My first Thanksgiving!!!

Disneylover79

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Please tell me where to start. My mom is going to come over and help me cook..I can do all of it except for the Turkey...
I have waited for this (my mom helping/teaching me how to cook a holiday dinner) for 20 years!!!

So do you have any tips?!?!?!?
 
Please tell me where to start. My mom is going to come over and help me cook..I can do all of it except for the Turkey...
I have waited for this (my mom helping/teaching me how to cook a holiday dinner) for 20 years!!!

So do you have any tips?!?!?!?

You'll find that the turkey might be the easiest part!

You don't say in your post, but have you planned your menu? That's where I'd start.
 
Make what you can the night before. It'll make everything a whole lot easier to just heat things up.
 
I agree, prep/cook whatever you can the night before. The turkey MUST be cooking on Thanksgiving for me because you need that "smell" in the house to make it Thanksgiving :lmao: Are you having people bring anything? If so, be pretty specific what you need-tell them a "pumpkin pie", not just a dessert, etc.

Wash dishes as you go so you don't have a huge pile to clean after dinner, oh, and Dh cleans up if you do all the cooking:lmao:.
 

Make out your menu. Decide when you want to eat and go backward from there to make a timeline so everything will come out at the right time. If your mom is coming over to teach you and you have enjoyed her cooking all these years, I'd say the best advise will come from her. Try sitting down with her asap and talk through the process. It's really not a difficult meal, just the last 20 minutes of getting it all to the table can get crazy. I always enlist the help of family at that point with pre-assigned jobs to make it go smoother. Have a wonderful time doing this with your mom!
 
figure out your menu,
from that figure out the ingredients, use that to make a shopping list (and idealy, don't wait till the week of thanksgiving to shop-some items will be in short supply and the stores are a nightmare),

figure out the time on how long something has to cook/what temp, and figure out a schedual based on that.

i agree with cleaning dishes as you go-much nicer to be able to relax after the meal. also-if you can time it so the dishwasher's last big load has been run and put away before the meal then you can put the dinner dishes and serving utensils in and you don't get stuck with a full sink.


last tip-check your spices and not often used ingredients. you may be sure you have what you need but it's better to find out you are out or nearly out of a particular spice beforehand vs. trying to find it the day of.
 
I think everyone here has pretty much covered the basics, but I just wanted to wish you well.. How exciting! :goodvibes

Is this going to be the start of a family tradition - or just a one-time deal?

Thanksgiving isn't that far away, so get your food shopping list ready so you can take advantage of the sales as they start..

Good luck - and have fun! :goodvibes
 
Make what you can the night before. It'll make everything a whole lot easier to just heat things up.

Yup--this is what I do. Pies can be cooked the night before, and casseroles (green bean, yam, and the stuffing) can all be assembled too. You could make your cranberry sauce if you want that to be homemade, though I really like Trader Joe's orange cranberry relish. Buying premade relish makes one less thing for me to do. I buy dinner rolls as well. That leaves stuffing the turkey, cooking the turkey, and making the mashed potatoes/gravy for Thanksgiving Day. Actually, on Thanksgiving, I'm usually opening the wine around noon and relaxing while everything bakes. :goodvibes

I also should put in a good word for using Reynolds bags. No basting that way, and the turkeys I've made have come out delicious and moist. I use a thermometer, too, because using the bag seems to cut down the cooking time. I've never tried brining a turkey, but I've heard that is a great way to go as well. Lately, I've bought Shelton's fresh turkeys; they're really tasty and not injected with saline solution (my pet peeve about meats nowadays).

Good luck and have fun. :)
 
Just don't serve a near raw turkey like my wife did her first time. She prepped the bird the night before and put it into the fridge overnight. What we didn't know was the back of the fridge would feeze things. Unknown we put a half frozen bird into the oven. Dinner was late that year.
 
Congrats on your 1st Thanksgiving I agree the turkey is the easy part esp with the roasting bag.

1 thing I do (have done..not doing the big turkey dinner this year to busy moving) is chop all my onions an celery needed for the dinner in advance spread them on a cookie sheet put in freezer till frozen then in zip lock freezer bag. i can do this early in November.

I've also always made my own pie crusts usually on monday before Thanksgiving put the pie crusts in the pie plates then covered an left them in fridge till Wednesday night when I bake pie I'm just that much further into pie making when the time comes an Wednesday is always busy that week.

The more you can do before the big day the better an easier it will be on you.

I also clean kitchen from top to bottom early November then like on monday before Thanksgiving make sure everything is in it's place an I can reach an grab on the fly....nothing like spending half hour lookin for something in middle of cooking turkey dinner.
 
Thanks for all the help!! I can't wait until I get to make dinner...it actually will just myself,DF,mom,dad, and brother..
 
also, if people ask you if they can help, take them up on it!! Don't be afraid to tell people what to bring if they offer to make a dish.
 
1 thing I do (have done..not doing the big turkey dinner this year to busy moving) is chop all my onions an celery needed for the dinner in advance spread them on a cookie sheet put in freezer till frozen then in zip lock freezer bag. i can do this early in November.

The more you can do before the big day the better an easier it will be on you.

I also clean kitchen from top to bottom early November then like on monday before Thanksgiving make sure everything is in it's place an I can reach an grab on the fly....nothing like spending half hour lookin for something in middle of cooking turkey dinner.

I do this too. Nothing like making your dressing on Thanksgiving day and finding out you don't have any poultry seasoning. You can chop your celery & onions a few days ahead and put them in the fridge. I make my own dried bread crumbs for the dressing, so that gets done the weekend before Thanksgiving. I wash and trim my vegetables the day before. I wrap my sweet potatoes in foil so they're ready to go, too.

