What Do You Have For Thanksgiving Meal?

Welcome to Wondercafe2!

A community where we discuss, share, and have some fun together. Join today and become a part of it!

We don't presently have a "tradition" because menu varies according to who's here. Last year it was a vegetarian feast that we all enjoyed, because our guests were vegetarian. This year it was just my partner & I, and we had delicious shrimp risotto as our main course :-) And like all good Thanksgiving meals, there's enough left for lunch today!
 
Noodles? Smokies? Shrimp? Vegetarian? Oh dear, I'm afraid some of you have no idea how to celebrate Thanksgiving. :(
 
Traditions end, new ones are begun. Turkey for holidays is largely a North American tradition anyhow (because, I think, they are native to here). In Britain, it's usually goose or ham or something for holidays. Other parts of the world have their own thing, too. Families have always had their own traditions that diverged in small ways from the larger traditions of their society. For my family growing up in Kitchener, Ontario (and many others in K-W I'm sure) going to the Oktoberfest Parade was a Thanksgiving tradition that most other communities would not have (since Thanksgiving parades aren't a thing here like they are in the US).

In the end, it is the spirit with which you observe Thanksgiving, not the specifics, that matters. Our soup contains the bounty of the harvest (see ingredients in my post) and most of them are Canadian so we are just as thankful for that as someone who mashes their potatoes, boils their carrots and serves it all with turkey instead of in a soup. Not that soup is necessarily our tradition at this point, but I would see no harm in it becoming one.
 
Jae, in my family we've always done noodles with browned butter at pretty much every holiday meal. If I had to guess it's probably something that came of living on a farm in the depression era, you had your own chickens and cows so could provide your own eggs for the noodles and cream to make butter. We used to make Carrot pie rather than pumpkin too, a lot of the time, taste is similar.
 
We kids would insist on broccoli and cheese sauce every Thanksgiving, and Christmas too, and mom always came through, My sisters still make it for there for their families, but it is never as good as mom's.
We just some of the Thanksgiving fixings to my son's place...about 4 hours away...and his request was broccoli cheese casserole. We had all the other traditional food plus my sister's cannelloni...another of my son's requests!
 
Put chickens in the crock pots. Then cook potatoes and veggies on stove.

Turkey I expect would be too big for crock pot
You can get those really big roasters, like a crock pot. We've done turkey in them...in the summer, plugged into the garage outlet outside, when it is too hot to cook on the stove or in the oven.
 
Jae, Jae, Jae, Your thanksgiving meal was less than traditional and yet you critize others for their choices? Where is your christian love in that?
 
He is busy practising that Christian thing known as 'judge not........'. Personally speaking I truly don't care what other people had for their Thanksgiving meal - if they identified a particular meal in that way. There really doesn't seem to be any genuine tradition to follow.
 
He is busy practising that Christian thing known as 'judge not........'. Personally speaking I truly don't care what other people had for their Thanksgiving meal - if they identified a particular meal in that way. There really doesn't seem to be any genuine tradition to follow.

Thr is dfintly a gnuin tradition to be followed. Howvr, it is of little importance right now as the occasion is now past.

Th xciting nws is - kp watching for a post by me in December in which I will share with one and all the corrct mnu for Christmas dinner. Hr's a hint - no noodls or smokis at invlvd.
 
I think that the only solid 'tradition' in my meal is that I have to go out to the garden and harvest some of it. Even if it's only some swiss chard for a salad, some herbs for stuffing. Some years, I've had a feast of ratatouille from all of the eggplants and tomatoes. This year, the eggplant harvest was a little too pathetic for that.
 
I am already yawning at Jae's threat to tell us what we are 'supposed' to eat at Christmas. Comparing our various choices is interesting- attempts to make me 'just like everyone else' isn't. The only part of that I find interesting to think about is the bit dealing with those who live somewhere other than Europe or North America. Personally, I had NEVER tasted turkey until arriving in Canada as a young adult. I served a very unusual Thanksgiving meal this year (some years I have served turkey or chicken or ham).
 
Personally speaking I truly don't care what other people had for their Thanksgiving meal - if they identified a particular meal in that way.
I've enjoyed reading what others do, why certain things are traditional to them, etc.
 
I am already yawning at Jae's threat to tell us what we are 'supposed' to eat at Christmas. Comparing our various choices is interesting- attempts to make me 'just like everyone else' isn't. The only part of that I find interesting to think about is the bit dealing with those who live somewhere other than Europe or North America. Personally, I had NEVER tasted turkey until arriving in Canada as a young adult. I served a very unusual Thanksgiving meal this year (some years I have served turkey or chicken or ham).

My wife and son had never had turkey either until after my wife did the wise thing and married me. Now, of course, they wouldn't have anything else. It's part of a kind of tradeoff as it were. I respect the traditions of Korea, and they respect the traditions of Canada. Sadly, I see here on Wondercafe2 that many Canadians don't honor their own traditions. That's why a Christmas dinner tutorial is so desperately needed.
 
My wife and son had never had turkey either until after my wife did the wise thing and married me. Now, of course, they wouldn't have anything else. It's part of a kind of tradeoff as it were. I respect the traditions of Korea, and they respect the traditions of Canada. Sadly, I see here on Wondercafe2 that many Canadians don't honor their own traditions. That's why a Christmas dinner tutorial is so desperately needed.
Jae, do you not honour the Canadian spellings?
 
Jae cut the BS. You say your wife and her son insist on Turkey but in another thread you said you served chicken as your early Thanksgiving meal and another meat altogether for thanksgiving.
 
Back
Top