TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING
Stress Free Plans and Easy Recipes for Busy Moms
By Marilyn Moll
www.urbanhomemaker.com
Copyrighted 2004
All Rights Reserved
Introduction:
Welcome to Traditional Thanksgiving Stress Free Plans and Easy
Recipes for Busy Moms. As a very busy mom I have perfected our
Thanksgiving Menu and Recipes so that we look forward to the same
menu each year. Busy moms need strategies, plans and recipes
for a stress free Thanksgiving. We at the Urban Homemaker believe
in promoting the old fashioned skills of cooking and baking with
basic, whole ingredients using streamlined methods to save time
and money. Please share this ebook with your friends and relatives
as our way of saying Happy Thanksgiving. If you would like to
know more about the products and information that we offer, please
go to our website www.urbanhomemaker.com. For a free bi-monthly
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product specials, please go to http://tinyurl.com/u4pj to sign
up.
TRADITIONAL THANKSGIVING
By Marilyn Moll
Over the years, my children and I have focused on various historical
aspects of Thanksgiving traditions and used a variety of ways
to focus on and enrich our celebrations. We have read lavishly
illustrated living history stories about the Pilgrims' celebrating
their first Thanksgiving, made colorful Pilgrim and Indian costumes
and headcoverings, roasted our turkey outside on a spit over coals,
and other hands-on activities to create memories. We have prepared
traditional foods such as spicy pumpkin and apple pies, Indian
pudding and arisen early to gather together and watch parades
and football games. Children of all ages, however, can learn that
Thanksgiving has a richer and deeper meaning when they are involved
in all aspects of the preparations and are taught how to focus
on the spiritual blessings God has bestowed on them and their
family as modeled by their parents.
Pausing to Give Thanks
In our family, we don't have extended family members that live
close by to celebrate with, therefore, we have had to dig deeper
to create a fruitful and meaningful celebration that we eagerly
anticipate each year. Although we use Thanksgiving as a time to
reflect on material and financial blessings, we endeavor to take
time to talk about and reflect on the spiritual blessings experienced
both personally and as a family. In fact, we have found that amidst
family afflictions and conflicts a quintessential opportunity
presented to focus on and recognize God's abundant blessings amidst
the challenges and trials incumbent in daily living. Reflection
time enables us to experience deeper appreciation of God's love,
His sufficiency, His great and precious promises of faithfulness,
provision, mercy, goodness and the completed work of the cross.
Difficulties and disappointments of life are tools that God
uses to prune us so that we may bring forth more fruit in our
lives. Difficulties help us to learn to count it all joy and give
thanks in all circumstances.
Planning the Meal
In our family, preparations of our traditional family recipes
sets the stage for a unforgettable and worthwhile Thanksgiving
celebration. When we have eaten and are satisfied, our immediate
family gathers together, not necessarily on Thanksgiving Day,
to praise the Lord for all his benefits, to give thanks to him
and praise his name and especially to focus on what He has been
doing in the life of each of us.
Your Thanksgiving meal will be more enjoyable and noteworthy when
you take time to plan the menu, assemble recipes, contact guests,
make shopping lists, and prepare decorations several weeks ahead
of time. When the menu is planned and the grocery list is complete,
make lists and create a time line for completing food preparations,
decorations, cleaning tasks and other preparations ahead of the
big day. Be sure to involve all the children. Set aside the academics
for a few days and focus on the life skills and memories that
they can be develop.
Involve Your Children
Children of all ages enjoy simple to complex kitchen tasks including
milling wheat into flour, measuring dry ingredients, stirring
and kneading dough, rolling pie crusts, cutting fruits and vegetable,
arranging trays of pickles, olives, and vegetables, mixing up
dips, cutting fruits and vegetables, opening cans, shaping rolls,
washing dishes, dusting furniture, vacuuming, cleaning bathrooms,
putting away clutter, setting the table, preparing decorations
and more.