The turkey is the easiest part. Just make sure to start thawing it 3 days before, or it will be rock solid. Look for the turkey parts inside the cavity AND inside the neck opening. Once your turkey is thawed they will come out easily. Your mom can take it from there.:goodvibes

So, what kinds of side dishes are you having?
 
I do this too. Nothing like making your dressing on Thanksgiving day and finding out you don't have any poultry seasoning. You can chop your celery & onions a few days ahead and put them in the fridge. I make my own dried bread crumbs for the dressing, so that gets done the weekend before Thanksgiving. I wash and trim my vegetables the day before. I wrap my sweet potatoes in foil so they're ready to go, too.

The turkey is the easiest part. Just make sure to start thawing it 3 days before, or it will be rock solid. Look for the turkey parts inside the cavity AND inside the neck opening. Once your turkey is thawed they will come out easily. Your mom can take it from there.:goodvibes

So, what kinds of side dishes are you having?

For us, we do a 22-25 lb turkey. The very first year, I followed the instructions on the turky for defrosting. The poor guy was still partially frozed the day before. We had to do the water soaking to get him done. I guess we keep our fridge colder, which caused the issue.

So now, our bird comes out of the freezer on friday night and sits in the fridge for the entire week before. We have not since then, had any issues with a semi-frozen bird. And we have never had an issue with bad meat.
 
Since my Aunt died in July :sad1: it's up to ME to host Thanksgiving, my FIRST too!! :scared1: And I'm 54!!!

No fool here, I'm having it catered... :surfweb:
 
For us, we do a 22-25 lb turkey. The very first year, I followed the instructions on the turky for defrosting. The poor guy was still partially frozed the day before. We had to do the water soaking to get him done. I guess we keep our fridge colder, which caused the issue.

So now, our bird comes out of the freezer on friday night and sits in the fridge for the entire week before. We have not since then, had any issues with a semi-frozen bird. And we have never had an issue with bad meat.

Yeah, I usually get a 15-18-lb bird and I have to start the defrost on Sunday. I figured most small families would be getting a 10-12-lb turkey, which would take about 72hrs to thaw.
 
To help with the thaw, you may want to set it on the counter for the first two hours or so and THEN put it in the fridge. It gets the thaw going but there is no danger of it getting too warm and causing food poisoning. I've tried thawing large items by going staight into the fridge vs. getting it going on the counter first, and putting it on the counter for one or two hours made a huge difference in thaw time.

Also if you keep your fridge on the lowest setting, you may want to bump the thermostat up a bit. Due to weight/size issues most people have to put things on the bottom shelf, the coldest part of the fridge. If it's too cold, it could take way more time to thaw than what you have to work with. Obviously keep your fridge at a safe temp, but you may want to make it a bit warmer than usual.

Right now, start going over your dishes, do you have enough plates, silverware, stemware, etc? Do you have enough serving bowls and serving spoons. Gravy boat(s)? Trivets? Do you want to order a centerpiece (or if you're crafty, make one). If you want to have candles on the table, do you HAVE candles/candle holders? Do you have enough chairs? Tablecloth and napikins, do you have enough? Do they need to be ironed? Do you need to make space in the front closet for coats? Do you have enough kleenex, paper towels, toilet paper? Do you need a cork screw/bottle opener/can opener. Do you have coolers for drinks? Do you need to make/buy ice for the coolers? Do the coolers need to be washed out? And DON'T assume on any of this stuff, go and check to make sure you know where everything is located at AND that it is in working order. Especially if it's something you don't use much and is "put away somewhere". You want time to find things that are lost, repair or replace things that you didn't know where broken, and clean things out that need cleaning out.

Also, decide if you want your guests to bring any side dishes and if so, who gets to bring what. If you plan on sending leftovers home with people, stock up on disposable plastic containers.

Plan your menu (keep in mind any food aversions or allergies of your guests - count on at least one person not liking pumpkin so make sure to have a non-pumpkin desert) and and start making up a shoping list. When you're menu is set, start wit the time you want to serve your meal and start working backwards to figure when things need to go in the oven, and from there when you need to start putting ingrediants together. Look at what temp things need to cook at and decide what temp to use if there are different cooking temps for different dishes, and adjust cooking time accordingly. Then print off a time table for T-day, you can use it as a check list to make sure you didn't forget to do anything. You may not follow it exactly, but it's a good outline.

The weekend before, do a big clean of your house, that way all you need to do is light cleaning/picking up the night before.

The day or two before, go over you menu and double check your fridge/pantry to make sure you have all ingrediants. Go online and findout which grocery store (if any) will be open T-day morning, just in case.

The day before, do as much food prep as you can. Chop all veggies that can be choped, toast your bread for dressing/stuffing, bake your pies, I even pre-messure things like butter so I can just plop the right amount in as needed the next day. Also if you need to, get the folding chairs out, put the leaves in the table (or set up a folding table. or both!). Make sure the table linens are washed/pressed, make sure you have enough clean kitchen towels. Some people like to set the table the day before. I don't care to for some reason, beside it gives me something to give guests to do to "help" when they ask if they can help me with anything. In my family at least, when we ask our hosts if we can help, we really want to and feel bad if we can't pitch in! So I leave that little chore for them.

Really organization is the key. And the more you can do ahead of time, the less you have to do the day of.
 
Everybody has given wonderful practical advice. I'd just like to add: take advantage of this time with your mom. If there are any old family recipes, get them from her and make sure they're written down. Ask her about Thanksgiving traditions when she was a child. Don't get so busy/stressed out that you forget to enjoy the time together. My mom passed away unexpectedly at the age of 50, and there are so many things I never got around to asking her--and so many recipes I wish I had--stuff that was never written down, just in her head. It sounds stupid, but what I wouldn't give for my mother's broccoli-cheese casserole recipe!
 

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