Thanksgiving 2015

Happy Thanksgiving Day to all of you! May your plates and portfolios be full, and may we all have peace and hope.

 

 

And, of course, may all the correct teams win this weekend!

Happy Thanksgiving

Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Don’t eat too much.  That is all.

Happy Thanksgiving to All!

Today, do nothing in moderation!

 

http://youtu.be/lStSLZiT0WE

 

Bites & Pieces: Open Thanksgiving Thread

Today has been all about cranberries for me.  I’ve made and canned both cranberry chutney and cranberry salsa.  The chutney is a great condiment with Thanksgiving turkey, or for that matter with almost any other meat.  The salsa is an unusual treat if your tastebuds  like tart.

I’m way pumped about Thanksgiving (I’ve posted before that Thanksgiving is THE holiday in my family), but I really can’t do my other food assignments this far in advance.  My big flurry of activity will be next week.  Sigh, still experimenting with baked apple recipes.  Does anybody recommend a particularly good cinnamon?  I’m planning to visit the spice store on Monday.

What are everybody’s plans for the holiday?  And who has some good recipes to share?

Cranberry Chutney*

 Ingredients

  • 6 cups fresh or frozen cranberries, (1 1/2 pounds)
  • 2 cups raspberries and/or chopped apples
  • 2 shallots, minced
  • 2 jalapeno peppers, seeded and minced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar
  • 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
  • 1 1/2 cups red-wine vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons minced fresh ginger
  • 2 tablespoons whole mustard seeds
  • 1 tablespoon freshly grated orange zest
  • 1 tablespoon freshly grated lemon zest
  • 2 teaspoons salt

Preparation

Combine all ingredients except tender fruits or berries, e.g., raspberries, in a large saucepan; bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat and simmer, uncovered, stirring often, until the cranberries have broken down and the mixture has thickened somewhat, 10 to 15 minutes.  When reduced to a simmer, add tender fruits or berries.  Let cool completely. Ladle the chutney into clean jars and refrigerate.

Nutrition

Per tablespoon : 35 Calories; 0 g Fat; 0 g Sat; 0 g Mono; 0 mg Cholesterol; 9 g Carbohydrates; 0 g Protein; 1 g Fiber; 58 mg Sodium; 15 mg Potassium

Exchanges: 1/2 other carbohydrate

 Makes about 5 C.  Refrigerate chutney in an airtight container for up to 1 month.

* Source:  Modified from www.eatingwell.com

Vickie’s Cranberry Salsa**

Ingredients

1 pkg fresh cranberries, chopped (use food processor)

1 8-oz can crushed pineapple, drained

2/3 cup sugar

2 T finely chopped onion

1 jalapeno pepper, seeded and chopped

¼ t salt

¼ t fresh cilantro, chopped (optional)

Preparation

Combine all ingredients in large bowl.  Cover and chill for 2 hours to let flavors blend.  Store in refrigerator in jars.

**Source:  Physical therapist clinician in Oklahoma.

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Brent’s Turkey on the Grill

Turkey in the Weber Kettle: While this will not work with stuffing inside the bird, and you won’t get gravy from it, the turkey comes out juicy and there is a great smoky flavor.  The best part is that it frees up the kitchen for other stuff.

Here is how we do it.  Basically the recipe from Weber.

Turkey preparation is easy – take out the neck and giblets ad.  Rub the outside with olive oil and then sprinkle with kosher salt and coarse black pepper.

Put a foil pan from the supermarket in the center of the grill. Put around 20 briquettes of charcoal on each side and light.  Be sure to place the grate such that the spaces on each side are over the charcoal.  Take a paper towel and pour some olive oil on it and oil the grate.  Once the coals are gray, put the turkey on the grate and place the cover over the grill.  Open the vents.  Add 8 briquettes per side every 45 minutes until the turkey is done (180 degrees in the thigh).  You should have a nice crispy skin, with a tender, smoky inside.


