[Question] Are you cooking something other than turkey for Thanksgiving?
My wife and I rarely cook turkey for Thanksgiving. This year we're coming Cornish hens. In previous years we've cooked duck, leg of lamb, and rib roast. It's not that we don't like turkey, but there are lots of other things that I think I'd prefer eating.
Are you cooking something other than turkey this year? Or maybe preparing your turkey in a non-traditional way?
Normally I smoke a turkey, duck, or pork roast. But this year we have canceled Thanksgiving and probably will Christmas too. Just not enough funds to justify the cost of a big dinner for 3 people.
Definitely feel that. I just got a little ham steak and some sides I'm doing just for me this year. Not doing anything for Xmas. I'll be recovering from a surgery, yay!
Oh just the usual. I'm allergic to poultry so we just find some good pork. Do the stuffing with better than bouillon veggie broth, I just made way too much cranberry last night (you can never have too much cranberry it'll last three days) I think we only have three kinds of potato this year
It's just my mom and me, and neither of us is big on turkey. I found a recipe for pomegranate rosewater chicken thighs so we're going to try that this year. Also not making a ton of sides. Salad, bread sticks, green beans and a pear walnut crumble for dessert
"Cooking" (i.e. reheating) a city ham (i.e. fully cooked , Easter-style ham) sous vide this year. Just me and the partner this year,so a turkey doesn't make sense, especially since I'm usually underwhelmed with turkey anyway.
the dark meat is great for chicken and dumplings. I'll usually break it down because it's about $5/pound here. (verse like $10 for 2 breasts...) so if you're not needing the full bird for something, you can always re-freeze whatever you're holding.
And the chicken and dumplings are great for family meals. you can make most of it ahead of time, reheat and drop the dumplings when the family is ready to go.
It is a lot. but, the prep is spread out over several days, so there's that. makes things manageable.
It's just me for Thanksgiving this year, but I wanted to do a little something. Made deviled egg potato salad, but everything else was super simple. I decided to do indoor bbq on my Ninja indoor grill/air fryer. Just a sous vide chicken breast finished on the grill with bbq sauce glaze and canned baked beans. I did want a little Thanksgiving flavor so a I made a box of Stovetop cornbread stuffing, with gravy and cranberry sauce, and a small maple/mustard glazed ham steak. The ham steak was the only thing I bought specifically to make. Everything else was just stuff I had in the pantry/fridge.
We've done Cornish Hens exclusively before, but we usually do ham plus Turkey.
What we did one year and are gonna do again this year that's a little non-traditional is the boneless turkey roasts that you can get, instead of a full turkey. The breast roast gets a wet salt brine overnight, stuffed, and then wrapped in bacon. The dark-meat roast gets dry-brined with salt and a few herbs, and then coated in solid fat to develop a crust.