Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Thanksgiving Preparations

Honestly, I haven't done much in the way of Thanksgiving preparation yet.  But I have plans to!    

The two things I have done so far are plan my menu for Friday (that's when we celebrate) and make cranberry syrup for fun sparkling drinks.  The syrup is really easy- I just combine a couple of cups of Wisconsin cranberries with one cup of sugar and 1/2 cup of water.  I simmer it until the cranberries burst and then strain it.  


I admit to adding another batch of sugar and water to stretch the cranberries further.  The second batch was still plenty flavorful!  All that's needed for a fun drink is some fizzy water and a couple spoonfuls of this syrup.  

Just look at that color!
Now for the food...

Here's what I have planned:
Homemade Tofurky (Bryanna Clark Grogan's recipe)
Cornbread stuffing (Meemaw's recipe)
Spinach casserole
Roasted portabello mushrooms
Mashed potatoes
Lots of gravy
Cranberry ginger preserves
Rolls
Chocolate Pumpkin Pie (Martha's recipe, veganized)

I plan on cooking all day tomorrow!  I can't wait!

Monday, November 29, 2010

When I'm Not Cooking

This past weekend I got a lot done.  But that didn't include cooking.  I did a serious deep clean of the kids' room and rearranged the furniture.  Mike and I filled cracks in the house with foam insulation.  We repaired the back of the fridge (don't ask).  We covered all the windows in plastic film to cut down on drafts.  I ordered and picked up our photo holiday cards and a few gifts.

Luckily we had Thanksgiving leftovers so I didn't starve, because I didn't cook at all.

My leftover potatoes and spinach casserole became potato cakes for Saturday morning breakfast and I ate stuffing/dressing for at least 3 more meals.

 Last night I was exhausted and couldn't eat stuffing again.  So I opted for the fruit and nut plate.  Fresh fruit was a nice change!

Friday, November 26, 2010

Thanksgiving- In photos

Cornbread batter poured into hot oil in the cast iron skillet...yum!

Snow works good for cooling down cornbread quickly.

It was a little sad to break apart all that cornbread for dressing. I might have eaten a bite or two.

Appetizers: Homemade cornichons and pickled green beans
(Not pictured: roasted chestnuts)

Cranberry ginger jam (also canned up about 6 half pints for later)

Marinated & roasted portabellos

Super creamy rosemary mashed potatoes by Mike's mom

Cornbread dressing

Spinach casserole

Roasted parsnips, carrots and red onion with balsamic glaze

My plate (pre-cranberry jam)

Mike eyeing the pecan pie truffles

Pumpkin ice cream pie with salted caramel sauce

Hot cider mulled with craisins

Thursday, November 25, 2010

On the Table

Like every year, my Thanksgiving dinner is on Friday.  So today, while all of you are stressing out...I'm enjoying an extra day off work, relaxing and slowly prepping ingredients for tomorrow's meal.  But don't be too jealous.  Having Thanksgiving on Friday means that Thursday is a little lonely.  And that everyone coming to my dinner has already had their fill of Thanksgiving the day before.  Plus, half of my guests are omnivores!

I planned out my meal and then peeked at my post from last year.  Surprise!  I planned nearly the exact same thing that I did the year before.

To start:
Homemade pickles (green bean, cucumber, okra, beet)
Roasted chestnuts
Hot local cider

For the meal:
Cornbread dressing
Mashed potatoes
Gravy
Spinach casserole
Roasted portabellos
Roasted garden carrots and parsnips
Cranberry sauce

For dessert:
Pumpkin ice cream pie with GF graham crust and a salted caramel sauce
Pecan pie truffles

Mike just asked me if this was going to be enough food.  I had my doubts until I saw it all written out.  This should do it.  I'll get ya'll some photos tomorrow!

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Halloween Elves!

One of my very favorite things to do each year is to make the kids' Halloween costumes.  I don't do much sewing, other than mending, during the rest of the year.  I have plenty of good intentions to sew other things, but most of those items are tucked away in my little sewing desk.  

But letting the kids design their own costumes is crazy fun and I really love a good project.  So we go all out! 

This year they both wanted  to be elves (not the Santa variety).  So we busted out the mythical creature &  Dungeons and Dragons reference books and got to work designing.  Basically, they found items they liked in the books or thought them up on their own- I drew them out and then we headed to the fabric store.  

I seriously love it when these boys get into the crafty spirit.  They actually LIKE going to the fabric store!  The sewing process is something I mostly do on my own, but the boys helped refine the designs and recommend any changes needed.  It was sort of like Project Runway, but with a smaller budget and more felt.