Spiced Cranberry Sauce with Zinfandel

I once had an open-minded Mormon ask me for this recipe when I assured him that most of the alcohol cooks off.  You’ve inspired me to make if for our Thanksgiving feast this year, okie!

  • 1 3/4 cups Zinfandel
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup (packed) golden brown sugar
  • 6 whole cloves
  • 6 whole allspice
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 1 3X1-inch strip orange peel
  • 1 12-oz bag cranberries

Combine all ingredients except cranberries in medium saucepan.  Bring to a boil over medium high heat, stirring until sugar dissolves.  Reduce heat and simmer until reduced to 1 3/4 cups, about 10 minutes.  Strain syrup into large saucepan.  Add cranberries to syrup and cook over medium heat until berries burst, about 6 minutes.  Cool.  Transfer sauce to medium bowl.  Cover and refrigerate until cold.  Can be made up to 1 week ahead.  Keep refrigerated.  Makes about 3 cups.

–Michigoose


Betty Crocker’s Very Basic Stuffing

You remember that cookbook I told you about?  This is the stuffing recipe from it, and it’s still my favorite.  I add more sage than the recipe calls for, but other than that haven’t changed a thing.

  • 2 loaves of bread, cubed
  • 1 cup butter
  • 3/4 cup finely minced onion
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped celery (leaves and stalks)
  • 2 tbl salt
  • 1 tsp pepper
  • 1 tbl sage

Use 2  – 4 day old bread and cut off the crusts.  Melt the butter in a large heavy skillet, then add the onion and cook until yellow, stirring occasionally.  Stir in some of the bread to soak up the butter, then turn into a bowl and mix with the rest of the ingredients.  Add turkey broth to desired moistness; at this point you can either stuff the turkey or cover and cook in a 350 degree oven.

–Michigoose


MiA’s annual TG contribution – I think I posted here last year – but here it is:

Mark’s Apple Cranberry Currant Pie

PREP AND COOK TIME: About 1 1/2 hours, plus at least 1 hour to cool
MAKES: 8 [adult male or teenager] servings

1/4 cup Gran Marnier [or brandy, if you are short on the good stuff]
1/4 cup currants [look like tiny raisins – you could use raisins in a pinch but they are not the same]
1 cup fresh [or thawed frozen] cranberries [I find fresh make a tarter pie – I am OK with tart]
About 3/4 cup granulated FRUCTOSE [a lot of apple pie recipes call for a cup or more of sugar – fructose is sweeter and way lower on the glycemic index]
1/2 cup tapioca flour [I never use cornstarch in a fruit pie]
1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 oz 1/2+1/2
6 cups sliced/chopped Granny Smith apples [about 2 1/4 lb]. I like the skin on for this pie – it’s more “rustic”.
2×9-inch pie pastry shells – I either make my own or buy really great shells at Central Market. When I make my own it is in no way unusual.

1. In a small bowl, combine Gran Marnier and currants. Cover and let stand until currants are plump, at least 1 hour. [Sometimes I cheat and do not soak this long. No biggie. The plumpness of currants is mainly a texture deal]

2. Chop/slice apples, skin on, using a mix of techniques for slices and chunks. If there will be a delay between prep and oven, put the 6 cups of apples in a big bowl and add a little OJ to keep them from browning. LATER YOU MUST THOROUGHLY DRAIN AND PAT DRY THE APPLES! My grandmother taught me the OJ instead of lemon juice trick about 52 years ago.

3. Sort cranberries and discard any that are bruised or decayed. Rinse and drain berries.

4. In a large bowl, mix fructose, tapioca flour, nutmeg, and salt. With a slotted spoon, lift currants from Gran Marnier ; reserve Gran Marnier. Add currants, cranberries, and chopped apples to fructose mixture and mix well. Taste and add more fructose if desired. Pour filling into unbaked pie pastry in pan. Cut hole pattern in top crust. Mix 1/2+1/2 with reserved Gran Marnier and cinnamon and brush liberally on pie crust. Carefully braid foil around pie’s edge to keep pie from from crisping-burning on crust edge that overlaps the pan during baking. [Later, pass off the tiny pieces of foil that some guest finds in the crust edge as “healthy mineral”. :-)]

5. Bake on the bottom rack of a 375° oven until juices bubble around edges and through top holes, 55 to 65 minutes. If pie browns too quickly – check after 30 minutes – cover loosely with foil.