Making Centerpieces
You might be surprised at what gorgeous centerpieces children
can create from simple items such as gourds, pine cones of various
shapes and sizes, nuts, acorns, mini pumpkins, oak leaves, Indian
corn, ribbons, turkeys, pilgrim statues, candles, napkins, doilies,
dried grasses, and whatever else you may have in hand that fits
into the theme of harvest and Thanksgiving. Many of these items
may be found while walking around in your neighborhood or a park.
Older children can teach and supervise the younger children. Teaching
practical life skills to children is the foundation of priceless
traditions and memories. Try to make it a point to take lots of
pictures. They will make timeless additions to student notebooks
or family photo albums.
Practical Tips
Here are a few more practical tips for planning all the cooking
and baking, followed by our family's traditional Thanksgiving
menu as well as some of our family favorite recipes.
1. Purchase as many non-perishable items ahead when they go on
sale.
2. Turkeys are usually on sale ahead of time. Buy the biggest
bird that will fit in your freezer and oven. Leftover turkey can
be frozen in meal sized portions to make some of the tastiest
and most economical main dishes imaginable.
3. Pies, rolls and breads can be baked several weeks ahead and
frozen.
4. Allow sufficient time for the turkey to thaw in your refrigerator.
It may take several days for big turkeys.
5. Clean out your refrigerator and use all the leftovers several
days ahead of the big day to make room for the turkey and trimmings.
6. Clear your counters of any unneeded clutter to make room for
the preparations.
7. Stuffed turkeys cook slower but makes yummier stuffing and
helps to save precious oven space during that last hectic hour
prior to serving.
8. Allow at east one hour prior to serving time for the turkey
roasting to be complete so you have plenty of time to carve, make
gravy, mash the potatoes, heat vegetable dishes, and attend to
other last minute preparations.
Here is the Urban Homemaker Family's Traditional Thanksgiving
Menu and recipes that we have been using for nearly twenty years.
Recipes follow for the * Items.
Turkey, Homemade Gravy*, Herbed Stuffing*
Mashed Potatoes, Aunt Helen's Sweet Potatoes*,
Green Beans Amandine, Cranberry Relish Jello Salad*
Pumpkin Bread*,Fantastic Whole Wheat Rolls*,
Apple Pie*, Pecan Pie*, coffee and tea.
AUNT HELEN'S SWEET POTATOES
The crispy, nutty topping will appeal to children of all ages.
1/4 Cup butter
2 eggs
1/2 C. sugar or honey
2/3 C. evaporated milk
1 tsp vanilla
4 lbs. fresh sweet potatoes cooked OR 4 lbs canned, drained sweet
potatoes
(Note: Sweet potatoes are distinctly and vividly orange colored,
extremely high in vitamin A and often mislabeled as Yams.)
To prepare sweet potatoes in their jackets, drop them into
boiling water to cover and cook until tender, about 25 minutes.
(I usually pressure cook the sweet potatoes in 10 minutes to save
time and money.) Peel and mash the cooked sweet potatoes and mix
with the other ingredients. Place in a shallow 11 X 7 baking dish,
bake at 350° for 30-45 minutes. Then sprinkle the topping
mixture over the sweet potatoes and bake another 15-20 minutes
Topping Mixture
2 Cups Crisp Rice cereal
1/2 C. chopped pecans or walnuts
1/4 C. butter
1/2 C. brown sugar or Sucanat
CRANBERRY RELISH JELLO MOLD
I have served this jello mold at Thanksgiving and Christmas for
nearly 30 years! This recipe can be prepared several days ahead.
Yields 8-10 servings
1. Assemble and prepare the following ingredients:
20 oz. can crushed pineapple unsweetened (drain, reserving
the juice)
2 pkg (3 oz each) cherry, raspberry, or strawberry gelatin
1 Cup boiling water
1 Cup fresh, whole cranberries
1 - 11 oz can mandarin oranges
1 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped pecans
1 TB lemon juice
2. Dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add lemon juice and reserved
pineapple juice.
3. Chill until gelatin begins to set-up about one hour. Meanwhile,
coarsely chop cranberries in blender or food processor.
4. Stir in cranberries, oranges, pineapple, celery, and pecans
to the thickened gelatin. Place this mixture in holiday jello
mold or attractive glass serving bowl. Chill until firm.