G opted to be more of a nature-y elf with leaves around his collar and a leaf-shaped hat.

S is more of a warrior elf with totally adorable felt elf ears and wrist cuffs.  

I'm so excited for them to get to wear these this weekend!  Anyone else have some cool costumes they made?

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Fourth of July Canning II

I spent my 4th of July in tears.  

Sappy commercials? Scary fireworks?  Overwhelming patriotism?  Nope.  Five pounds of baby red onions.  Somehow I forgot about the extremely tearful reaction I have to onions when I was dumping these into my grocery bag.  But the sight of all those onions just made me want to preserve them!


Just like last year, I spent this 4th of July canning.

I knew I needed to can about 4 lbs. of green beans from the garden today, but I started off the day at the St. Paul Farmer's Market to see what else was lookin' good.  My best find was those 5 lbs. of little red onions just begging to be pickled.

But when I consulted my recipe, I realized that I needed to soak them in salty water for 12 hours to draw out their juices and get them ready for their pickling brine.  So I packed them in salt in my favorite pickling crock and looked for something else to can.


Dilly Beans were an obvious choice for my green beans.  I'm obsessed with them.  I canned 28 pints last year and I still ran out.  We ate about 2 lbs. for dinners last week and I'm guessing there are more waiting to be picked right now! One note about these, though.  You can decrease the salt in the recipe by 1/2 and they're still plenty salty.  The salt is just for flavor, not preservation.  I love how pretty the dried chilies look in the jars!


After canning the beans, I still wasn't satisfied.  I mean, 7 pints of Dilly Beans does not an ExtravaCANza make.  So I started browsing through my favorite canning book.


I can't say enough good things about The Ball Complete Book of Home Preserving.  The Ball Blue Book is a great starting book for new canners and it's super cheap.  But the Complete Book is that book's mama.  It has everything from the Blue Book, plus tons more.  I don't want to be a blatant Mississippi Market advertisement (subtle is better), but you should go buy this book there during July.  It's only $19.99 right now and the usual price is $22.95!

Anyways, I was perusing this book and the Split Pea Soup caught my eye.  I know, I know.  It's hot as heck today, so why in the world did I want to make soup?  Because I could eat soup every day, that's why.  And because I didn't have all the ingredients to make anything else in the book and had already been to the co-op once today.  So I put some yellow split peas in my pressure cooker to cook them up quickly.

Quick note about this: My pressure cooker warns me not to cook split peas in it because they foam too much and will overflow out of the vent hole.  I can now attest to the truth in this warning.  Don't do this.  It's really messy.

Luckily, after an emergency shut-off of the cooker, the peas happened to be perfectly done and soupy.  So I added a bit of bouillon cube, carrots, onions, salt and pepper.  And then I loaded up my pressure canner.

Another quick note: A pressure canner and a pressure cooker are different. Usually.  My pressure canner can also be a pressure cooker.  But my pressure cooker cannot be a pressure canner.  Got it?  To pressure can you need to be able to control the amount of pressure in your canner.  So unless the lid has a weighted gauge or a dial gauge to choose the pressure, you've got a pressure cooker.

Now I'm camped out in my kitchen, listening to the canner bubble away.  It's a full 75 minutes in the canner for these 9 pints of soup, but it's going to be so awesome to have this soup ready to heat up anytime... Like on super hot summer days when I'm craving homemade soup and don't want to heat up the kitchen.

So that's my 4th of July so far.  Later this evening I'll probably wander down the alley to watch the ridiculously extravagant fireworks show that our neighbors put on every year.  How are you spending your 4th of July?

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Next Holiday, Please

I'm going to be really annoying and promptly follow a Thanksgiving post with one about Christmas/Solstice.  I hate it when one holiday is barely over and people are already rushing to prepare for the next.  But... I'm making a conscious effort to be more festive this year, so I'd better not put it off for too long.

We usually don't decorate for holidays or make too much of a big deal about them, aside from making and eating a lot of food.  Don't get me wrong- we celebrate.  We just don't spend money making it look like we celebrate.  For example, I don't buy wrapping paper EVER.  I reuse the stuff other people buy or make my own out of paper bags or newspaper.  I just can't spend money on something that will be quickly ripped to shreds.

Last year we didn't get a holiday tree- I thought it was much more practical to not get a tree than to go out and buy one, only to then compost it a few weeks later.  But, honestly, it made me sad to not have a tree or other decorations up.

