Marthe, never having experienced a Thanksgiving Dinner (also never having been to the US), just a small query. Do you all go through the same turkey dinner menu at Christmas or does it never make appearance then?
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Anna
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marthe
Anna, Christmas is pretty much the same menu as Thanksgiving minus the Pumpkin Pie. For my husband, turkey is obligatory for Christmas dinner because that's what his mother made every Christmas. On Boxing Day his family always had "warm-ups" which consisted of turkey, other left-overs, and gravy warmed up in a large casserole dish. At Christmas we also have Christmas cake (made locally by two English cousins who are doing business as The Two English Cousins.) Our freezer is usually well stocked with turkey soup after the holidays!
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Anna
Thanks marthe for reply. Personally I steer clear of cooking turkey, boring, but one of the best things here (comparing your husband's warm-ups) is bubble & squeak, the sprouts, tatties and chestnuts all fried up together topped with a fried egg and bacon.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostThanks marthe for reply. Personally I steer clear of cooking turkey, boring, but one of the best things here (comparing your husband's warm-ups) is bubble & squeak, the sprouts, tatties and chestnuts all fried up together topped with a fried egg and bacon.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostOh, 50% of the time I am vegetarian. The rest of the time I am absolutely disgraceful!
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marthe
Anna, it really is turkey overload here at holiday time, but the turkey tradition holds sway. I'm really not a big meat eater but rather enjoy all the interesting side dishes, even if they're of the sprouts, carrots and turnips variety. Other members of the family can't live without having meat on the table. I work with a woman who is a vegan and is quite strict about what she eats and how it's cooked. Her husband eats meat with great abandon so M. has two sets of pots and pans so that there's no cross-contamination of her vegan food by pans in which meat has been cooked. She became quite ill once because she was served rice that had been cooked in meat broth.
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marthe
What was Christmas like when you were a child? Has it always as important as Thanksgiving Day? I believe turkey came fairly recently to the UK. Wasn’t it goose not so long ago? Well, not so long ago when people when to Christmas market to buy special things for Christmas. About a hundred years ago
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Postone of my five a day ....
easy -
a cognac (grapes are a fruit)
a coffee (again, fruit)
- with sugar ( a vegetable) - and cream (made from grass, innit)
chocolate (again fruit)
a cigar (ain't tobacco a veggible??)
- so - a brandy with an irish coffee, a chocolate, and a ceeegar - that's your five-a-day sorted....
PS - those tempted by illegal substances - well, marijuana and heroin ( = opium ) and cocaine - all good healthy vegetarian possibilities...
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marthe
Originally posted by doversoul View Postmarthe
What was Christmas like when you were a child? Has it always as important as Thanksgiving Day? I believe turkey came fairly recently to the UK. Wasn’t it goose not so long ago? Well, not so long ago when people when to Christmas market to buy special things for Christmas. About a hundred years ago
Christmas was (and is) as important as Thanksgiving though the menu varies quite a bit depending on different family traditions.Turkey is always front and center for Thanksgiving. Chez m. We also have turkey for Christmas because this was traditional in my husband's family. When I lived in England in the 70s, I always did Thanksgiving dinner for friends and co-workers. The trick was finding a turkey a month early (also cranberries...usually frozen and imported from the US).
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