Quote:
Originally posted by Uabassoon
I've always thought it was greek.
Ok well I guess I am wrong. Either way I LOVE it! :p
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Quote:
Originally posted by Uabassoon
I've always thought it was greek.
Ok well I guess I am wrong. Either way I LOVE it! :p
Turkeyand mashed potatoes.*drools*.I actually like a whole bunch of the stuff i eat on Thanksgiving, which is mainly vegetables,pie,my dad's bread that he makes,turkey,etc.we used to go to my grandparents and eat Chinese food on Thanksgiving,lol
I love it all, but with the HUGE sweet tooth I'm always nursing, the pies (especially pumpkin) are what I look forward to the most. :)
Yum! Everything together makes the best meal! For some reason right now though, the stuffing and mashed potatoes and gravy sound really good. Other favorites were always the rolls mom got, the corn casserole, the grean bean casserole, and of course, all the yummy deserts!
I miss the family meal at my parents! Last year was also delicious with Brian making the meal, but it wasn't fully the same making our own traditions out of his families and mine. But, this year is really going to be odd with him in Iraq so no family to share it with! Thank goodness for friends though!
Now I'm really hungry.
I love Honey Baked Ham. Next up is this green pea and onion caserole with cream sauce my grandma makes. But what I really like and this may sound strange, is to take the honey ham sauce and use it like gravy over the stuffing, green pea caserole and of course to drown the ham in. Yum!
Actually, Baclava is Turkish. This is due to the long Oriental influence in the area. Greece and Romania have such a long common history too, that most of the dishes are the same. We also have these grape leaves stuffed with rice and vegetables and minced meet that we consider truly Romanian, in Greece they consider them truly Greek. Romania and Greece are mainly Orthodox Christian and that's why they had so much history together.Quote:
Originally posted by luckies4me
Baklova is a Romanian pastry is it not? I am part Romanian and I have always thought it was a Romanian pastry. I love it! :D
Luckies4me, you're partly Romanian? I am Romanian too :)
Quote:
Originally posted by Vio&Juni
Actually, Baclava is Turkish. This is due to the long Oriental influence in the area. Greece and Romania have such a long common history too, that most of the dishes are the same. We also have these grape leaves stuffed with rice and vegetables and minced meet that we consider truly Romanian, in Greece they consider them truly Greek. Romania and Greece are mainly Orthodox Christian and that's why they had so much history together.
Luckies4me, you're partly Romanian? I am Romanian too :)
That is SO funny, because here in the Middle East, both Baclava and stuffed vine leaves are considered "local" delicacies!!! I don't mind WHO invented Baclava - I'm just glad someone did!!
We don't have Thanksgiving in South Africa, although I have had traditional Thanksgiving dinner once - we went on a cruise around the Bahamas and it was over Thanksgiving so we had the whole spread!!! It was GREAT (PLUS no food to prepare and no dishes to wash)!
In South Africa our big holiday is Christmas. Some people do the whole "turkey" thing - we tend to just have a huge BBQ next to the pool with all the family together - it's great!
Whilst we are talking about food - has anyone got a good recipe for KEY LIME PIE???
BUMP
BUMP
BUMP
I just wanted to add that one of my favorite things about Thanksgiving is the smell in general of all the food mixing together!
i love food/recipes, so chose to read this thread while i keep johannas tex and georgia company this morning......although i loved the comments re all the foods....it is 9 a.m. and i am starving.......even tho i have already had breakfast........all that wonderful food!!!!!!!
My favorite has always been my mom's famous fruit salad. No holiday is complete without it:D
I like, TURKEY!!! and my moms stuffing!! Yum Yum!!! corn on the cob too!!!
Many people may think it's weird, but my mom always made saurkraut as a side dish with the turkey (maybe her German influence) but in the last few years I've skipped it. Not this year though, Jenny loves saurkraut and she & I will have it with my special turkey gravy (it's good on leftover turkey sandwiches too :eek: ) REALLY. My kids always insisted I make my special sweet potato souffle cassarole with brown sugar, raisens, pecans & whipped egg whites and of course the little marshmallows browned on the top - an old southern fav I think. The best part of the Thanksgiving dinner? THE LEFTOVERS :D
The brown rice and steamed vegetables?:D
Just kidding...
Thanksgiving is a world of nostalgia. My mom was a Home Economics teacher, so our family of 6 grew up trying out every kind of recipe imaginable...
I love the cranberry sauce! And hot crescent rolls!