This year I'm going to try to do a little more holiday stuff. So today I went to a garden store and bought a little bunch of winterberry branches and some stems of  ??? with cool with yellow pods on the top to go in my vase on the table.  As I was browsing around, I was  tempted to buy bunches of evergreen boughs and wreaths, but they were so expensive!  I don't think I can spend $40 on a wreath.  But as I was standing in line, I realized that I have 3 different evergreen trees in my yard and the same grapevines that the wreaths are made of.  And pine cones.

So I went home and clipped some boughs and then tied on a ribbon that someone must have bought to wrap a present for one of us (because I didn't buy it!)



Then I ripped down some grapevines from the fence and wrapped them to make a wreath.  I love the bare branch wreaths the best.  I wove in a couple of different evergreen branches a pine cones, too.


Maybe not quite as perfect as the professionally made wreaths, but this will do.  I'm pretty pleased with myself-  I did a little decorating and didn't have to feel silly about buying a bunch of stuff for the compost bin!

Anyone have any other ideas for DIY decorations?

Friday, November 27, 2009

Thanksgiving Staples



This year I didn't make anything super new or fancy for Thanksgiving.  I've kept it pretty low-key for my own sanity and also because I really just wanted the food that my family has always made for the holiday (veganized and gluten-freed, of course!).  I didn't even make a fake turkey or tofu or any "main dish".  Here's the menu for the 7 of us- I'll list the items and give you pictures first and then ramble on and on about a few of the dishes and give some recipes for those of you who are interested.  This might be the longest blog post ever.

Pickled beets, baby gherkin pickles, olives with herbs de provence


Cornbread Dressing
Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes


Spinach Casserole
Marinated Portabello Mushrooms


Cranberry-Ginger Preserves
Caramelized Onion-Miso Gravy
Pumpkin Pie

Yeah...my pie cracked open like the Grand Canyon.

Chocolate Bundt Cake



For me, stuffing/dressing is what really makes Thanksgiving... Thanksgiving.  I mean, family and gratitude are important, too.  But the dressing is really important!  My meemaw has always made cornbread dressing, so I just use a gluten free cornbread with her basic recipe, which I've gleaned from just watching her over the years.  The measurements aren't really so important here- That's the beauty of it!  Last year I promised that someday I'd give you the recipe, so here it is (too late for this year, though!):

Meemaw's Cornbread Dressing (veganized and gluten-freed)
In this batch, I used 1/2 cornbread and 1/2 store-bought GF bread that I had in my freezer for way too long.  So dig around in your freezer- maybe you have some, too.  Dressing is all about using up leftovers!  Otherwise, you can use a double batch of cornbread.  PS- Meemaw doesn't use chopped nuts in her dressing, but I really like it.

1 loaf of gluten free bread (I used Food for Life millet bread)
1 batch of Mary Frances' cornbread, cooled
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 large red onion, chopped
6 stalks celery, chopped
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 cup pecans or walnuts, chopped and dry toasted
1 Tbsp. dried sage (at least)
2 tsp. poultry seasoning
1/2 tsp. salt
1 quart of vegetable broth (homemade or made from bouillon)

Start by toasting the gluten free bread.  Roughly chop the bread into cubes and then lay them on a cookie sheet and bake for about 10 minutes at 350, or until toasty and dry (This makes it ready to absorb the yummy broth you'll be dousing it in).  Throw your dry bread cubes in a 9x11 inch glass baking pan.  Crumble the entire batch of cornbread in to pan, too.  The pan will be very full with bread, but don't worry.  It condenses when you add the liquid and smash it down.

In a large skillet, heat 2 Tbsp. olive oil until it ripples.  Then add the chopped onion and cook, stirring frequently, until onions are lightly browned and mostly translucent.  Then add the celery and garlic and cook another 2-3 minutes or so.  Dump all the onions, garlic and celery into the pan with your bread.  Also add the chopped, toasted pecans, sage, poultry seasoning and salt.

Return the pan to the heat and then deglaze the pan with the quart of vegetable broth.  Be sure to scrape up all the delicious little bits of onion off the pan.  Then remove from heat.

Now use your hands to mix up the bread, cornbread, vegetables, herbs, nuts in the baking dish.  It might get messy!  When thoroughly combined, smash the dressing down with your palms.  Last, ladle broth over the dressing, cup by cup.  I used nearly the entire quart.  You want the dressing to be moist to the touch, but not floating in broth.

At this point, I usually refrigerate the dressing until the next day because I like to make this in advance.  But you could bake it right now.  Set the oven to 350F and bake, covered, for 40-50 minutes.

