Dishes are done
This year we ditched the 6 hour drive to the relatives and I made a 11 lb
turkey for my two teenage kids and I and there's just enough leftovers not to get sick of turkey. We had cherry stuffing, mashed potatoes, whipped sweet potatoes, acorn squash my daughter insisted on and then didn't eat because the sweet potatoes were enough, rasperry orange jello with cranberry sauce, cranberry sauce out of the can, and homemade cranberry sauce with orange juice and some triple sec- very good but I'm the only one that ate it and brown and serve rolls. Eggless pumpkin pie for dessert. Not only are the dishes done but I just froze four quarts of turkey broth. I'm ready for SHOPPING at 6 am tomorrow! Joelle The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St Augustine Joelle |
Mine are being washed as I write *YaY*.
I definitely sent the kids home with more food than we ate *laughs* BUT I got the carcass from both birds so I can make uber stock! *giggles* Hope everyone had a wonderful day! *cheers* Barb Anne |
Mine are being washed as I write *YaY*.
I definitely sent the kids home with more food than we ate *laughs* BUT I got the carcass from both birds so I can make uber stock! *giggles* Hope everyone had a wonderful day! *cheers* Barb Anne |
The dishwasher is running the 2nd of three loads (14 people + 3 kids). Not
only is today's turkey carcass in the stock pot, I rummaged through the freezer and found all the backbones of spatchcocked chickens and turkeys for the last 6 months. I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Louis Cohen Living la vida loca at N37° 43' 7.9" W122° 8' 42.8" "Joelle" > wrote in message ... > This year we ditched the 6 hour drive to the relatives and I made a 11 lb > turkey for my two teenage kids and I and there's just enough leftovers not > to > get sick of turkey. > > We had cherry stuffing, mashed potatoes, whipped sweet potatoes, acorn > squash > my daughter insisted on and then didn't eat because the sweet potatoes > were > enough, rasperry orange jello with cranberry sauce, cranberry sauce out of > the > can, and homemade cranberry sauce with orange juice and some triple sec- > very > good but I'm the only one that ate it and brown and serve rolls. Eggless > pumpkin pie for dessert. > > Not only are the dishes done but I just froze four quarts of turkey broth. > I'm > ready for SHOPPING at 6 am tomorrow! > > Joelle > The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St > Augustine > Joelle |
The dishwasher is running the 2nd of three loads (14 people + 3 kids). Not
only is today's turkey carcass in the stock pot, I rummaged through the freezer and found all the backbones of spatchcocked chickens and turkeys for the last 6 months. I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. -- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Louis Cohen Living la vida loca at N37° 43' 7.9" W122° 8' 42.8" "Joelle" > wrote in message ... > This year we ditched the 6 hour drive to the relatives and I made a 11 lb > turkey for my two teenage kids and I and there's just enough leftovers not > to > get sick of turkey. > > We had cherry stuffing, mashed potatoes, whipped sweet potatoes, acorn > squash > my daughter insisted on and then didn't eat because the sweet potatoes > were > enough, rasperry orange jello with cranberry sauce, cranberry sauce out of > the > can, and homemade cranberry sauce with orange juice and some triple sec- > very > good but I'm the only one that ate it and brown and serve rolls. Eggless > pumpkin pie for dessert. > > Not only are the dishes done but I just froze four quarts of turkey broth. > I'm > ready for SHOPPING at 6 am tomorrow! > > Joelle > The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St > Augustine > Joelle |
On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen"
> wrote: >I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? Christine |
On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen"
> wrote: >I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? Christine |
On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen"
> wrote: >I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? Christine |
