Posted on 10/31/2018 4:36:00 PM PDT by Jamestown1630
The First Thanksgiving, Jennie Augusta Brownscombe, 1914
When we were first married and hosting our first Thanksgiving dinner together, my husband and I salt-water brined our first Thanksgiving turkey. We were very pleased with the difference this made, and continued to do it. However, a few years ago we learned about the Judy Bird - named after Judy Rodgers of the Zuni Cafe in San Francisco, who used the technique for chicken. This involves dry-brining the turkey in salt, and does away with the need to fill your refrigerator with a giant container of water right when you need that space the most. And it turned out amazing the breast meat had the texture that chicken thigh meat usually does and we have settled on this as our permanent approach.
Most brining instructions indicate that you should not do this with a Kosher or other pre-seasoned turkey; but I believe that in the past, some of the Freepers have indicated that they have brined Kosher turkeys with good results. I havent done it myself, but here, from The Joy of Kosher is an article about it:
https://www.joyofkosher.com/holidays/how-to-brine-a-kosher-turkey/
and the link to Food52 for the Judy Bird instructions:
https://food52.com/recipes/15069-russ-parsons-dry-brined-turkey-a-k-a-the-judy-bird
A recent King Arthur Flour newsletter featured pretty little brandied mince-meat tartlets; I love mince-meat pie, but if you aren't into it, I think you could do these easily with any pie-filling:
https://www.kingarthurflour.com/recipes/christmas-brandied-mince-tarts-recipe
Chef John of Food Wishes makes a cheddar/spring onion biscuit using the kind of folding technique used for puff pastry; and the biscuits look very good:
https://foodwishes.blogspot.com/2017/03/irish-cheddar-spring-onion-biscuits.html
-JT
I hope youre all having fun with the little ghosties and ghoulies tonight, and looking forward to a great election, and a very Happy Holiday Season. We have a lot to be thankful for.
Please post your favorite Thanksgiving recipes, traditions, memories!
-JT
I’m just so excited to see you & this thread! Yippee! After a Halloween day at an elementary school it’s nice to curl up with adults. ; )
This morning when my husband dropped me off at work, I suddenly realized that I wasn’t wearing anything at all to celebrate Hallowe’en.
Husband said, “You’re dressed exactly like a serial killer - they always appear perfectly normal”.
For Halloween my lady is in the kitchen right now cooking a pork tenderloin and scalloped potatoes. My Arsenic And Old Lace dvd is cued up and waiting for dinner and a movie.
I grew up darn near in Canada, but we always had this as a side dish..
https://www.geniuskitchen.com/recipe/moms-oyster-casserole-242628
Love that film!
May I offer you some Elderberry wine?
We watch it every Halloween...tradition. I would love some Elderberry wine but I’d probably get sick after the three beers I’ve had...oh, and the O’Mara’s Itish Cream!
SWEET POTATO TOTS / CHIPOTLE MAYO DIP
ING large sweet potato, peeled 1 egg ¼ cup flour ¼ teaspoon sea salt
¼ teaspoon paprika ¼ teaspoon garlic powder 3 cups peanut oil, for deep frying
METHOD Fork/combine par-boiled shredded potato and egg. Add combined flour, salt, paprika, gar/powder; stir to combine.
Form inch balls. Batch-fry in 375 deg oil, do not overcrowd pan. Fry 3 min, then lift out to drain. Sprinkle w/ K/s.
Repeat with rest; let oil come back to temp between batches. Can bake 400 deg 30 min.
SERVE hot w/ chipotle mayo
That looks very good, and different!
Irish cream never set well with Mortimer or the DR.
Now, Johnny could drink a bucket of gasoline.
“Oh I feel a bit queasy Johnny”.. LOL
A triple decker Thanksgiving turkey club.
Buttered toast, layers and layers of turkey, cranberry sauce
tomato slices, lettuce leaves, smothered in mayo, 2-3 crisp bacon slices. Add those leftover brussels sprouts, too.
I never make demands on Thanksgiving.
It is all good!
You’re exactly right. Especially for the cook who can finally relax ;-)
We ought to post our favorite leftover recipes, too.
My Friends Mother still melts when I tell her she makes the best corn chowder I have ever had.
Of course it is the Only corn chowder I have ever had LoL
Amen Liz!
Explain parboil for a sweet potato please & what is the K you’re sprinkling on?
Your husband has a great sense of humor!
I’ve always heard about that play/movie but never seen it, and will have to look for it.
(Love scalloped potatoes but husband doesn’t. I learned that the first time I ever cooked for him :-(
lol Good one!
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