Another recipe that we ALWAYS have at Thanksgiving is Spinach Casserole.  Here people would call it "Spinach Hot Dish".  But that doesn't sound nearly as good to me.  Usually it calls for cottage cheese, Velveeta and eggs.  This adaptation is a little different from the original, but very close in texture and flavor.   The tofu takes the place of both the cottage cheese and the eggs.  The cashew cheese stands in for the Velveeta.  Some corn or tapioca starch replaces the little bit of wheat flour normally in there.  The kids chose this as their favorite dish out of everything I made!

Spinach Casserole (veganized and gluten-freed)
4 10-oz. bags of frozen organic spinach, thawed
1 batch of vegan cashew cheese (just whizzed in the food processor, not drained or baked)
1 lb. of firm tofu
1/2 cup Veganaise
2 Tbsp. cornstarch or tapioca starch

It's really important to get all the liquid out of the spinach after it thaws.  So wrap it up in a dishtowel and squeeze it like crazy.  Or press it in a strainer.  Just do something to get all the liquid out- You're not making spinach soup.

Add the tofu to the food processor and give it a whizz until it's all pureed together with the cashew cheese.  Taste it and add a little salt if it isn't delicious.  Then add the Veganaise and cornstarch and whizz it some more.  Then combine the spinach with the "cheese" and load it into a glass baking dish.  I used a 9x9 inch one and it worked well.  Bake covered for about 40 minutes and then put under the broiler for 3-5 minutes or until the top is browned.  You can also put this in a crockpot and let it cook on high for a couple hours.


For dessert, I was talked into making a Pumpkin Pie.  I hate pumpkin pie and always have.  That gelatinous texture just grosses me out.  And Mike didn't want pumpkin pie "with a twist" (a.k.a. chocolate added or made into cheesecake).  He wanted regular ol' pumpkin pie.  But gluten free and vegan.  Now gluten-free pie crust has been my nemesis.  I've been okay with using GF cookie crumbs for a crust, but have never really made a traditional pie crust that worked.  Thankfully, the Gluten-Free Girl posted a pie crust recipe just a couple days ago.  So I tried that one...sort of.

After making up the dough I realized that I not only intentionally subbed different flours for nearly every one she called for and used egg replacer, but I also left out a main flour ingredient- the almond flour.  Just left it out.  Or at least I think I did.  I'm not completely sure, though, because I was watching a House MD marathon while baking, so maybe I subbed another flour and don't remember.   Somehow, the dough still looked great and rolled out very nicely, though!  I didn't make 2 crusts with it like I was supposed to because I used a large Springform pan to bake my pie.  Because I lost both my pie pans a few years ago and never bothered to replace them.  And also because Alton Brown says that he always uses Springform pans or tart pans for all his pies.

Anyways, the crust worked great and I filled it with this pumpkin pie filling because I liked that it was called pumpkin pie but used a whole container of cream cheese.  So then I could techically make the plain ol' pumpkin pie Mike wanted, but still get something a little different from that dreaded gelatinous orange stuff.

Just in case the pumpkin pie sucked, I made a cake.  My mom's chocolate bundt cake rocks the whole world because it has chocolate chips in it.  So I made the "Lower Fat Deep Chocolate Bundt Cake" from Veganomicon and just subbed 1 1/3 cup millet flour, 2/3 cup tapioca starch, and 1 1/2 tsp. xanthan gum for the 2 cups of flour in the recipe.  The only other change I made was that I made was to add about a cup of chocolate chips to the batter and then to bake it about 10 more minutes than called for in the recipe.  Yum!!!

And for the record, I thoroughly enjoyed both the pumpkin pie and chocolate cake.  I can't say I hate pumpkin pie anymore.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Calling all Lizzes...

Don't forget to celebrate Liz Day!!  Today is 2-17, and if you spin that upside down it spells LIZ. Last year I celebrated with pure gluttony.  How will you celebrate?

Monday, December 22, 2008

An Early Celebration


Yesterday we celebrated Christmas/Solstice with Mike's family in our usual tradition: 
With Pizza!

Every year we make way too much pizza topped with all the toppings that we usually try not to splurge on (artichoke hearts, roasted peppers, 3 kinds of olives, etc.).  We had 8 people at our gathering and we made 5 pizzas...You do the math.

