far as traditions, it aint thanksgiving til some one gets berated, beat down or just slapped over some stupid garbage, YUP we are a dysfunctional group....
One of the jobs I did in south Louisiana took us past some brackish water that had a lot of markers in it. Asked the boat's captain what they were for, he said that it delineated various families' oyster beds. That was the scuzziest swamp I've seen and I grew up by Black Bayou... There ain't no way that I'd eat fish out of that soup much less some feces filtering oysters on the bottom.I'll take Cornbread stuffing any day over Oyster stuffing. Oysters, Yuk!
When much younger all my uncles,my dad and the cousins would head out rabbit hunting on thanksgiving day. wimmen folks would prepare the meal at my grandmothers house, big spread, turkey,ham, mashed taters various vegetables, mac and cheese,sauerkraut and a lot of other things. Tootie (my grandmother) would do all the baking homemade rolls, bread and at least three different kinds of pies, she made the best pumpkin pie I ever ate (and the pumpkin did not come out of a can) Great uncles would show up Manny,Jerry and daniel( they always ate dessert first, asked Manny one time why they done that, he looked me straight in the eye and told me get the best first that way if you die before eating your ahead of the game) and a big long table was set fine dining there and lots of stories. Some times I feel like the last of the Mohicians as they are now all moved on.My friends family always had oyster dressing when their grandmother used to cook. Not necessarily a Southern Illinois tradition, but it was in their house.
In my family, the fellows would go rabbit hunting while the ladies cooked the meal on Thanksgiving Day. Christmas was more of a potluck with a typical ham and usually rabbit from the Thanksgiving hunt.
That sounds Great! Good luck.Have to go elk hunting the day before or day after!
Love me some neck bones and rice. Never had it with kraut though. Yet...Pork Necks and Sauerkraut.
Can't have Thanksgiving without Pork Necks and Sauerkraut.
Here is a stove top trick for ya. If you have to resort to stove top stuffing you can make it taste like the real deal. When I have to use that, usually due to time restraints., I will use two or three boxes and follow the directions on the box. After it sets the required ten minutes I add chopped up boiled chicken, finely chopped white onion and celery, salt, and black pepper. Then dumpJust checked the price of fresh oysters here - $24 per pound. A double batch would cost more than the turkey. I’m afraid i’m gonna commit blasphemy, fellas… half dozen or so cans of smoked oysters in stove top mix. But at least i add chopped onions, sliced mushrooms, garlic and a couple of eggs, and then bake it. I’ll let the turkey watch.
Before the peasants riot, it’s better than the unthinkable alternative, which is (shudder) plain dressing!
Thanksgiving blessings on y’all!
don
Gotta make it last brother...Oh yes, but my Mother always cooked down the carcass to make soup!
DEVELED EGGS, are the CREME DE LA CREME!!! it is never complete with out them!Oyster stuffing sounds good to me. You can’t have Thanksgiving without Deviled Eggs.
grease gravy thickened with corn starch, is finger lichen good!Don't forget gravy......... In the south gravy is either a food group or a beverage........
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