Sep 16, 2007 by Fort Sill Army Wife | Posted in Other - Food & Drink
My husband will be home a few days before Thanksgiving, after making a 15-month deployment to Iraq and we wish all our family over, they will travel over 2,400 miles to get here and I want to do This Thanksgiving I'm very special to start planning now. Im going to do all the food tradiontal .. turkey, mashed potatoes, yams, cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie, etc. What would be good .. I was thinking about bread pudding? There will be 16 people eating and they cannot bring a dish because they are flying, the more I like cooking ideas or recipes would be greatly appreciated!
I always do a lot of appetizers when the family comes. I know that when I put a relish tray with olives, pickles, celery stuffed (with cheese, chili and other with peanut butter), pickled vegetables they go fast. Me too, I always chips and dips. When the family is that now there will be lots of crunch and talk.
As for dinner, we always make turkey, gravy, rolls, sweet potatoes (with marshmallows and some baked with butter, just like a baked potato that some people do not like the sweet version) , green beans, broccoli, salad, fruit salad, dressing, salad, potato, and sometimes okra and French bread too long with any people make stuff. But each family has different faves.
Now we add to our tamales rallies that we have new family members who love them. It's a matter of mixing all the family faves together.I would give each member a call and just talk to them about their favorite holiday moments and foods. So I compiled a list of one element of each person and if necessary call them and get the recipe. This way, everyone has something they love.
Sep 16, 2007 | by James Watkin
I always do a lot of appetizers when the family comes. I know that when I put a relish tray with olives, pickles, celery stuffed (with cheese, chili and other with peanut butter), pickled vegetables they go fast. Me too, I always chips and dips. When the family is that now there will be lots of crunch and talk.
As for dinner, we always make turkey, gravy, rolls, sweet potatoes (with marshmallows and some baked with butter, just like a baked potato that some people do not like the sweet version) , green beans, broccoli, salad, fruit salad, dressing, salad, potato, and sometimes okra and French bread too long with any people make stuff. But each family has different faves.
Now we add to our tamales rallies that we have new family members who love them. It's a matter of mixing all the family faves together.I would give each member a call and just talk to them about their favorite holiday moments and foods. So I compiled a list of one element of each person and if necessary call them and get the recipe. This way, everyone has something they love.
Sep 16, 2007 | by James Watkin
Does anyone have good apple pie recipes or other good Thanksgiving recipes?
Nov 15, 2008 by sleepnix | Posted in Cooking & Recipes
Can someone give me a good apple pie recipe using frozen pie crust, or another easy Thanksgiving dessert recipe? Websites with tried-and-true recipes are fine, if you include a link. Please help me. Low fat stuff is also good. Thanks!
Please note, FROZEN CRUST!
PERFECT APPLE PIE
PASTRY:
3/4 cup cake flour
1 3/4 cups all purpose flour
scant tsp salt
1 Tablespoon sugar
1 Tablespoon lard
4 Tablespoons Crisco shortening
large pinch Rumford Baking Powder
1 Tablespoon buttermilk powder OR:
1 Tablespoon lemon juice or white vinegar ADDED TO:
5-7 Tablespoons ice water
one stick plus 1/3 stick butter, frozen in advance
FILLING:
10 Apples, peeled and sliced thinly
1/2 cup white sugar
2 Tablespoons butter
2 Tablespoons brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon ginger
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
sprinkle of mace (optional)
sprinkle of vanilla
lemon juice
Flour, cornstarch, or arrowroot for thickening
Preheat oven to 400°F, then reduce to 375°F after pie is in the oven.
Combine dry ingredients. Mix together Crisco and lard in metal bowl. Sprinkle with flour mixture. Chill in refrigerator for 15 minutes. Remove butter from freezer and slice into 1/2 inch chunks. Add to bowl. Work butter and shortenings together into flour with fingers or a pastry blender, leaving large chunks, the size of walnuts. The purpose is to coat the butter particles with flour, but not to allow the butter or shortenings to melt. Do not overwork the mixture.