How do we keep things vegan in an omni kitchen?  Mike's mom had the super smart idea to label her big wooden cutting board with a vegan side and a meat side!  See the fuzzy picture below:

That's veggie side up with 2 kinds of olives and veggie pepperoni.  Mike and I shared a gluten free pizza this year  (Last year I accidentally left the GF free crust at home on accident).  Usually the crust is perfect, but I must have done something different this time because it stuck to the pan like crazy.  Luckily, with all these toppings, it tasted just fine- Even if it was the ugliest pizza!

Trouble cat was being super duper cute yesterday (begging for some of grandma's gluten free sugar cookies, maybe?).  This is her peeking out of the big pickling crock.  



Friday, November 28, 2008

Thanksgiving 08

I love Thanksgiving so much.  This is food I would eat every day if it didn't send me into a delicious food coma.  I just woke up from a 3 hour nap.  Yep- that's right.  I did it just because I could.  

We hosted Thanksgiving this year- that's mostly been the tradition lately.  I love doing the cooking and Mike's mom is perfectly happy to bring anything I need and help with the grocery bill.  We're a perfect in-law match!  (actually not in law, since the law is not involved in our relationship.  But you know what I mean).  Mike's family is always a good sport about the whole vegan thing- no complaints about the missing turkey or anything. 

Mike will surely read this and make fun of me, but I want to post a picture of the table because I think it looked really cute!  The yellow candle holders are glasses with layers of tissue paper wrapped around them- they look really pretty when the light shines through.  The idea is from the November issue of Martha Stewart Living.  I broke out some homemade pickles on the table for snacking and the kids devoured them!
This is the first year I haven't made a seitan-tofu turkey a la Bryanna Clark Grogan.  I really love her recipe, but this year we made sure everything was wheat free and mostly gluten free for Mike.  And I just can't figure out how to make a "turkey" like that without wheat gluten. So I made some tofu turkey cutlets marinated in poultry seasoning, nutritional yeast, and veg. broth. And in case they weren't that good, I crusted them, fried them, and baked them to make up for it.  They were that good, though.

Of course there were mashed potatoes with onion gravy, green beans with a parsley, almond, and lemon gremoulade, cranberry-ginger relish (Martha Stewart Living Nov 08), and my gluten free cornbread stuffing, too.  Someday I'll post a recipe of it, but I never measure anything for it so I couldn't give you a recipe right now.  The cornbread I used was a double recipe of Mary Frances' Southern Style GF Cornbread.  It's my fave.

When I was a little girl I remember seeing my Meemaw bake HUGE pans of cornbread on Thanksgiving, only to break it up into bits for the dressing/stuffing.  I always felt sad seeing the perfect cornbread get smashed, but it's a necessary evil for this amazing dish!  

For dessert I broke out yet another Martha recipe.  This is the "Triple Chocolate Pumpkin Pie" from the Nov. 2008 issue.  I subbed a 12 point whatever ounce pack of silken tofu for the 12 oz. of  evaporated milk and 3 eggs called for in the recipe and used Newman's wheat and dairy free O's for the crust instead of graham crackers.  What happened to the creme filling on all those O's, you ask?  I'll never tell!

Since the O's have barley flour, this isn't gluten free.  But you could just use any GF cookie you can find.  I couldn't bring myself to bake cookies and then smash them to make a crust.  That plus the cornbread destruction might have been too much for my delicate constitution.  {I used to cry when balloons popped}

On top of the pie is some whipped Soyatoo cream.  I've had the stuff in a can and wasn't that impressed.  It deflated as soon as it left the can!  But this was the liquid variety that you whip at home and I thought it was 100% better.  Plus it was fun to whip it good in my KitchenAid. Seward Co-op in Minneapolis carries it.

We had a great day just chatting and eating and enjoying each other's company.  Now the kids are off to grandma's for the annual setting up of the Christmas decorations, I'm up from my nap, and I'm ready for leftovers.  Hope everyone else's Thanksgiving was as good as ours!  

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Early Thanksgiving

We went to a friend's house last night for a rockin' vegan potluck with a thanksgiving/holiday theme.  Such a good idea!  

It's a pretty rare thing for a vegan to show up at a holiday gathering and be able to eat anything on the table.  Unless, of course, she/he was in charge of preparing all the food.  So it was really nice to show up with just a couple of dishes and sit down to an amazing meal.

We had Tofurky, Celebration Roast, gluten-free cornbread stuffing, 2 kinds of mashed potatoes, gravy (I made 2 quarts of it!), corn, homemade cranberry sauce, pumpkin pie with buckwheat crust, homemade pumpkin soy cream, and whipped topping.  Yum!

