Well confiscate my passport, I thought Thanksgiving was the third Thursday of November. This is a notion that I was dispossessed of after sending an email around, which invited several friends/colleagues over to my house on the 20th for turkey and pumpkin pie. I decided to stick with the false date, since I will be giving my first university lecture on "real" Thanksgiving (45 minutes on market based approaches for environmental services to engineering students at École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, one of two federal engineering schools in Switzerland - the other is here in Züri) and will not have time to tend a turkey. (O/T: Any teaching/lecturing tips!?!)
In preparation, I collected recipes and put them into a spreadsheet to figure out my shopping list. I also went to one of the big grocery stores, on the outskirts of town, to buy a frozen turkey. On the big day, I went to my kreisbüro (city office for my area) to apply for an extension to stay in Switzerland and for a Swiss drivers licence. Then I went to the local supermarket to get all the ingredients, except for the parts of the pumpkin pie, which I had bought the previous afternoon because I thought I would have time after practice and
World Toilet Day to bake, and the ingredients I had brought form the USA (brown sugar, canned pumpkin, and pumpkin pie spice, which I didn't end up using).
First off I baked the pumpkin pie, so it could cool. I followed a recipe for the
Ultimate Pumpkin Pie (I used actual spices instead of "pumpkin pie spice"), which turned out quite well. I did not notice a big effect from the apricot preserves, but they certainly did not hurt. If I make it again, I will use a thicker layer. Luckily, I grabbed an extra crust at the store (thinking I'd have time to whip up a second pie), since the one I bought the day before was not big enough. I bought the smallest pie tin at the store, so why they sell pie crusts that are smaller I do not know!
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| One of my guests brought an apple pie, so my lack of baking a second pie was a-o-k! |
Next came the things that needed to be baked, but could be reheated after the turkey was done: stuffing, cranberry sauce, and sweet potatoes. I prepared the stuffing according to a recipe my dad had sent when I was living in Germany the first time, back in 2005, and there were some issues with how it turned out the first time: my
LJ (blog) from that time attests to me telling the Germans that it was a "Bread Salad"! Well, after being in the oven for 20 minutes, it was starting to have that sort of bread salad feel, so I looked up other recipes... most of which involved adding broth to the mixture of butter, bread, onions, celery and herbs, so I poured some stock and a whisked egg over the salad, re-stirred, and re-baked at the same time as the sweet potatoes. The outcome was fantastic - it kept it's shape even when the walls of the spring-form pan that I baked it in were taken away!

While the stuffing was in the oven the first time, I was trying to make something that could act as cranberry sauce. You can't get fresh cranberries here (not that I looked very hard), so I got some dried ones and simmered them in orange juice and zest, sugar, and water. After they had plumped up and cooked down, I added a bit of corn starch to thicken it. Unfortunately, in the chaos of setting the food out on the table, this got left in the fridge.
The sweet potatoes were easy an delicious. Everyone was really excited about how good the tasted -multiple guests added "especially for being so healthy." It was rather difficult to explain the massive amount of butter and brown sugar involved. (I easily used over a pound of butter across all the recipes).
Now it was turkey time. This was my first time cooking a full bird (I had steamed turkey parts for Thanksgiving in my oven-less apartment in Madrid and have avoided hosting duties in the interim), but this lil'guy didn't come with gizzards. Cradling the full bird in order to rinse out the cavity was a strange sensation. I plopped it onto the rack in the roasting pan over veggies, then spread herbs around the insides, added some additional sprigs, and tucked the legs through a whole in skin. Then I doused the outside in butter and massaged salt, pepper and herbs into the skin. I then surrounded the bird with some more veggies and put it the oven.
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| Pretty textbook... |
The turkey was doing its thing, I made deviled eggs and Brussels sprouts.
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You know it is a promising recipe when you have to add
butter to the bacon grease you have already collected.
Oh, and brown sugar! |
Once the turkey was done, I made gravy, while the stuffing, sweet potatoes, and green been casserole (which someone had brought) were reheated.
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There was another american on hand to assist with the slicing (the apple pie provider).
Also in this photo: the pink-ish soup in the upper left-hand corner is chesnut-red wine soup
a solid and genuine effort from my flatmate, but I would not recommend it! |
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How many people does it take to slice a turkey?
There is one good to great knife in my flat and I coudl not find it for this...
I suppose it was napping after working on all veggies all afternoon! |
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| So good! |
And there were leftovers! (It may be bad to say, but the leftovers are my favorite part...) I made soup, but set aside enough so that I can take a few turkey sandwiches with cranberry sauce for lunch this week.

Thanks to all of my guests for providing me with an excuse to cook this much food and to my parents who gave me recipe guidance (Dad's turkey advice makes up for the (nine year old!) incomplete stuffing procedure).