HERBED STUFFING
Stuffing recipes are easy to make.
1. Cut bread into crouton-size cubes, about 20 slices of toasted
white or whole wheat bread OR use one large bag of Pepperidge
Farm Herb Stuffing Mix (For homebaked whole wheat bread use 15
thin slices.) Place in a large bowl.
2 If you are using the Pepperidge Farm Stuffing Mix, omit this
step.
IF you are using your own croutons, Combine in a separate small
bowl and sprinkle over the bread:
2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. pepper
1 TB sage or poultry seasoning.
3. Crumble, brown, and drain the sausage. Add the sausage to
the stuffing mix or bread cubes:
1/4 pound bulk turkey breakfast sausage,
1/4 pound bulk turkey Italian sausage
(Leftover sausage can be frozen for scrambled eggs, pizzas, etc.)
4. Saute the celery and onion in 1 TB of butter:
1 cup chopped celery
1 chopped onion
5. Next, add to the bread cubes/stuffing mixture:
4 TB fresh chopped parsley
1 peeled, cored, chopped Granny Smith or Jonathan apple
3/4 cup cranberries (for color/ optional)
6. Combine together:
1 stick melted butter
2 Cups canned chicken broth or reconstituted chicken broth powder
7. Drizzle all the liquid over the other ingredients and lightly
toss until well mixed.
8. Stuff the bird loosely because stuffing expands during roasting,
or place the mixture in a glass casserole dish and bake the stuffing
separately until hot. It is very hard to ruin stuffing; use the
ingredients you have and like, but don't forget the onion and
celery. I can't wait to make this right now!
PERFECT HOMEMADE GRAVY
Ladies, don't spoil your feast by using store bought turkey
gravy mix. Your guests will notice the difference and remember
this delicious homemade gravy. My daughter was horrified when
she was helping another family clean up the meal and all the turkey
drippings had been discarded! Make lots of gravy, it is perfect
for leftovers, and many turkey casserole variations.
The secret to homemade gravy is to make a delicious stock/base
by simmering the giblets and neck in 2-3 cups of water while the
turkey roasts, and saving ALL the drippings and browned crusty
bits on the bottom of the roasting pan. Canned chicken broth or
commercial gravy mix is a poor substitute, so resolve not to be
tempted to compromise these steps.
Pour all the turkey drippings from the roasting pan into a
large measuring cup (at least 2 Cup measure) and allow the grease
to separate. While the drippings are separating, pour 2-3 cups
of water into the roasting pan and bring it to a boil by placing
the pan on two burners on your stove top. Using a wooden spoon,
stir up these browned bits so they "dissolve" into the
water. This step is essential to wonderful tasting, beautifully
browned gravy and makes cleaning up a roasting pan a much easier
task. Reserve 4-8TB (1/4- 1/2 Cup) of the turkey grease once it
separates from the drippings.
After the roasting pan has simmered with water and turned a
deep brown color, combine this liquid with turkey drippings (not
the fat) and the broth from simmering turkey giblets so that you
have 5-6 Cups of liquid. I use my 6-Cup blender as a measuring
cup.
Then combine 1/4-1/2 Cup turkey fat (or butter) with 8-10 TB
flour (whole wheat pastry preferred) until it gelatinizes, or
thickens in a large sauce pan. Keep stirring over medium low heat
for about one minute.
Now, VERY GRADUALLY, pour the liquid from the turkey giblets
and the roasting pan into the fat/flour mixture while you stir
it continuously so as to not have any lumps. Stir continuously
until the entire mixture thickens. Adjust the liquid if needed
so you have a nice pourable gravy. Add 2-3 tsp salt or to taste,
OR use 1-2 TB of Sue's Kitchen Magic for a richer/deeper flavor
and for a lower sodium gravy. Save leftover gravy leftovers for
future meals, open face sandwiches, etc!
FANTASTIC WHOLE WHEAT ROLLS
These wonderful rolls will be a hit for everyday or special occasions.
