Thanksgiving for Omnivores, Vegetarians, Vegans & Gluten-Intolerant Family Members

I found an online article about throwing away the rules for setting a table at Thanksgiving. Setting a table? You have to throw away the rules for everything!

Spoiler alert: my family broke these rules years ago. Partially, they were broken because all of our elders were gone. Partially, they were broken while the elders were still around. Mom would say, “Use paper plates,” or Aunt Mary would say, “Do we really want to eat that again?” I think they were giving us permission to do our own thing. And now, we do.

The Rules

For families who have broken no rules but want to consider doing Thanksgiving Light, these are suggested by the writer of the article.

  1. Forget the place cards. (Really? Do families really use place cards?) The article suggests giving general seating directions and allowing Uncle Percy to find a seat away from Cousin Sally who has such left-wing views he can’t swallow. Or not. Part of family life is family debate. Right?
  2. Forget formal flowers, or any flowers….bring outside elements to the dinner table, like branches, acorns, squash, and cabbages. Alongside a few votives, you will have a dramatic — and dramatically simple — centerpiece. I have to say that we gave up decorating the table at all for this meal. But it’s a nice touch.
  3. Forget the tablecloth. Show off the natural wood of your table, or use simple placemats to create a clean, elegant place setting. Great idea. If I think the wood might be damaged, I use a vinyl cloth.
  4. Forget the crystal. This can be an all-hands-on-deck meal, with everyone cooking, everyone going inside and outside, everyone doing everything but taking care not to shatter the crystal. Everyday glasses are just fine. Perfect, in fact.
  5. Forget covering the table with food. Everyone passing the turkey, dressing, cranberry sauce and gravy. Spilling here and there. Having to help little ones and older ones. Is my family the only one that went to buffet serving ten to fifteen years ago?

And Now For Those Recipes

My family has come up with favorites over the years, combining meat eaters with I’ll-eat-fish eaters with no-meat-or-fish-for-me-please eaters to nothing-that-comes-from-an-animal eaters, with a few gluten-free omnivores and gluten-free vegans thrown in for good measure.

Rather than bore you with our recipes, I’m sharing suggestions from a great article in HuffingtonPost Online. Click on the link for full recipes.

  1. Lablabi (Middle Eastern Spicy Chickpea Stew). This works for everyone, including persons with a need to eat gluten-free. Those folks will just have to forgo the baguettes that are suggested for serving.
  2. Thanksgiving Root Vegetable Pie. This will work for vegetarians. For vegan or gluten-free diets, you can work around items (olive oil instead of butter, crustless or crust made with vegan ingredients).
  3. Jeweled Millet. This is packed with flavor and texture. Ingredients include millet, chickpeas, sautéed almonds, caramelized onions and a variety of spices.
  4. Vegan Lentil Shepard’s Pie. Think root vegetables, lentils, mushrooms, rosemary and thyme. Yum.
  5. Creamy Carrot Ginger Bisque With Cashew Cream. To die for. Serve to everyone, vegan and gluten-free included.
  6. Wintry Cornbread Pudding. This is a vegetarian dish. If you have access to replacement ingredients for the eggs and cheese, and if you use a vegan-friendly bread, it can be made into a vegan dish.
  7. Hearty Kale Salad With Kabocha Squash, Pomegranate Seeds And Toasted Hazelnuts. There is nothing to add in explanation except the dressing. This recipe uses olive oil, Dijon mustard, lemon juice and maple syrup. If you haven’t discovered the magic of kale, now is the time.
  8. Radish And Pecan Grain Salad. Oh, my. Mixed grains (they suggest farro, freekeh, wheat berries, wild rice, quinoa, pearl barley or any combination), with arugula, parsley, tarragon, mint, pecans, walnut oil, sherry vinegar, radishes, shallot, raisins and dried cranberries. What is not to love?
  9. Leek And Greens Tart With Cornmeal Crust. They kind of lost me on this one.
  10. Butternut Squash, Brussels Sprout, And Bread Stuffing With Apples. Again, use a vegan-friendly and hopefully a gluten-free – bread, and this can be served to everyone. Everyone.
  11. Quinoa Salad With Hazelnuts, Apple, And Dried Cranberries. This includes cooked-to-crisp onions and celery and is finished with hazelnut oil. Sigh.
  12. Leek Risotto. Any risotto. Good for Thanksgiving.