Christine Dabney wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen" > > wrote: > > > >>I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >>and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. > > > > Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it > as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? > > Christine Here's my favorite. Just substitute leftover dark turkey meat and whatever boils loose from the carcass for the legs, and use turkey boilings for the stock, and pick up the recipe at "meanwhile, saute okra..." Turkey Gumbo 2 large turkey legs 1 large bell pepper, chopped 3 quarts water 2 pounds sliced okra 1/2 C oil 1/2 C flour 2 cloves garlic 1 16-oz (or 22 oz.) can tomatoes 1 to 2 tsp salt (to taste) 1 bay leaf 2 stalks celery 1 tsp each: cayenne, thyme, basil, black pepper 1 bunch green onions, chopped 2 chicken bouillon cubes 1 yellow onion, chopped boil or pressure-cook the turkey, water, bouillon cubes until tender. remove turkey legs from stock and allow to cool. remove meat from bones, chop, set aside. break the bones and add back to stock (with skin, gristle, etc.). put on back burner to simmer. meanwhile, sauté okra in 1/4 oil in a heavy pot until all ropiness is gone (about 1 hour). combine remaining oil and flour in an iron skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until flour is chocolate brown. be careful not to burn it. add onions, celery, garlic and bell pepper to the roux and sauté until tender. add roux-vegetables mixture to the okra. add tomatoes, meat, strained turkey stock, bay leaf, cayenne, black pepper and thyme; simmer, partially covered for half hour. add basil and salt, simmer another 10 minutes. serve over steamed rice. |
Christine Dabney wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen" > > wrote: > > > >>I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >>and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. > > > > Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it > as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? > > Christine Here's my favorite. Just substitute leftover dark turkey meat and whatever boils loose from the carcass for the legs, and use turkey boilings for the stock, and pick up the recipe at "meanwhile, saute okra..." Turkey Gumbo 2 large turkey legs 1 large bell pepper, chopped 3 quarts water 2 pounds sliced okra 1/2 C oil 1/2 C flour 2 cloves garlic 1 16-oz (or 22 oz.) can tomatoes 1 to 2 tsp salt (to taste) 1 bay leaf 2 stalks celery 1 tsp each: cayenne, thyme, basil, black pepper 1 bunch green onions, chopped 2 chicken bouillon cubes 1 yellow onion, chopped boil or pressure-cook the turkey, water, bouillon cubes until tender. remove turkey legs from stock and allow to cool. remove meat from bones, chop, set aside. break the bones and add back to stock (with skin, gristle, etc.). put on back burner to simmer. meanwhile, sauté okra in 1/4 oil in a heavy pot until all ropiness is gone (about 1 hour). combine remaining oil and flour in an iron skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until flour is chocolate brown. be careful not to burn it. add onions, celery, garlic and bell pepper to the roux and sauté until tender. add roux-vegetables mixture to the okra. add tomatoes, meat, strained turkey stock, bay leaf, cayenne, black pepper and thyme; simmer, partially covered for half hour. add basil and salt, simmer another 10 minutes. serve over steamed rice. |
Christine Dabney wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Nov 2004 18:53:16 -0800, "Louis Cohen" > > wrote: > > > >>I'm thinking turkey soup and turkey gumbo. And next year, a small turkey >>and a leg of lamb instead of a 20 lb'er. > > > > Ooooh...turkey gumbo..do you have a recipe in mind, or do you wing it > as you go along? If you have a recipe, can you please post it? > > Christine Here's my favorite. Just substitute leftover dark turkey meat and whatever boils loose from the carcass for the legs, and use turkey boilings for the stock, and pick up the recipe at "meanwhile, saute okra..." Turkey Gumbo 2 large turkey legs 1 large bell pepper, chopped 3 quarts water 2 pounds sliced okra 1/2 C oil 1/2 C flour 2 cloves garlic 1 16-oz (or 22 oz.) can tomatoes 1 to 2 tsp salt (to taste) 1 bay leaf 2 stalks celery 1 tsp each: cayenne, thyme, basil, black pepper 1 bunch green onions, chopped 2 chicken bouillon cubes 1 yellow onion, chopped boil or pressure-cook the turkey, water, bouillon cubes until tender. remove turkey legs from stock and allow to cool. remove meat from bones, chop, set aside. break the bones and add back to stock (with skin, gristle, etc.). put on back burner to simmer. meanwhile, sauté okra in 1/4 oil in a heavy pot until all ropiness is gone (about 1 hour). combine remaining oil and flour in an iron skillet and cook over medium heat, stirring constantly until flour is chocolate brown. be careful not to burn it. add onions, celery, garlic and bell pepper to the roux and sauté until tender. add roux-vegetables mixture to the okra. add tomatoes, meat, strained turkey stock, bay leaf, cayenne, black pepper and thyme; simmer, partially covered for half hour. add basil and salt, simmer another 10 minutes. serve over steamed rice. |
