MyCommunityNOW.com
Blog Home |  Email Author  |  About this Blog       Welcome to MyCommunityNOW - Blogs Sign in | Join

In the Race

Now, here, you see, it takes all the blogging I can do to keep in the same place.
If I want to get somewhere else, I must blog twice as fast as that!
You see, I'm in the Red Queen's Race...

Why Do We Eat Turkey At Thanksgiving?

By Janet Evans
Thursday, Nov 22 2007, 06:15 AM

 

Although juicy and tender butterball turkeys are the main cuisine of today's Thanksgiving celebrations, these birds were NOT the most popular centerpieces on the first Thanksgiving tables.

In 1621 when the Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians celebrated the first Thanksgiving, they were gobbling up many more foods than just turkey.

Since lobster, goose, duck, seal, eel, and cod were plentiful during this time, these foods were most likely the main courses of this first feast.

Deer meat and wild fowl are the only two items that historians know for sure were menu of this autumn celebration.
So how did the turkey become the main mascot of modern-day Thanksgiving if we don't know for certain that turkeys were at this first feast?

One story tells of how Queen Elizabeth of 16th century England was chowing down on roast goose during a harvest festival.

When news was delivered to her that the Spanish Armada had sunk on it way to attack her beloved England, the queen was so pleased that she order a second goose to celebrate the great news.

Thus, the goose became the favorite bird at harvest time in England. When the Pilgrims arrived in America from England, roasted turkey replaced roasted goose as the main cuisine because wild turkeys were more abundant and easier to find than geese.

Turkey Trivia:
  • The long fleshy skin that hangs over a turkey's beak is called a snood.
  • The color of a wild turkey's naked head and neck area can change blue when mating.
  • Male turkeys are nicknamed "toms" while females are called "hens."
  • When turkeys reach maturity they can have as many as 3,500 feathers!
  • Faster than a speeding bullet--Wild turkeys can run up to 55 miles an hour!
 >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>  

And  I apologize for this, but I just can't resist .... 


Your dinner will be the talk of the TOWN!!

You should try this!
Sure to bring smiles from your guests!

 Here is a new way to prepare your Thanksgiving Turkey. 
 
1.  Cut out aluminum foil in desired shapes.

2. Arrange the turkey in the roasting pan,position the foil carefully.? (see attached picture for details)

3. Roast according to your own recipe and serve.

 

4. Watch your guests' faces...  (scroll down) 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Filed under: , ,
Permalink |  Mail to a friend

Comments

Bryan Maersch   

Janet

Was that a thongkini on that bird? I hope this picture was not one of Kevin's vacation pictures.

In case you did not see my Thankgiving message on Kevin's post. Have a happy one! Enjoy Black Friday shopping and please check Gregs blog for all the store opening hours. (He still thinks Black Friday is a racist remark!!!)

November 22, 2007 4:23 PM

Janet Evans   

Bryan,

I see you have been busy today with some very THOUGHTFUL comments!  Quite funny!

No shopping for me - I'll stick to the internet for that!

As far as this picture being one of Kevin's ... well, that is between "us bloggers!"

November 22, 2007 8:54 PM

Leave a Comment

Please Sign In to post comment.

Posts

Your browser must support javascript to use the posts pager. Please enable javascript or return to the home page to page through posts.
Newer Older

Tags

News


Visit My
Righty Blog

Today:
”9-11 Terrorist's Remains - The Story”

5th Annual "Corks for Kids"
Wine Tasting Fundraiser
Friday, February 6, 2009
6:30-9:00 p.m.
Hugo's Steakhouse, Franklin
Root River Junior Women's Club

Search the Blogs