The extra special ingredients for this dressing were the leftover breakfast sausage in my freezer and a pint of fresh oysters.
I could tell that the dressing was the favorite with my friends too because I know they love the flavor of fresh oyster liquor and because they kept spooning more dressing onto their plates. The little glass round of stuffing contained NO OYSTERS for the boring palate of the hubs.
I had wanted to cook a green bean casserole for my feast. I bought French green beans and a mushroom condensed soup base. I also printed out these instructions from Cooks Illustrated because I like vegetables to be as emerald green as possible.
Alas I had no time or energy left to make that green bean casserole which will just have to happen at Christmas feasting or another meal needing zhushing.
What took so much time to cook were my winter squash soups. I kind of went all out while shopping and bought kabocha, butternut and a couple of acorn squashes. I thought of slicing them up and roasting with brown sugar and butter, but never did get to them. That part of the meal like my planned green bean casserole went by the wayside.
I turned to online recipes as well as my big black binder in which I store favorite recipes and recipes I want to eventually try.
Kabocha squash is my favorite for Asian curries, and so I thought it would make a delicious soup. I followed one recipe which called for slicing it open, removing the seeds and then roasting.
I pureed the roasted squash with some of my homemade soup stock and then put into pot along with caramelized aromatics. I rarely make pies from scratch and stuck a commercial frozen pie into my still-hot oven. My favorite unusual ingredient in a squash soup is citrus--I squeezed the juice of an orange into the kabocha soup.
I ended up bringing the soups to my brother's home the next day for his Thanksgiving lunch-dinner.
The next labor intensive dish was my Brussels sprouts salad. I shredded each and every sprout on my mandoline as well as toast pecans I had left in my freezer.
My short cut was the Delfina lemon vinaigrette that a friend gave me as a gift, but if I hadn't that, I would have made my own with olive oil, lemon juice, shallots, salt and white pepper. The final touch on my cabbage salad were pomegranate seeds.
My Friendsgiving dinner in the end was comprised only of roast turkey (my bird which I bought premarinated was not picture worthy though delicious); the to-the-nines dressing with pork and oysters; mashed potatoes (which were basic and awesome by the way because you can't go wrong with Russet potatoes, maybe a few Yukon golds, and lots of butter and heavy cream which you have to mash by hand to get tiny lumps of handmade deliciousness); a giblet gravy (also homemade from flour browned in the turkey drippings as well as boiling the heart and giblets and liver and neck and then chopping all that very fine afterward)and lots of glasses of Chardonnay and Cabernet Sauvignon. We had no room for dessert, but a fine meal nevertheless was had.
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