The Feathered Nest

The softer side of MaisonBisson

Thirteen Days ’til Thanksgiving November 14, 2010

TowerGirl @ 1:27 pm
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I’ve spent the week perusing recipes and putting together a menu. It looks like we will have between 8-10 people for the big meal. This is less than I like to have, I believe in a big Thanksgiving, but it’s probably all I can accommodate. I think we’ll have a nice mix of family and friends, and I am pleased because we’ll get to spend the holiday this year with people we don’t usually get to share the celebration with. Of course, I am particularly excited that my family is flying out to join us. That means so much to me.

So here’s what I’ve come up with for dinner. I am trying to balance flavors. I don’t want too much sweet or too much savory. The only course I am not 100% happy with is dessert. I am afraid the two options are rather similar, but they both look so amazing I can’t choose!

I’ve created a prep schedule and I’ll share that later. I want to do all that I can ahead of time so I can enjoy my guests.

 

Time to Plan November 2, 2010

TowerGirl @ 10:22 am
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It’s November. This means it is time to start planning and prepping for Thanksgiving. I take Thanksgiving very seriously. Thanksgiving is all about food and that is celebration whose aims I wholeheartedly support.

This year my parents and brother are flying west to celebrate with us. We are also fortunate that my husband’s sister is local so she will join us for the festivities, which never happened when we lived back east. Our good friends from Santa Cruz will also be present. I like a big Thanksgiving. I’d invite more, but I’m not sure they’d fit in our small apartment.

The most pressing matter at this time is planning the menu. I have a basic menu I’ve followed for years, but I’m feeling the need to spice things up a bit this year. I will still do a salt roasted turkey, it’s too good not to repeat. You cover the turkey in salt and let it sit for 24 hours, before roasting you rinse of the salt and pat it dry before all the usual basting. I tried this a couple years ago after many years of brining. It is easier and the resulting bird is so incredibly juicy and flavorful.

I traveled over the weekend so I purchased the Thanksgiving issues of Real Simple and Bon Appetite to keep me company on the plane. I am thinking of adding the “Cranberry Salsa with Cilantro and Chiles” from Bon Appetite to the menu and the “Honeyed Carrots and Oranges” from Real Simple. I having been making a salad of mixed greens, tart granny smith apples, and shaved parmesan that I serve with homemade lemon vinaigrette. It’s a tasty and light starter. I think that will be my salad. There will, of course, be mashed potatoes. I like a little roasted garlic and lots of butter in my mashed potatoes.

What I still need to choose is a soup, a green vegetable, a stuffing, a squash recipe, and desserts. I also should have some pre-bird nibbles. I think I need to nail down a menu this week. Then it’s about figuring out what I can make ahead and freeze and what needs to be done the day of. I also need to figure out seating and table decor. Let the holidays begin.

 

Happy Thanksgiving November 26, 2009

TowerGirl @ 9:47 am
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At The Feathered Nest Thanksgiving is the most eagerly anticipated holiday of the year.  It is easy to understand why. Thanksgiving is a holiday that centers, largely, around food. For a culinary enthusiast like myself, it is a chance to have fun and show off a bit.  However, there is another component of the day even more essential than a golden, glistening bird and stack of creamy mashed potatoes.  That component is embedded in the very name of the day. Today is the day we all give thanks for the many wonders of our lives.

I truly lead a charmed existence and I try never to take that for granted.  Were I to list all those things I am thankful for this blog post would read like War and Peace so I will try to keep it simple. I am thankful for family,friends, fur balls, and food. I am thankful for my husband and home.  I am thankful for a job that is rewarding and that I have never known want.  I am thankful for music, laughter, color, and whimsy. I am thankful for you, for taking a moment and reading my musings.

Happy Thanksgiving to all.

 

Turkey Day Postmortem November 29, 2008

Thanksgiving

I am late writing about the big feast. Thursday, I was exhausted after the gorging, and then the cleaning, was done. Yesterday, I awoke at the crack of dawn to meet up with mom and aunt for our traditional black Friday outing and discovered that our dear male cat, Newton, was urinating blood. So that meant I was at the vet instead of the mall and have been distracted taking care of him. He seems to be better today but I am still keeping a close watch on him. All cat lovers, send us positive thoughts.

This morning, I finally have time to sit down and write about the feast. Did all my planning make the day a breeze? Was each dish a picture of perfection? Was I cool, calm, and collected? Of course not.

I got up around seven to put the turkey in the oven. I coated it in an herbed salt mixture the night before and I had to rinse it, pat it dry, stuff the cavity with herbs and citrus, and then coat the outside in melted butter. The turkey was in the oven by eight. The plan was for our guests to arrive at one, the recipe estimated that the bird would need five hours in the oven. I took it out every forty-five minutes to baste. When I took it out for a basting around eleven, it looked done, I took out the meat thermometer and sure enough it was at, actually above, temperature. I took it out and covered it in foil. I began to fret that I would be serving a dry, cold turkey. I put the foil covered sides in the oven to warm. I set the table. I blanched the green beans. I put on water to boil potatoes. I took out the cutting board and knife to prep the potatoes and then I realized that I never actually purchased potatoes. You simply can’t have Thanksgiving without mashed potatoes.

One of the advantages of living in a place with more than two stores is that there is usually something open. We still find this fact to be a decadent novelty. Casey ran out to the nearest grocery, the one we usually don’t frequent, but that is another story. He purchased potatoes and was on his way back when our guests called to say that they were runnig ahead of schedule.

They arrived to find me furiously setting potatoes to boil, simultaneously chopping sun-dried tomatoes, dripping with sweat, and looking haggard. So much for the poised picture of domestic goddessness I had hoped to paint. Casey mixed drinks. I composed myself and the kitchen.

We all sat down and gave thanks. We had family and we had food. The turkey was not dry, it was actually damn good. I may not be the modern Donna Reed, but I think the day was a success.

Photos: dinner, done, and leftovers.

 

T Minus Twenty-Four Hours and Counting November 26, 2008

Choya MartiniI took yesterday off. My day job had been taxing due to the hyperactive and hormonal nature of my clientele. I needed a respite. I drank a vodka martini and watched Dr. Zhivago. I feel better now.

However, my evening of indulgence means that I am now behind on Operation Thanksgiving.  I got out of said day job early today, so I now need to scramble around and get my derriere in gear. On my agenda for today is house cleaning, most of which will pawned off the hubby.  Then I need to roast garlic for tomorrow’s garlic mashed potatoes. I need to make the wild rice stuffing and the traditional bread stuffing.  I need to salt both the twenty-pound dinner turkey and a separate turkey breast. The auxiliary breast is for my husband’s traditional post-gluttony hike with his friend Will. They climb a mountain and camp, in NH, the day after Thanksgiving. I don’t believe in cold weather camping. Why the hell would I want to freeze to death on an, admittedly, lovely mountain when I happen to possess a nice, warm bed? I am all for the outdoors but I draw the line when adventure becomes torture. I go shopping on Friday, it is equally challenging — but warmer.

CC-licensed martini photo by Jazreel Chan.