Before we left, the kitten came tearing down the stairs with a gift bag stuck around her belly.  It was a sad sight and the poor little kitten was confused about what was going on.  But I managed to snap a picture before I cut the bag off of her.  Now I know who's been ripping apart all my gift wrap supplies in my closet, huh?

Friday, October 31, 2008

Halloween Treats!

Every year for Halloween we take the boys trick or treating and let them gather up big bags of candy that we don't eat. Then when we get back to the house they trade in their artificially colored, high fructose corn syrup for a Haloween goodie bag. This year there's some seriously good stuff in these bags!

Fast and Furless in Minneapolis had Sjaak's Organic, vegan, fair trade extra dark chocolate bites filled with peanut butter. This is the kind of chocolate where you can really taste the cocoa because it's not gobbed up with tons of sugar. I don't even need to tell you how good these are. It'll just make you cry.

I also picked up some Yummy Earth organic lollipops, a Panda raspberry licorice, a chocolate coconut fair trade Larabar, organic strawberry Stretch Island fruit leather, Endangered Species dark chocolate bite, dark chocolate "earth balls", and some Yummy Earth organic peppermint drops for each boy.
Oh, and there's some for the parents, too!

What do we do with all the unwanted candy? We bring it into the Co-op and give it to our coworkers or sometimes we "regift" it to other trick or treaters who come to our door (along with a little organic chocolate, of course)!

Well, this is it- My 31st Vegan MoFo posting. While I did miss a day or two, I made sure to post extra on a couple of days to make up for it. Yay! I did better than last year!


Monday, December 17, 2007

Cookies!















In case you were wondering- it is possible to bake so many cookies in a day that you feel sick just from smelling the Earth Balance saturated fumes wafting from the oven. I baked about 144 cookies yesterday.


Here's what I made:
Dreena Burton's "You Got Peanut Butter in my Chocolate" cookies
Isa Chandra's Sparkley Ginger Cookies
Colleen Patrick-Goudreau's Mexican Wedding Cookies
My Cranberry Pistachio Lime Shortbread cookies


I'm adding these Cranberry cookies to Food Blogga's Eat Christmas Cookies contest because these are my favorite holiday cookies and everyone should make some this week.
Just don't bake so many that you feel sick, okay?

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Thanksgiving

Here's the finished products:Seitan/Tofu Turkey Roulade with "Stuffin' Muffins", Whipped Roasted Garlic Potatoes, and Homestyle Potato Rolls (aka the best rolls ever)
Maple Dijon Glazed Greenie Beanies, Southwestern Corn Pudding, and Jalapeño Cranberry Chutney
My (first) plate of food.

I was really happy with how everything turned out. I don't have a picture, but Mike's mom made an awesome Peanut Butter Chocolate Pie with soy whipped cream. It was rich and creamy- perfect. The dog thought so, too, apparently. She jumped up and shoved her whole snout in the pie.

This morning we ate Thanksgiving sandwiches on those potato rolls. Wow- The kids ate about 3 rolls each last night (in addition to everything else except the corn and cranberries because they were a bit spicy) and then at 2 more this morning (each). Good thing that recipe makes a lot of rolls!

Thursday, November 22, 2007

The beginning of my late Thanksgiving

This year I got to have an early Thanksgiving with my family in Virginia and now I'm preparing for my late Thanksgiving with my family in Minnesota. Tomorrow I'm having the parents in law (except not really in law, because there's nothing legal binding me and my sweetie. Just love...awwww!), the kids, and a friend over for the big meal. And I get an extra day to cook since it's late!

It was a little weird today being alone on a day that nearly everyone spends with family. But I snuggled with the animals and read a book, then went to yoga (a full class, despite the holiday), and started cooking. Now my sweetie is home, but exhausted, so I'm kinda alone again.


Here's the carb-tastic menu I'm planning:

Bryanna's Tofu/Seitan "Turkey" Roulade
Pecan & Sage Stuffing (made with spelt bread because it was 1/2 off!)
VCon's Southwestern Corn Pudding
Roasted Garlic Mashed Potatoes
VCon's Homestyle Potato Rolls
Kale Gratin
Green Beans
Cranberry-Jalapeño Chutney
And some kind of gravy, depending on what flavors seem good tomorrow.

Perhaps it's too much food for 7 people? I'm sure it is, but I love Thanksgiving leftovers SO MUCH!

Here's the Roulade about to go into the oven: And here's the stuffing smashed into muffin tins, a la Rachel Ray.

I'll follow up tomorrow with the full meal's pictures, after baking.