool an hour, and serve with whipped cream.
My Mamaw's Apple Cake
1 cup cooking oil
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
2 cups self-rising flour
1-teaspoon vanilla
3 cups chopped apples
1-cup nuts
½ cup raisins
1-teaspoon cinnamon
1-teaspoon nutmeg
Combine oil, sugar and eggs. Beat well. Add flour and beat well. Add remaining ingredients and blend well with spoon or spatula. Turn batter into a greased and floured 13x9 inch pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 40-45 minutes. Don't forget the trick of tossing the raisins and nuts with a tiny bit of flour to keep them from sinking to the bottom of your cake!
Thursday
This is the big day!
8:00 am
Place turkey in covered roaster or cooking bag, with 2 cups of water. Be sure to salt and pepper the turkey inside and out. For a brown skin, rub generously with real butter. Place in 300-degree oven with lid on. The last 45 minutes, increase oven temperature to 350 degrees, remove the lid or cut open your bag. This will allow a beautiful roasted turkey. At this temperature, you are looking at 3-5 hours for a 12-pound, so you will have to adjust your time. While the turkey is sitting waiting for the side dishes to cook, cover it to retain heat.
While your turkey is baking:
Set your table. Get the side dishes you made the day before and let them come to room temperature. Wash your dishes as you go along. Start your green beans. Add onion, bacon and chicken bullion or base, simmer for 45 minutes. Set to the side, and warm them up before serving.
For the dressing: Break up the bread and/or cornbread for the dressing, Sauté onion and celery gently on low heat until transparent. Add to dressing. Sprinkle with ground sage, I use 1 teaspoon, we like sage but it gets overpowering sometimes. Using the stock from the turkey, get the cubes moist. In a separate bowl, whisk 2 eggs with a little milk. Fold into dressing. Turn dressing into well greased casserole dish (here is a trick for a crisp bottom - let the casserole dish sit in the oven with 2 tablespoons butter until melted. Pour dressing into dish.) Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes. You can now bake the sweet potatoes, macaroni and cheese or baked beans along with the dressing. Increase oven temperature to 400 degrees if baking more than one thing.
Mashed Potatoes: While the dressing is baking, peel potatoes and boil for 20 minutes - start your potatoes in cold water, and they will cook much better without turning to mush. Drain. Heat heavy whipping cream, salt, pepper and butter in a measuring cup: for 8 potatoes, use 3/4 stick margarine to about 1/2 cup whipping cream (you don't have to use cream, you can use milk.) Start mashing the potatoes using a masher or handheld mixer, adding the liquid slowly until they are the consistency you prefer. Place lid on potatoes to retain heat until ready to eat.
Dumplings: While potatoes are boiling, bring more stock to a simmer and add dumplings. Stir frequently but gently until dumplings sink. Cover until time to serve.
Dumpling method: I use 6 cups of stock (which I make by using chicken or turkey base) to one can of a 10 count buttermilk biscuits. Dredge each biscuit in flour lightly and roll out to a large circle about the size of a saucer; use a pizza cutter and slice each biscuit into strips, turn and cut again until you have squares. Drop the biscuits into the simmering stock one by one, and it will take about 15 minutes. Depending on the type of biscuits you use, it's not a bad idea to have a cup or two of hot stock just in case they start to get too thick. You can just add a little stock at a time until you have the balance you want. And as I said above, if you don't have enough stock from your turkey, you can always use chicken or turkey base, and they also have cartons of stock at the grocery usually in the soup aisle. Cutting your dumplings the night before, and covering with plastic wrap in the refrigerator takes a lot of stress out of your preparation on Thanksgiving Day.
Corn: If you are serving this, prepare it now.
Make Gravy
Remove dressing from oven when bubbly around the edges.
Place the rolls in the oven.
Carve turkey
Take food to the table.
Whew! Eat and enjoy, and let everyone else do the dishes!
Remember, if you are not concerned with bringing a whole turkey to the table, bake it all night using my upside down method. Makes the day less stressful.
Take your turkey, just as you are going to bake it the day of. Place in the oven the night before, on 325 degrees. Let it bake all night, breast side down, in your covered roaster or oven bag. When you get up in the morning, increase the oven temperature to 350 and bake 45 minutes. At this point, is does not matter if you remove lid or not - you are not going to bring the whole bird to the table, but rather just lift the turkey from the bones - it is that tender. Strain the stock. Place the meat in a covered casserole dish and chill. An hour before dinner, remove the turkey. Pour boiling gravy made from the stock over the turkey, and serve. Baking your turkey breast side down all night will not make a presentable brown skinned turkey, but will make the best turkey you have ever eaten. Plus, your stock is right there - no waiting to make the dressing, dumplings, etc.
Good luck! And remember everyone - it's important for you to set traditions for your family! These recipes are simple and easy to follow, which means you will have more time with the ones you love.
And for those of you who request it, my most popular recipe ever:
Catt's Pumpkin Dump Cake
1 (29 oz.) can pumpkin
1 (12 oz.) can evaporated milk
1 cup sugar
1/4 tsp. pumpkin pie spice
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
3 eggs
1 box yellow cake mix
1 cup pecans (chopped)
1 cup butter or margarine (melted)
Beat together pumpkin, milk, sugar, pumpkin
pie spice, cinnamon, and eggs. Pour into
9x12 greased baking dish. Sprinkle
the dry cake mix evenly over the pumpkin
mixture, and then sprinkle on pecans. Drizzle
melted butter over the top. Bake at 350 for
1 hour. Cool. Top with
whipping cream, and enjoy!
Friday, November 16, 2007
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4 comments:
Where have you been, girl? I check this blog occasionally and was v. happy to see you back. Someone (Rosie Hawthorne) posts over at the Sandra Lee Meet Market and asked about this blog. I PM'ed her and gave her the link. This was what she was looking for.
Glad to see you're back!
Glad you posted something for Thanksgiving! I am trying to collect all of your recipes, and I was really excited to see a couple here that I didn't already have. Thank you!
Rosie Hawthorne steered my this way. And am I so glad! I love reading about family traditions. Yours, orchidgal, er Marilyn.
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