I'm heading home to Chicago for a midwestern Thanksgiving this year, and I am totally excited to help my mom cook The Big Meal. A grocery shopping jaunt to Harris Teeter this afternoon amplified my anticipation; the store is already brimming with giant frozen turkeys, special holiday displays, jars of cranberry jelly, and the like. I wandered the aisles aimlessly, taking in the festive atmosphere (and the free samples!).
My sister makes her famous mashed potatoes each year, but all the other dishes are up for grabs. I've been scouting around the web for inspiration, which isn't difficult since every remotely food-related site switches to Thanksgiving-pocalypse mode this time of year, complete with
countdowns and
turkey slide shows. Amidst the frenzy, I truly enjoy the measured wisdom imparted by
Gourmet. No stranger to the culinary obsession surrounding the holiday (exhibit A: its guide to "achieving turkey perfection"), the magazine (and its website) nonetheless maintains its composure with its clean, low-key design, and intelligent approach. In a smart acknowledgment of diverse food traditions as a metaphor for America's melting pot greatness, Gourmet is offering
five traditional Thanksgiving menus, each inspired by a different region of the country. Each menu, of course, includes a turkey, and I'm finding myself particularly intrigued by the Southern-style
Roast Turkey with Herbed Oyster Stuffing and Giblet Gravy. The "California Eatin"
three-onion stuffing also sounds delicious. The Northeastern
nutmeg ice cream would be the perfect way to end the big meal.
This month's print version of the magazine offers a Latino-inspired Thanksgiving menu (
adobo Turkey, chipotle meatballs, cornbread and chorizo stuffing, sweet potato coconut puree, and apple pie with Mexican brown sugar), as well as a Mediterranean meal (braised artichokes, mushroom and farro pie, mache salad, parmesan-roasted butternut squash, cranberry sauce with dates and orange, and a pumpkin tart with anise-seed crust).
I've honestly no idea how authentic these menus might be for the various regions and peoples they claim to represent, but I love reading about all the different variations out there. I would welcome hearing about everyone's Thanksgiving traditions and must-haves, recipes, ideas, etc.
(Currently thankful for: wild sweet orange Tazo tea, incredible Mexican food and at Oyamel last night with a good friend who I hadn't seen in a long time, natural Greek yogurt with honey and granola for breakfast, multi-vitamins, freshly brewed coffee, good friends, an amazing family, my new job and colleagues, Barbara Kingsolver's
Animal, Vegetable, Miracle on audiobook, the bright yellow leaves blanketing my neighborhood's sidewalks, and, of course, the
Gourmet subscription renewal my sister gave me for my birthday).
Photo of caramel pie by Romulo Yanes, who does beautiful work for Gourmet and others.
1 comment:
I've been in search of some good vegetarian dishes for Thanksgiving. As much as I love mashed potatoes and the inevitable green bean casserole, the two alone leave something to be desired on the plate!
Vegetarian Times has a great looking menu for the day.
And, for the record, I'm considering changing up my mashed potatoes this year. Something is drawing me to sweet potatoes, maybe mashed up with maple syrup and pecans...
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