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A NEW ENGLAND THANKSGIVING

Tradition holds that the first Thanksgiving feast was celebrated by the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag Indians at Plymouth Colony, Massachusetts, in 1621. In addition to turkey, which was a Native American staple, they reportedly served an impressive array of New England delicacies including waterfowl, venison, fish, lobster, clams, berries, fruit, pumpkin and squash.

As interesting as what was served at the first Thanksgiving is what was not. Smithsonian Magazine reports that while turkey was present, it was not the centerpiece of the feast. Goose or duck were preferred. Shellfish, including lobster, clams, oysters and mussels, were available, and the forests yielded chestnuts, walnuts and beechnuts. Indian corn was grown, along with beans, garlic, onions, pumpkins, squash and other vegetables. But white potatoes, native to South America, and sweet potatoes, from the Caribbean, were not in Massachusetts with the Pilgrims. And, while cranberries were native, a sugary cranberry sauce was not. Without butter and wheat flour, pie crusts were absent, thus no pumpkin pie. And what beverage accompanied the meal? Probably water.

The Founding Fathers, especially Ben Franklin, regarded the turkey as an American icon, and Alexander Hamilton once proclaimed that no “citizen of the United States should refrain from turkey on Thanksgiving Day.” Nevertheless, turkey was uncommon as Thanksgiving fare until after 1800. Midcentury brought increased interest in the nation’s history when Of Plimoth Plantation, Governor William Bradford’s account of the founding of Plymouth Colony, was rediscovered and published. Abraham Lincoln nationalized the holiday in 1863 under pressure from Sarah Josepha Hale, editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book, a trendsetter for household management among women at the time.

She argued that the celebration of Thanksgiving would unite a country divided by the Civil War. By 1867, turkey was part of the traditional dinner, at least in New England.


A NEW ENGLAND THANKSGIVING

Wild mushroom pate with crackers
Crudites with creamy watercress dip
Lobster corn chowder
Nana’s roasted turkey with giblet gravy
Apple cider brine
James Beard’s oyster stuffing
Mashed potatoes
Mashed sweet potatoes with maple syrup and orange zest
Brussels sprouts with chestnuts
New England cranberry relish
Indian pudding
Thyme scented apple galette     

Coffee, Tea


THANKSGIVING PLAN OF ATTACK

THE WEEK BEFORE

FIVE DAYS AHEAD (Saturday)

FOUR DAYS AHEAD (Sunday)

THREE DAYS AHEAD (Monday)

TWO DAYS AHEAD (Tuesday)

ONE DAY AHEAD (Wednesday)

THANKSGIVING DAY (Thursday)

 

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