Halve the recipe for a smaller batch.
2 1/2 Cups warm water
1/2 Cup honey
1/2 Cup dry powdered milk (optional)
2 TB yeast
2 eggs
6-8 cups whole wheat flour*
2 1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 Cup oil
1/2 Cup vital gluten
2 TB dough enhancer (optional)
melted butter
Combine warm water, honey, powdered milk, and yeast in mixing
bowl. Allow yeast to activate. Add the eggs and 3 Cups flour.
Stir until thoroughly mixed; dough will resemble cake batter.
Cover, let rest until bubbly, about 30 minutes. Add salt, oil,
and enough of the remaining flour until the dough pulls away from
the sides of the bowl. Be careful to not add too much flour. Knead
the dough for 6-8 minutes or until the gluten is developed or
the dough is soft and pliable, not dry. Place the dough on a lightly
greased surface. Grease the baking sheets. Pinch off small round
portions of dough, and roll into an an 8-inch rope. Tie the "rope"
in a single knot. Place the knots in rows on baking sheets, cover,
and let rise until double. Bake in a 350 degree oven for 20 to
25 minutes or until lightly browned. Brush with melted butter
if desired, and remove to a cooling rack. Makes 2-3 dozen.
Multi-grain variation: Substitute 1 cup of 7-Grain Mix, cracked
OR 1 Cup cracked wheat for one cup of the whole wheat flour.
* IF you do not have high quality fresh home milled whole wheat
flour I would recommend that you use half bread flour or all-purpose
flour in place of some of the whole wheat flour in order to avoid
heavy, dense rolls.
AMERICAN APPLE PIE
This is the best Apple Pie Recipe I have ever found. Use tart
apples such as Jonathan, Granny Smith, Gala, Macintosh or a combination
of apples for fabulous flavor. The spices used in this apple pie
version are the best. Serve with real whipped cream or French
Vanilla ice cream.
1 Double Crust Pie Recipe (use your favorite pie crust recipe
or check http://tinyurl.com/2uwal for for Never Fail Pie Crust)
8-9 Large tart cooking apples, pared, cored and sliced thin. (An
Apple Peeler saves LOTS of time)
1/4 Cup fresh lemon juice
6 TB flour, whole wheat pastry flour is good
3/4 Cup sugar or Sucanat, more if desired
1 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. nutmeg (key ingredient)
2 TB butter (not margarine)
Place prepared bottom crust in a 9-inch pie pan. Put sliced,
cored, peeled apples into a large mixing bowl and toss with lemon
juice. Preheat the oven to 400° F. In a small bowl, combine
the flour, sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg. Sprinkle 1/4 Cup of the
sugar mixture on the bottom pie crust and add the rest of the
sugar mixture to the apples and stir to coat the apples. Fill
the pie crust heaping full with the apple mixture. Dot with the
butter.
Place the top crust over the filling. Press edges together
and flute. Bake about 50 minutes, until the crust is golden browned.
Serve with favorite topping. Makes one pie.
PECAN PIE
A simple, easy and delicious classic!
PREHEAT OVEN TO 450°
Line a 9" pie pan with single crust of pie dough (Never
Fail Pie Crust Recipe can be found at http://tinyurl.com/2uwal),
fork it all over very thoroughly to allow steam to escape and
bake it only partially, from 5 to 7 minutes. Allow it to cool.
Reduce oven heat to 375°.
Combine and beat thoroughly:
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
1/2 tsp. salt
1/3 cup melted butter
1 cup light corn syrup
Stir In:
1 cup pecan halves
1 tsp. vanilla
Fill the shell. Bake the pie 40 to 50 minutes at 375° or
until a knife inserted in the filling comes out clean. I have
found that when the pie looks browned it is done. Serve warm or
cold.
PUMPKIN BREAD
This classic pumpkin bread recipe will make 3 to 4 medium sized
loaves, or lots of muffins, plenty for family and gifts.
