Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving. Show all posts

Thursday, November 28, 2013

Happy Thanksgiving! Things I am Grateful for




 
It's Thanksgiving morning, 9AM.  I have no turkey to roast, no pies to bake, no sides to prepare, no stuffing to stuff.
 
My home is quiet as a churchyard on any day but Sunday.  The wind outside is blowing and the temps are in the low 20s.  There is a dusting of snow on the ground.
 
My husband is still asleep; my mother-in-law is too, each wrestling with fatigues born of insomnia, injury or illness.   Even our faithful dog Dewey is slumbering, having awakened my husband at 5AM for a quick trip outdoors.  They are safe and warm and snuggling in their beds on this cold November day.
 
Our sons are halfway round the world in Australia.  I miss them but I reassure myself they are safe and happy and on the adventure of their lives. 
 
My brother, his wife and daughters are on the West Coast.  We haven't seen one another in five years.  The girls have their own families now and I know my brother is surrounded by love.
 
Our table stands empty.  It will not be set today.  But it rings with the memory of holiday dinners, family, friends and parties. 
 
My parents are gone and, I believe, in a better place.  Every holiday fills with their presence, their customs.  My mother would spend two days getting ready for Thanksgiving and our menu rarely varied.  She served Waldorf salad on her mother's cranberry pressed glass plates (which I still have), roast turkey stuffed with a traditional herbed bread stuffing, candied yams in butter & brown sugar, green peas, home made cranberry sauce, oyster dressing (a second stuffing for those with sophisticated palates), gravy, mashed potatoes, crudités of carrots, celery, black olives.  The table was always set with her Irish linen or old lace tablecloth, linen napkins, her fine silverware, Lenox dinner plates, crystal goblets.  There were fresh flowers, candles and music.  Dessert was always pumpkin pie and minced or pecan pie with whipping cream.
 
My father always carved with his steel butcher knife.  He loved to sharpen that thing on his whetstone and made a very big deal of it.  Grace preceded the meal.  Ours was an observant family, at least, outwardly.
 
Afterwards, mother and I did the dishes.  She had no dishwasher until they retired and, if she had, it wouldn't have mattered as she would never have put her good dishes, crystal and silver in it anyway.
 
When I married and lived far from home, my husband and I celebrated Thanksgiving meals I prepared or we went out.  I remember one Thanksgiving in Chicago where we were on vacation.  We stayed at the Ambassador East hotel and had reservations in the Pump Room.  Very chic.  By the time we sat down and ordered, they were out of turkey!  We had to eat fish!  That still makes me smile.
 
Today, my husband, my mother-in-law and I are dressing up and going to a lovely hotel in our mountain town where we will be served a traditional Thanksgiving meal.  We shall sit and dine on fine china with fancy cutlery, crystal on a white tablecloth and enjoy spectacular views of the mountain range.  It will be nice and easy. 
 
Aside from the people I love who are gone or away, I shall miss the leftovers.


Happy Thanksgiving!


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Thursday, November 22, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!



Embrace your family




Enjoy your surroundings




Count your blessings





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Thursday, November 24, 2011

A Rockwellian Thanksgiving



Chef with Thanksgiving Menu  (1942)





          Saying Grace  (1951)


     Mother and Son Peeling Potatoes  (1945)






















          Ye Glutton   (1923)











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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Sometimes I know we did a good job parenting...


Number One son texts on Thanksgiving after calling me to say he wanted to "change it up for Thanksgiving and volunteer at a homeless shelter". 

TXT#1:  "I love you.  all the homeless shelters and slavations arms were closed so i ran into two homeless guys and drove them to a place with a nice view."

TXT#2:  "Bought them beer and cigs and hung out for a cou(p)le hours.  they were so happy!"

TXT#3:  "Ya it does.  I took them up the avenues and found a spot for them to drink a few beers.  They seemed really happy about it.  Not so lonely ya know?"

TXT from us:  "I am proud of you, son.  Dad wants me to ask you to be careful...I know you are..."

TXT#4:  "I'm all tired from the turkey.  Tell dad not to worrythey were very nice guys.  Right around your age too.  I may call in a bit." 

My loving kind son went out and rounded up two homeless guys and bought them beer and cigarettes and treated them like human beings.  As much as his faith in humanity scares us, it thrills us too. 

#1 Son
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Thursday, December 11, 2008

Holiday Meal Planning

I prepared for Thanksgiving by planning everything in advance. I ordered my first farm raised turkey, about 20 lbs grain fed, and picked that up the day before. I baked my first set of real Parker House rolls. I was experimenting with a wonderful book called "Baking in America" with many original or traditional baking recipes. They took half a day to prepare but they were unbelievably good. In fact, I'm making a new batch right now for a dinner party we're attending tonight. I made the usual green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole w/ fresh orange juice, brown sugar & marshmallows (very Southern), garlic mashers and the best gravy I've ever attempted. Actually, I hate making gravy but I read three recipes on how to get it right and it was easy and it was lacking in grease. I used paper towels to blot out the grease from the pan...an old fashioned trick. It worked. I used the fresh giblets from the turkey which I'd boiled over 12 hours to make the broth for the stuffing and they were great. I normally don't make giblet gravy either. Anyway, I made pecan pie and a pumpkin chiffon pie in a gingersnap crust and it was light as a feather. Good thing I baked over a four day period. It was my best Thanksgiving dinner ever. I guess I got into it because my eldest son is home for 5 wks (broken foot--skateboarding--don't ask) and the youngest was home, the in-laws were here and it was all family.