>
> This year we ditched the 6 hour drive to the relatives and I made a 11 lb >turkey for my two teenage kids and I and there's just enough leftovers not to >get sick of turkey. > >We had cherry stuffing, mashed potatoes, whipped sweet potatoes, acorn squash >my daughter insisted on and then didn't eat because the sweet potatoes were >enough, rasperry orange jello with cranberry sauce, cranberry sauce out of >the >can, and homemade cranberry sauce with orange juice and some triple sec- very >good but I'm the only one that ate it and brown and serve rolls. Eggless >pumpkin pie for dessert. > >Not only are the dishes done but I just froze four quarts of turkey broth. >I'm >ready for SHOPPING at 6 am tomorrow! > >Joelle >The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St >Augustine >Joelle > >There was turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, Waldorf salad, ham, two different green bean casseroles, a spinach dish, a broccoli dish, that green dish made with Cool whip, dressing, walnut pie, an odd but good pumpkin dessert, cheesecake, a Death by Chocolate sort of cake, Napoleons and what else? I'm sure I missed something. I'm glad I wore stretch jeans. Nice company, including the teens. We got home and I fell asleep after the Apprentice. We brought some leftovers home but I will still probably brine and cook a turkey breast next week. |
>
> This year we ditched the 6 hour drive to the relatives and I made a 11 lb >turkey for my two teenage kids and I and there's just enough leftovers not to >get sick of turkey. > >We had cherry stuffing, mashed potatoes, whipped sweet potatoes, acorn squash >my daughter insisted on and then didn't eat because the sweet potatoes were >enough, rasperry orange jello with cranberry sauce, cranberry sauce out of >the >can, and homemade cranberry sauce with orange juice and some triple sec- very >good but I'm the only one that ate it and brown and serve rolls. Eggless >pumpkin pie for dessert. > >Not only are the dishes done but I just froze four quarts of turkey broth. >I'm >ready for SHOPPING at 6 am tomorrow! > >Joelle >The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page - St >Augustine >Joelle > >There was turkey, gravy, mashed potatoes, Waldorf salad, ham, two different green bean casseroles, a spinach dish, a broccoli dish, that green dish made with Cool whip, dressing, walnut pie, an odd but good pumpkin dessert, cheesecake, a Death by Chocolate sort of cake, Napoleons and what else? I'm sure I missed something. I'm glad I wore stretch jeans. Nice company, including the teens. We got home and I fell asleep after the Apprentice. We brought some leftovers home but I will still probably brine and cook a turkey breast next week. |
In article >,
Barbtail > wrote: >Mine are being washed as I write *YaY*. I did end up with doing the dishes as well as cooking, but the dishwasher did a nice job, even with the antique plates (thats' what the light china setting is for). By the time my parents called to say they were home safe at 9 pm, the second load was in the dishwasher. All the plates fit, which was nice. Dad had also washed out the roasting pan. Mom has him well trained ;-) Yesterday I finished all the glassware and boxed everything back up again. I also made some more mashed potatoes with the three I had left from the 5# sack. I sent the original leftovers home with someone. >I definitely sent the kids home with more food than we ate *laughs* BUT I got >the carcass from both birds so I can make uber stock! *giggles* Time for me to do so. >Hope everyone had a wonderful day! Mee Too! I spent yesterday not doing much, although I did make an attempt to unclog the sink that got clogged during the party. Which was the only big glitch that arose. Otherwise I think it went pretty well for a first-timer. I did have some help (I didn't do the desserts). My big tip is to get a potato ricer if you are making mashed potatoes for a crowd. then you don't have to peel the spuds first. Saves time and energy. >*cheers* I also put the three dead champagne bottles out for recycling ;-). Charlotte -- |
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