4 1/2 C. sugar, white, brown, Sucanat, or combination
1 1/2 C. vegetable oil
6 eggs
2 tsp. nutmeg
2 tsp. cinnamon
1 TB salt
3 C. canned pumpkin
1 c. water
1 1/2 tsp. baking soda
3/4 tsp. baking powder
4 1/2 C flour
Combine first eight ingredients and beat one minute. Stir together
the flour, soda and baking powder, then add to wet mixture. Stir
all ingredients until well-combined without overmixing. Pour batter
into greased loaf pans or muffin tins. Bake in 325° F oven
for 50-60 minutes (regular sized loaf pans). Decrease baking time
for muffins and mini-loaves. Test for doneness, cool five minutes
in pan and finish cooling on a wire rack. Wrap completely cooled
product in plastic wrap or bread bags for storage. Variation:
Add 1-2 C. chopped nuts and,or raisins to batter before baking.
TURKEY LEFTOVER RECIPES
With all those delicious turkey leftovers, here are a few recipes
we look forward to each year after Thanksgiving!!! This is absolutely
the best part of Thanksgiving.
TURKEY CHOWDER
My friend, Debi Nancarrow, shared this recipe with me in 1985
that had become not only a family favorite of theirs but also
part of their "Twelfth Night Party" Celebration tradition.
The recipe has been published in a coffee table book celebrating
Colorado Christmas traditions and it is probably in other books
as well. I guarantee this recipe is a winner for those leftover
bits of turkey.
If you make homemade turkey stock from the leftover bones the
flavor skyrockets to a perfect "10"! Even if you can't
try this recipe out this year, be sure to save the recipe for
future use. I usually double the amounts to have some soup for
the freezer. If you let the soup sit a day, the flavor improves
with age. We've eaten this in bread bowls that I've made. Fabulous!
2 C. sliced carrots
3 C. water, turkey broth or canned chicken broth
1 large floret of broccoli OR 1-10 oz box of broccoli
1 C. onion, chopped finely
1/2 C. celery, sliced
1 tsp. salt
1/2 C. ground oat flour (blend rolled oats in the blender to make
flour)
2 C. milk or allergy alternative soy product
6 oz. Swiss cheese, grated
1-1/2 C. diced turkey
Combine carrots, broth, onions, celery, broccoli, and salt.
Bring to a boil over medium heat. Simmer 10 minutes. Bring to
rolling boil again, and gradually stir in the oat flour, stirring
constantly.
Let simmer another 10 minutes until lumps disappear. Reduce heat.
Add milk, turkey. Remove from heat. Stir in cheese. Serves 4-6.
TURKEY TETRAZZINI
Serves: 6-8 servings (2-1/2 qt casserole)
3 cups diced turkey pieces
10 oz whole grain pasta of choice or use spaghetti
1/2 cup melted butter
1/2 cup whole wheat pastry flour or 6 TB unbleached white flour
1-3/4 cups hot milk, low fat if desired
1 cup Turkey or Chicken broth (homemade is tastiest)
1/4 cup cooking sherry or white grape juice
1/2 tsp. salt
1/4 tsp. pepper
1/8 tsp nutmeg
1 Cup fresh mushroom slices, sauteed in oil or butter OR 4 oz
can mushroom stems and pieces, drained
1/3 Cup Parmesan Cheese
1. Cook pasta according to package directions until just barely
tender or use leftover spaghetti or other pasta. Rinse, and drain.
2. Make the sauce by blending flour into melted butter and cook
and stir over medium heat about 1 minute; remove from heat. Blend
in milk and chicken broth. Return to heat; cook and stir until
thickened.
3. Blend in sherry, salt, pepper, nutmeg, and mushrooms. Combine
pasta, turkey, and sauce and place in casserole dish. Top with
Parmesan Cheese. Bake in 350 degree oven for 20-30 minutes or
until bubbly. Make two casseroles, one for the freezer and one
to serve.
GOURMET TURKEY SANDWICH
Sourdough bread, French bread or whole grain equivalent
Jellied cranberry sauce
Cream cheese
Leftover turkey meat (white meat, preferably)
Spread cranberry sauce and cream cheese on opposite
sides of bread, and then simply layer on some cold left-
over turkey meat.