Desserts

Make your favorites, but don’t forget your changing family! The recipes found in this link are good for vegans, so good for everyone.

  • Vegan Pumpkin Pie With Rustic Crust
  • The Best Vegan Apple Crisp
  • Raw Cranberry Walnut Tort
  • Pecan Pumpkin Pastries With Maple Glaze
  • Blackberry And Apple Almond Loaf Cake
  • Maple Pecan Cookies
  • Pumpkin Pie Parfaits (say this fast five times)
  • Vegan Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Muffins (not for me, thanks)

In Closing

For omnivores who must, absolutely must, have turkey, don’t forget it! Instead of a full bird, you can use a fun recipe for turkey breast. We have so many vegetarians and vegans in the family that, anymore, having a whole turkey is a waste of everything. We’ve seen enough beautifully-cooked birds to last a lifetime, anyway.

I think, this year, I’m going to try some new recipes. Maybe some of these!!!

These are Tiger Lily Approved recipes.

How To Be An Obnoxious House Guest

I have friends and family that live all over the country – Florida, California, Alaska, Arizona, New York, DC – places I have Always. Wanted. To. Visit. I plan to visit as many of these places as I can before the year is over.

One fabulous opportunity is coming up this summer. A cousin of my mother’s step-sister’s ex-husband will spend a month in the Tuscan countryside of Italy. I sent an email last week, noting my intention to travel through the area, and I suggested a get-together. You know, quality time to build our family bond. I hope to hear back soon.

I’ve encountered a few nightmares in the past. It’s like my hosts pulled tips from bad websites!

I invited myself to visit a friend in California last year. The Ms. of the couple greeted me nicely enough, but when she showed me to my room, she pointed to a sheet of paper on the bedside table. She said – listen to this! She said, “Here’s a list of things you might want to see while you’re here. We’re going to be busy, but I’m sure you can get rides with Uber or Lyft – I put numbers right here – and you can come and go as you like.”

The nerve! I left after two nights, because I didn’t even get dinner at a restaurant from them! They let me “graze” from their refrigerator if I didn’t have other meal plans.

I invited myself to visit another friend in New Mexico.  I was at the end of a loosely-fashioned week of stay, maybe it was ten days, and my hosts suggested we go out to dinner. At the end of the evening, as we had driven separately, they were up and out of the restaurant before I realized they were gone! They had not even paid for their own meal! Several times throughout the meal they mentioned the three times they had taken me out, and the extra groceries they had purchased and used during my stay. In hindsight, I realized they expected me, a guest, to shoulder some of the responsibility! I got them back by packing as soon as I got to the house. I left my bags at the door so they would trip over them as they left for work, and I was gone before they returned.

I love to make myself at home. I take what looks to be the most comfortable chair in the living room – I am the guest, after all – and put all of my evening things on the side table. You know. Things like nail polish remover, files and polish, my book, a crossword puzzle magazine, a bag of snacks. Sometimes my host will be rude enough to pick up my water glass and put a coaster underneath. As if I would slosh!

Another pet peeve of mine is just that. Pets. A good host will close their cats or dogs into the main bedroom for the duration of my stay. I’m the guest. They are pests.

Sometimes the “guest” room is actually a room of one of the children, and the little urchin is in and out, in and out, getting clothes, toys and books. Once, a teenager, responding to my look – I was trying to be polite and not say anything – said, “We expected you to be here one night. It’s been five, and I need my stuff.” I nearly made a pile of books and clothes in the hallway, but I took the higher road.

Tips

Because of past nightmares, I’m going to get smarter in the future. I share my tips with you.

  1. If you arrive with suitcase in hand and your friends greet you with, “Why don’t you join us for dinner after you get settled at your hotel?” beat feet for greener pastures.
  2. If people don’t take time off work to entertain you, cross them off your list.
  3. Be a good guest. Take your sheets and towels to the laundry room every morning to save your hosts some steps.
  4. Take a box of chocolates along as a gift. Save some for them.

In Closing

I was going to give you a closing tip, but I’ve just had the rudest email from that family member who will stay in Italy. She said she would be unable to host me. She gave me the names of three hotels in the area and said if I make it to Tuscany, perhaps we can meet at a restaurant. She added we could pay for our own meals. Really! I’m crossing her off my list!

These is a Tiger Lily Approved Blog. Not the behaviors. She doesn’t approve the behaviors.