Updated Thanksgiving Menu – Unique Side Dishes

I try to add something new each year to my Thanksgiving Menu.  There are some traditional parts of the meal that one should never leave out (turkey, stuffing, gravy, mashed potatoes).  On Thanksgiving, it is really in the side dishes that make the meal.  This is not a day to open the jar or the freezer, you should take the time to make things from scratch. 

2009 Side Dishes

1) Sauteed Carrots – Heat your pan over medium heat, add olive oil and butter, add the carrots and a sprinkling or herbs de provence or fresh time, salt and pepper.  Cook until tender and slightly caramelized. 

2) Homemade applesauce -

3) Cranberry Sauce – not that nonsense they sell in a can! 

4) Roasted Squash 

You can cube squash, add olive oil, sage, salt and pepper and roast at 400 degrees like you would a potato.  You can also roast it whole and then add brown sugar, salt, pepper, and butter afterwards.  It just depends on whether you like it sweet or savory.  The important thing is that you don’t serve your guests that awful frozen baby food like squash. 

A Fool Proof Thanksgiving Menu

I have followed this menu for the past several years and it has never failed me, and my guests love it.  I have pulled the recipes from a variety of sources which I will list below. 

The Perfect Roast Turkey by Ina Garten aka The Barefoot Contessa

Herb and Apple Stuffing by Ina Garten aka The Barefoot Contessa 

Cranberry Orange Sauce by Martha Stewart

Mashed Potatoes (mash as you normally would, but add 6 -8 cloves of roasted garlic that has been mashed with a fork) You should use Yukon Gold Potatoes for best results.  People will wonder why your mashed potatoes are so fabulous. 

Roast Acorn Squash – Roast at 350 degress for 45-60 minutes (until a knife goes through them easily).  Before roasting add a teaspoon of butter and a fresh sage leaf.  After roasting remove the sage leaf and stir or pulse in a food processor.  Add some butter, brown sugar,  some freshly grated nutmeg, cinnamon, salt and pepper.

Sometimes I roast brussels sprouts or green beans as well.  Sometimes I stop at the squash, it all depends on how many people are coming.  I have found that people don’t need 7 side dishes in order to be happy on Thanksgiving.  That realization has removed a great deal of stress from my Thanksgiving preparations.