Happy Thanksgiving Eve
It’s the calm before the storm. I’m sitting here peacefully in my study watching my ever-patient husband tinker with one of the thousands of little fairy lights I bought to decorate the dining room (which is also the kitchen, and the library, of course), sending my parents flowers for tomorrow, making timetables about when things need to get done tomorrow, when 19 people will be seated around my table.
Of course, here in England the vast majority of the populace are not excited, they’re at school and work, planning nothing more sustaining to eat than a nice packet of fish and chips or a plate of shepherd’s pie, so it’s not the all-hands-on-deck Cookathon that it is in America. I really do miss that Thanksgiving feeling: of a gray day (always, it seemed!), the last leaves wafting down, everyone home and underfoot, an old movie or football game on in the background, and all sorts of unaccustomed people in the kitchen. In my childhood, this unlikely cast of characters included my poor mother, who was never happy in the kitchen, and my father, who appeared on special occasions like Christmas morning to make the pancakes and Lil’ Smokies sausages. And of course, being a man, he carved any turkey that made its way into our kitchen, in that unspoken division of labor that holds sway in every American household I know.
On Thanksgiving Day, however, everyone put a hand in. In the olden, olden days, my mother’s mother taught me to make perfect turkey gravy in her kitchen in Southern Indiana, her matronly curves girdled and a lace-trimmed half apron around her waist. Then in later years, we gathered at my aunt and uncle’s house in Kentucky (getting lost at the same highway junction every year, listening to our parents amicably bickering over whose fault it was) and my grandfather commandeered the enormous turkey to get every morsel of meat from its bones. As the elder male statesman of the family, he accepted this as his right and responsibility. Leave no wing intact!
The stuffings: one plain for normal people and one studded with oysters for my mother’s family who claimed to like such fishy surprises. The canned green beans, smothered in canned cream of mushroom soup with crunchy fried Durkee onions. The hot rolls and butter (no margarine on Thanksgiving!), the mashed sweet potatoes with marshmallows on top! Jello with fruit cocktail swimming in it and cranberry sauce, fragrant with orange zest, freshly made — which was a surprise in a family otherwise addicted to things in cans. The pumpkin pies and a peculiar Indiana concoction called “sugar cream pie,” and pecan pie, golden with Karo syrup. All served with my aunt’s gleaming silver, sparkling crystal and lace tablecloth which was brought out, I would bet, on Christmas Day also and that was it, for the year.
It was a lovely little dozen years or so, those Thanksgivings, between being just old enough to remember, and moving away to set up housekeeping on my own. What nice years, all the family intact and healthy, plenty of grandparents to go around, the feeling of tradition and being looked after, good smells emanating from a kitchen that was somebody else’s, and all the more delicious for not having produced them myself.
Thanksgiving holds a special place in my heart because it was on just such a gray, savoury-smelling Kentucky afternoon 27 years ago that I realized I was in love! For the first time, and the last time, as it turned out. My boyfriend had swanned off to some exotic place like Florida or St Barths with his family, and I had decamped home with my family, only to discover that I… missed him! What an unexpected sensation, paradixically pleasant because it meant something wonderful had happened to me. Thanksgiving… just the right word.
A friend of mine said today that the holidays depressed her, and she wondered why. While I don’t myself get depressed at this time of year, quite the opposite, I could understand why she felt as she did. I think there is a little childhood left in each of us, a yearning for days when someone else was in charge, all the decisions had been made by grownups, who would stand or fall on their wisdom. No responsibility! Even if I eventually took over the gravy-making from my grandmother, as she no longer could stand comfortably at the stove, it was still someone else’s kitchen, stove, oven, whisk. A good feeling, and one I think we have to achieve a certain age to remember, and to value.
So I will say this year that there is one thing I am newly thankful for, and that is the deep memory of little-girl Thanksgivings, and young-woman Thanksgivings, happy and surrounded by family. Thankful that I now have my own little family, my own child to cook for. And as always, thankful that my long-ago boyfriend has spent the last 20 Thanksgivings in my grownup kitchen, carving the turkey as a good man should. Happy Thanksgiving, everyone.
Pumpkin Pie
(serves 8, if there are other pies around as well)
1 soup-size can pumpkin puree (not pie filling)
1 soup-size can evaporated milk
1 cup light brown sugar
2 large eggs
splash vanilla extract
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground nutmeg
1/4 tsp ground cloves
pinch salt
1 large deep pie crust (9‑inches)
Simply mix everything but the crust (!) together in a large bowl with a hand mixer till thoroughly mixed, then pour into pie crust. Bake at 425F/210C for 15 minutes, then turn heat down to 325F/160C and bake a further 40 minutes or until pie is set in the middle. Cool and serve with whipped cream or ice cream.
How romantic is the vision presented by your last paragraph! Hope you aren’t too homesick and have fun with the last of your preparations.
Beautifully written, friend. This is definitely one of those “home is where the heart is” kind of holidays for expats, don’t you think? Wishing you and yours a beautiful and most happy Thanksgiving. XOX
Lovely entry, Kristen! I can totally relate with the imagery you recount. You have definitely entered a new realm as far as Thanksgiving food goes! Have a wonderful Thanksgiving. We will be celebrating at my sister-in-law’s house (in town) with my parents, Bob’s parents, and Bob’s brother, sister and their kids. I’m bringing a sauteed brussels sprouts/asparagus/chestnuts side, plus a sweet potato pie!
Thanks, friends… Amy, do you mean to tell me your side dish contains ALL those ingredients? I need to hear details! Have a glorious holiday, everyone, wherever you are… :)
This was a beautiful reminiscence. Your description of the day and the offerings on the table are so spot-on. It did make me sad reading it, though. Sad for those large, replete days with three generations of family. This year, on Thanksgiving, I ate some turkey on rolls in the airport!
What a lovely Thanksgiving post. Slightly teary-eyed here. As I read your Thanksgiving memories, they conjured up my own versions — of kitchens peopled with family, of aromas escaping from pots bubbling and ovens baking, and of long tables laid with the ‘best’ china, in dining rooms so well-remembered but now long gone. Shades of Thanksgiving past indeed.
I am puzzling over how a girl from a family who liked things from cans came to be such an accomplished, disciplined and generous cook…
Isn’t it touching how many memories we all have — such disparate people from many different places — of Thanksgiving? I think I might write this in a slightly different way, with more recipes and photos and see if I might find a place for it out there in the world next year?
Poor Bee, stuck in the airport. Was the turkey on a roll a gesture toward the holiday??
Sarah, I like pretty much ALL food, sadly! I’ll still happily heat up a can of Campbell’s chicken soup if I get the chance and I love cold French cut green beans straight from the can. I’m sorry!