Add the lemon juice or vinegar to ice water and stir quickly into dry ingredients. Mix briefly, less than 45 seconds, leave large unincorporated pockets of butter and shortening. If mixture is beginning to melt, refrigerate briefly.
Gather mixture together into a flat disc, approximately 1 inch thick, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 1/2 hour or up to 2 days. Freeze if you want to reserve longer than 2 days. The half hour rest is necessary so that the dough will become easier to roll out. The buttermilk powder and/or lemon juice also helps relax the dough and prevent gluten, which can make for a tough crust.
NOTE: For a flakier pie crust, reserve 1/3 stick of butter and slice lengthwise, 1/8 inch thick. Place strips of butter onto dough and then fold into thirds before refrigerating for half hour resting period.
For the filling, use a combination of different types of apples. The best combination consists of mostly Granny Smith apples and a few Cortland types. The Granny Smith apples retain their shape when cooked and provide tartness and flavor. Meanwhile, the Cortland apples cook down into applesauce.
Mix the nutmeg, ginger, and cinnamon with the sugar. Sprinkle the sugar with a few drops of pure vanilla extract. Work the butter and 2 Tablespoons flour or other thickener into the sugar. Slice the apples into thin wedges and place apples into pre-rolled out and fitted pie crust, packing apples in tightly, since they will cook down significantly. Mound apples higher in center. Sprinkle over the apples the juice of 1/2 lemon, then sprinkle the sugar-spice mixture over the apples evenly.
Roll out and place top crust, fluting edges to seal tightly and creating several vent holes to allow steam to escape.
Brush top of crust with a mixture of one egg white and one tablespoon of water or with a little cream. Sprinkle with 1 teaspoon sugar.
Variation: One method of making a nice base for your apple pie is to peel a portion of the apples, placing the skins, cores, lemon peels, cinnamon sticks, and fresh grated ginger, into a saucepan with sugar and half cup of water or apple juice. Simmer over low heat for about an hour and strain, reserving the liquid. Thicken 1/2 cup of the strained liquid with 1-2 tsp cornstarch or arrowroot and cool. Add 1/4 tsp vanilla, the sliced and peeled apples, and pour into the pie shell. This is a nice variation when you don't have cortland apples to mix in with the granny smiths because it keeps the pie from being too dry. The liquid is enough for one 10-inch pie about 4 inches tall at center. Adjust according to your pie size.
Bake about 45 minutes, or until crust is golden brown.
I've found that freshly grated ginger much improves the flavor over the ground type in this recipe.
Nov 15, 2008 | by depp_lover
Thanksgiving Recipe - How to Brine & Tress Turkey
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Early Fall and Cold Winter?
I spent much time on the web researching different things that should be considered. Once I got frustrated with all this looking around, I left for the type of research that I prefer books! I rode to the library and dug around until they closed. I found some good books with gelatine new recipes of jams and I can not wait to try. Hopefully there will be some that I can find the ingredients! They are quite exotic and may require a hunt for food goals. I hope to sit down over coffee with my friend canning and find something that interests us both.While I have listed some beautiful hairflowers are definitely the summer, and time is made to act as last summer around the Bay Area, I can not help but wonder if this will be a harsh winter with an early fall. I noticed that I am becoming quite the type of provision for anything lately. Apart from the usual bottom family of jam and fruit preserves for the winter and next year, I found store of meat and staple foods as well. Our freezer is filled with meat that I bought was sold in large packs.It's just Dan and me in most occasions, so I went well break the whole pork tenderloin, roast beef and lots large ground beef, and chicken portions for full meals and we vacuum seal them before freeze them for later. All this is, of course, great sales, hey I can not let go of 76 cents per pound of chicken. I justify it as something that will save money in the long run, it goes and then I joke that my defense against the flu food bank. What if the H1N1 is a shame that we can barricade ourselves in the apartment and survive well for a few weeks.I wonder if deep down inside there is a sort of animal instinct kicked in making me want to spend a hoard terrible winter and the coming season beginning this fall....
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