Happy Thanksgiving! Just thought I'd psych everybody up for the true Thanksgiving holiday which occurs on Monday, Oct. 12 this year! And, to all my American relatives, it's Ok to be jealous. Not every household gets to have 2 Thanksgiving's per year. One with pickles (oh yeah!) and one without (unfortunate, but true). If you're feeling horribly deprived, you can always put pickles on your Thanksgiving table and say that you're doing it in my honor. I'll collaborate!
Jon and I agreed to celebrate both Thanksgiving holidays in our household from now on. Our Thanksgiving in Canada involves many of the same traditions as American Thanksgiving. We still have all the family over. Dinner involves turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes etc. The one thing I've noticed is the pickle thing. Everyone I know in Canada eats pickles at formal meals. You just slice 'em and serve 'em. Jon thinks that's weird. However, my family has some traditions that differ from most due to personal preference:
We always have both turkey w/mashed potatoes and ham w/ applesauce at Thanksgiving. You can choose. One side of the family fights over the dark turkey meat and the other side fights over the white meat. I personally like both, so there's always plenty for me wherever I go! Beets and cranberries are absolutely forbidden in the house, let alone on the table, and weird jello salads are a must for the Watson's (I'm talking cherry jell-o with pretzels, fruit, and whipped cream. Yuck) By the way, Jello is a side dish in Canada, not a dessert.
Every member of the Quinton family HATES pumpkin pie (we call it stoolie pie), although Mitchell might like it. We're not actually sure that he even tastes his food as he shovels it down. Pies for the holiday include lemon without meringue and banana cream with the bananas on top, not inside. The Watson side of the family has an obsession with Orange Dream Jello salad (orange jello mixed with whipped cream). That jello salad shows up at every Thanksgiving. My mom makes it the best, but my immediate family got so tired of it that she refused to make it. Now my aunt makes it every year (not as good).
The Quinton family also HATES Jello that has anything in it. We like it plain. No fruit, no whipped cream, and definitely no cheese, nuts, lettuce, or hamburger (I did warn you that Canadians like weird Jello salads).
Add all these ingredients together and you have the perfect recipe for a GREAT Canadian Thanksgiving!
10/7/09
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4 comments:
Wow. That is so funny about the Jello. We'll have to remember that when we get together in the future. We unfortunately do one of those Jello salads with stuff added in. We will make a plain "side dish" just for you!
Jon made me try that Cranberry Jello Salad last Thanksgiving. It wasn't bad, but I still prefer plain old jiggly Jell-o.
That cranberry jello salad is the best thing ever! However, I'm perfectly fine with you not liking it, because then I'll have more of my favorite Thanksgiving leftover.
That's very gracious of you Lauren!
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