6. Set pie, uncovered, on a rack until cool to touch, at least 1 hour.

Two Contributions by the Fairlington Blade

Mushroom Thyme Gravy

Note: this came from the Food52 website. Good enough that I didn’t bother bringing out the regular gravy. That’s all for me. Muahahahaha

1/3 cup dried mushrooms
2 cups vegetable stock
3 tablespoons butter
1 ½ tablespoon minced shallot
3 tablespoons flour
3 tablespoons soy sauce
½ cup light cream
1 tablespoon sherry
1 tablespoon minced fresh thyme
salt & pepper

1. Bring vegetable stock to a boil. In a small bowl pour stock over mushrooms. Let soak for 20 minutes.
2. Remove mushrooms from bowl, setting the stock aside for later. Mince or thinly slice the mushrooms.
3. In a medium saucepan melt the butter. Add the minced shallot and saute for 5 minutes over medium heat until softened.
4. Add the flour to the butter/shallot mixture stirring constantly. Cook for a 2 minutes.
5. Gradually add the reserved vegetable stock, atirring well to incorporate. Cook over medium heat until thickened.
6. Add the reserved mushrooms, soy sauce, cream, sherry & thyme. Cook for a few more minutes until heated through and thickened to desired consistency. Season to taste with salt & pepper.

Roasted Beets with Grapefruit Glaze

The glaze is sourced from Mollie Katzen’s Vegetable Dishes I Can’t Live Without. I prefer using bunches of beets with the greens still attached. This is a particularly colorful dish if you use a few different colors.

2 – 3 pounds of beets
2 large pink grapefruit
3 tablespoons maple syrup
1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar
1 tablespoon cornstarch or arrowroot

1. Spray small roasting pan or bread pan with vegetable oil (or toss beets with vegetable oil). Rinse beets, cut off leaves (but leave stem on), and put in pan. Cover with aluminum foil and put in 350 degree oven for about an hour. The cooking time depends upon the size.
2. Take out the beets and let them cool. Remove skins with your hands. Cut into 1 inch chunks. Set aside.
3. Juice grapefruit and strain to get one cup of juice.
4. Add maple syrup and vinegar to juice
5. Put cornstarch in a small saucepan over medium heat. Gradually add juice mixture and cook until thickened.
6. Combine beets with glaze. If using multicolored beets, keep them separate and then add everything together when serving.

Pre-Thanksgiving Bites

Everyone has their favorite way of doing their bird for the Big Day (and, really, it’s kind of too close to the holiday to think about changing turkey recipes at this point. . . but if you ask very, very nicely I’ll let you in on the secret of how the world’s Best Damn Turkey gets fixed at Chez Michigoose most years) but side dishes are something that we can play around with–or, to be grammatically correct, something with which we can play around.

Have I mentioned that my mother was an English teacher?

At any rate, here is my twist on one of the classics:

Better Than Campbell’s Green Bean Casserole


1         cup        Italian bread crumbs
3         cups       Fried onions (about a 6 oz can)
2         lb           Green beans, trimmed and halved
3         T            Unsalted butter
1         lb            Button mushrooms, cleaned, trimmed and broken into pieces
3         cloves     Garlic, minced
3         T            All-purpose flour
1 1/2 cups        Chicken stock
1 1/2   cups Heavy cream

Toss the bread crumbs and fried onions together in a bowl, set aside.

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.  Fill a large bowl with ice water.  Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil and add the beans.  Cook beans about 6 minutes until just barely tender; plunge beans into the ice water for a minute or two, then spread them on some paper towels to drain.

