Showing posts with label Thanksgiving recipes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Thanksgiving recipes. Show all posts

Thanksgiving Leftovers...Lasagna, Again?

I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate. --Julia Child


I'm not sure if your Thanksgiving leftovers are gone yet -- I didn't have any as we were guests at two separate, wonderful dinners this year--but the idea of Chris's Thanksgiving Lasagna came up again, and we actually made it for my sister/parents last week. We weren't able to stay and sample it, but from what I hear it was pretty good.

Here's what we did:

Take a lightly buttered lasagna/casserole pan and cover the bottom with the leftover stuffing, reserving a few tablespoons for the topping. Then, add a layer of shredded turkey breast, a light layer of cranberry sauce, and top with egg noodles and gravy. Sprinkle the extra stuffing on top, add some fresh pepper and wait for all the gravy-goodness to soak into the bottom before heating through and enjoying. 

You can of course do this with any combination of your leftovers -- mashed potatoes, green beans, sweet potatoes, etc.  The sky's the limit.

Have fun and let me know if you try this!

Yum!
xoxoxo

Turkey Day is Fast Approaching

You don't have to cook fancy or complicated masterpieces - just good food from fresh ingredients--Julia Child

I love Wednesdays -- because the NYT Dining Section runs. I can spend my whole hour commute reading and savoring it. In yesterday's, Mark Bittman gave 101 ideas for Thanksgiving jams, soups, salads, veggies, breads, and desserts. I was thinking of trying them all, but I don't know what Chris and I would do with all the food, especially since we're headed to NY for the holiday. There were a few really great recipes (Brussel Sprout Sliders), but I have a great side dish to add: Pecan Pie Sweet Potatoes w/ Sausage:

Take 3-4 large sweet potatoes, peel, and cut into chunks. Toss in a bowl with olive oil and salt and place in 375 degree oven for about 45 minutes, or until the potatoes get soft and slide off a fork. In the meantime, brown some sweet sausage on the stove until cooked through, adding a bit of chopped garlic, if you like. Drain, and return to pan. Add 2 TBS of butter, half a bag of "Pecan Pie" flavored pecans (you can get these at the grocery store), a dash of red pepper flakes, a dash of nutmeg, and some kosher salt. When that gets all warm and gooey, toss in the sweet potatoes. Mix everything together and put in a casserole dish. Add a few more pats of butter and 2 TBS of maple syrup. Stir it up and place in the heated oven for a few minutes more, until the potatoes get a bit softer--almost carmelized. Enjoy on Turkey Day, or with a nice pork loin. Tasty.

The first time I made this, I put the maple syrup in with the olive oil on the raw potatoes and then left the potatoes in the oven way too long and they turned into sticky, gooey, sweet potato carmels. Which, although they didn't look that great, tasted amazing. The pan was a disaster to clean though (I let Chris handle), so now I add the syrup at the end and it still tastes the same.

You live some you learn some.