Where: The home of Ulli and Randall.
When: November 22, 2007, evening.
What: Pumpkin soup with sweet corn foam.
Turkey.
Stuffing with mushrooms and chestnuts.
Risotto with pears and gorgonzola.
Mashed potatoes.
Mashed sweet potatoes.
Cranberry sauce.
Creamed pearl onions.
Whiskey apple pie with streusel topping.
Apple pie with granola topping.
Pumpkin pie topped with mascarpone whipped cream.
Pumpkin bars with coconut topping.

Thanksgiving Turkey
After breakfast, we took a long walk on the beach with the dogs, then came back and played cards (Milles Bornes!) while snacking on a cheeseball I made for the occasion. I attempted to help in the kitchen, but Ulli would have none of it, insisting I relax with the others in the family room. ‘Round about nightfall, we opened up a bottle of bubbly to whet our appetites. It was a surprisingly good brut from a winery in New Mexico (yes, New Mexico!) called Gruet. It is crisp and dry, perhaps lacking complexity, but perfectly enjoyable, and really ridiculously inexpensive (less than $15 for a 750ml bottle) for its quality.

We started with the soup, which was served in roasted mini-pumpkin and kabocha squash shells. Ulli used a whipped cream dispenser to squirt corn foam onto the top of the soup. She thought she could taste the nitrous oxide in it and was going to try something different next time, but I just tasted delicious corny goodness. I thought it was a brilliant touch to add to an already extremely tasty soup.

The turkey had been deep fried on the back porch, and was expertly carved by Randy. The stuffing was of simple ingredients: baguette, mushrooms, chestnuts, sweet onions, celery, and herbs. I don’t know if it was the cast-iron skillet it was baked in or just Ulli’s magical touch, but it was truly the best I have ever had, and I consider myself somewhat of a stuffing connoisseur. To me, the stuffing is the most important part of a Thanksgiving meal, maybe because Thanksgiving is the one and only day a year I eat stuffing.* The risotto was rich with gorgonzola; it’s sharp, creamy flavor contrasting the sweet, crisp pears. We also had mashed potatoes, mashed sweet potatoes, cranberry sauce, and we each got a little crock of creamed pearl onions. And it was all so incredibly delicious!

Not knowing there were already three pies coming down the pike, I brought a whiskey apple pie, the recipe for which I found in the New York Times. I made and baked off the crust, made the apple pie filling, and the streusel at home on Tuesday night, then on Wednesday night, I added the whiskey to the pie filling and assembled and baked the pie. The pie burnt a bit on top, but it still tasted delicious. All of Ulli’s pies were amazing. You can find the recipe for her pumpkin bars and the delicious egg liquor we sampled along with the pies on her website.

It was wonderful to spend Thanksgiving eating such amazing food with such a wonderful, warm, and fun bunch of people!

pumpkins and rolling pinsCarving the squashturkeycarving the birdpumpkin foamGorgeous stuffingpassing the bubblyplateSitting downsoup

*The next morning I was initially disappointed to see that we weren’t having stuffing for breakfast, but once I tasted the pumpkin pancakes Ulli made instead, I quit feeling sorry for myself! They were the best pumpkin pancakes I have ever had. They are often cloyingly sweet and too moist in the center, but these were perfectly flavored and perfectly cooked!

Pumpkin pancakes and bacon

One Response to “Thanksgiving Dinner, 2007”

  1. GASTRONORMOUS » Mushroom Risotto says:

    [...] my favorite local Brooklyn restaurants makes a fantastic red wine risotto (sans vegetables), and my second blog entry attests to the delectablity of a pear and gorgonzola risotto! Basic risotto ingredients and [...]

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