Place butter in a saute pan and melt over medium heat; add muchrooms, garlic, and some salt and pepper and cook for 6 minutes (mushrooms should release their moisture and the liquid should evaporate).  Add the flour and cook, stirring constantly, for 1 minute.  Stir in the chicken stock and bring to a simmer, stirring constantly.  Add the cream, reduce the heat to medium, and simmer until sauce is thickened and reduced to about 3 1/2 cups (about 12 minutes).  Taste and season with salt and pepper.

Add the green beans to the sauce and stir to coat; arrange in a baking dish and sprinkle with the bread crumb/onion topping.  Bake for 15 minutes and serve.


And I really, really don’t like sweet Sweet Potatoes–those things with little marshmallows in them were the bane of my existence as a kid at Thanksgiving.  So I was very happy to find this recipe in Gourmet magazine’s cook book one year:

Sweet Potatoes with Chipotle Peppers


4 – 5 Sweet potatoes
1 T Chipotle peppers in adobo sauce (processed)
3 T Unsalted butter

Process the chipotle peppers in their sauce in a food processor to make a paste.  The leftover processed peppers last several months in the refrigerator (mine don’t last that long, but only because I love cooking with them and use them in just about everything except ice cream)

Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.  Wash the sweet potatoes and prick the skins with a fork.  Roast for 1 – 2 hours until very soft and set aside to cool.  Lower oven to 350 degrees.

Scrape the meat out of the potatoes and add the chipotles and butter; beat with a mixer until smooth and fluffy.  Add salt and pepper to taste.  Place the potatoes in a baking dish and dot with more butter if desired; bake until warmed through.


Another take on green beans from okie:

Green Bean Bacon Wraps


Ingredients
2-3     lbs            whole green beans (fresh or frozen)
1         lb or less   bacon
1         C              brown sugar
1         C              butter
½         t               garlic salt
2         T               soy sauce

Preparation
If using fresh green beans, blanch in boiling water for 1minute and drain.  Thaw if using frozengreen beans.  Cut bacon into short enoughpieces to wrap bundles of 5-7 green beans each (about ¾ slice each).  Secure with toothpicks and place in a glassbaking dish.  Mix brown sugar, meltedbutter, garlic salt and soy sauce in a bowl. Pour the mixture over the green bean wraps and refrigerate overnight.  Cook at 350 degrees for 40 minutes.


Apple, Cranberry, Currant Pie from MarkInAustin

Mike, Brian, BB, and Dave! I know y’all have seen this from me twice, so I apologize to you in advance.

PREP AND COOK TIME: About 1 1/2 hours, plus at least 1 hour to cool
MAKES: 8 [adult male or teenager] servings

1/4     cup            Gran Marnier [or brandy, if you are short on the good stuff]
1/4     cup            currants [look like tiny raisins – you could use raisins in a pinch but they are not the same]
1        cup            fresh [or thawed frozen] cranberries [I find fresh make a tarter pie – I am OK with tart]
About 3/4 cup     granulated FRUCTOSE  [a lot of apple pie recipes call for a cup or more of sugar – fructose is sweeter and way lower on the glycemic index]
1/2     cup            tapioca flour [I never use cornstarch in a fruit pie]
1/2     tsp             ground nutmeg
1/2     tsp             ground cinnamon
1/4     tsp             salt
2        oz              1/2+1/2
6        cups          sliced/chopped Granny Smith apples [about 2 1/4 lb].  I like the skin on for this pie – it’s more “rustic”.  Think of Pilgrims and Indians.
2×9-inch pie pastry shells  – I either make my own or buy really great shells at Central Market.  When I make my own they are in no way unusual.

1. In a small bowl, combine Gran Marnier and currants. Cover and let stand until currants are plump, at least 1 hour.  [Sometimes I cheat and do not soak this long.  No biggie.  The plumpness of currants is mainly a texture deal]

2.  Chop/slice apples, skin on, using a mix of techniques for slices and chunks.  If there will be a delay between prep and oven, put the 6 cups of apples in a big bowl and add a little OJ to keep them from browning.  LATER YOU MUST THOROUGHLY DRAIN AND PAT DRY THE APPLES!  My grandmother taught me the OJ instead of lemon juice trick about 55 years ago.

3. Sort cranberries and discard any that are bruised or decayed. Rinse and drain berries.

4. In a large bowl, mix fructose, tapioca flour, nutmeg, and salt. With a slotted spoon, lift currants from Gran Marnier; reserve Gran Marnier. Add currants, cranberries, and chopped apples to fructose mixture and mix well. Taste and add more fructose if desired. Pour filling into unbaked pie pastry in pan.  Cut hole pattern in top crust.  Mix 1/2+1/2 with reserved Gran Marnier and cinnamon and brush liberally on pie crust.  Carefully braid foil around pie’s edge to keep pie from from crisping-burning on crust edge that overlaps the pan during baking.  [Later, pass off the tiny pieces of foil that some guest finds in the crust edge as “healthy mineral”. 🙂]  

5. Bake on the bottom rack of a 375° oven until juices bubble around edges and through top holes, 55 to 65 minutes. If pie browns too quickly – check after 30 minutes – cover loosely with foil.

6. Set pie, uncovered, on a rack until cool to touch, at least 1 hour.

Personal note:  I think most apple based recipes use way too much cinnamon, to the point that some people confuse the cinnamon with the apples.  Using the cinnamon on the crust, only, permits the fruit flavors to dominate, but the smell of the pie out of the oven has the familiar cinnamon scent.


Lulu’s mashed potatoes au gratin


8 – 10 potatoes peeled and cut in half, then boiled until tender

Mash potatoes with butter, milk, 2 cloves garlic, salt and pepper

While potatoes are boiling saute 2-3 onions (sliced) until really really carmelized, I do this over medium heat so they don’t burn

Put potatoes into baking dish, dot with butter and bake until heated through

Add onion to top and cover with either Gruyere or Havarti cheese and broil until cheese is nice and bubbly and golden


FABULOUS PUMPKIN BREAD
from MsJS


Makes three loaves.

Ingredients:
15 oz. pumpkin puree
4 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil, preferably canola
2/3 cup water
3 cups sugar

3.5 cups flour
2 teaspoons baking soda
1.5 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ground gloves
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease and flour three 8x3x2  loaf pans.

In a large bowl, mix together the first five ingredients until blended.  In a separate bowl, sift together everything else.  Mix the dry ingredients into the first bowl until just blended.  Don’t overmix.

Pour into the prepared loaf pans and bake 50-55 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean.  Cool completely before removing from the pans and slicing.


Turkey Enchiladas
by Victoria Topham, owner and chef, Piñon Market and Cafe (and friend of Michigoose’s)

1 ea onion, roughly chopped
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 can roasted green chilis, peeled
2 cups chicken stock

Sauté the onion and garlic.  Add the chilis and stock, cook down and puree.  Add salt if needed.

2 lb Turkey, cooked and shredded
2 cups Sour cream
1+ cup Pepper jack cheese, shredded (or salsa jack, if you can find it)
1+ cup Cheddar cheese, shredded
1 tsp Red pepper flakes
1 T Cilantro, chopped
1 T Scallion, chopped

Flour tortillas
Tomatillo salsa, for serving

Combine the enchilada filling ingredients together in a mixing bowl; mix well. Place about 1/2 cup of filling into a tortilla and roll up.  Place the enchilada in a baking dish and repeat until dish is full.

Pour the green chili sauce over the top, cover with more cheese and chopped tomatoes.

Bake at 350 degrees for about 20 minutes.

Serve with tomatillo salsa on the side.

NOTE: this is a very free-form recipe, as Vic adapted it for me from the amounts that she uses in her restaurant.  The most important thing is to use plenty of green chili sauce, so that the enchiladas don’t dry out while cooking. . . so supplement if needed–either with more sauce or more tomatillo salsa–and have fun!  I usually use more green onion than Vic does, and half the red pepper flakes since I use Penzey’s “very hot” ones.


Who’s next??