Thanksgiving 2025

For our Thanksgiving celebration recently, we put together the following menu:

Serving Suggestion
  • Diestel Bone-in Organic Turkey Breast – 6 lbs. Used the recommended “rub” (a couple of tablespoons of olive oil, some salt, and smoked paprika) before putting into a pre-heated 325 degree oven. Came out perfectly at 165 degrees internal temperature after two hours. We let the turkey breast rest for 30 minutes while the stuffing (below) cooked in the same oven. Compared to roasting a full bird, this bone-in breast was a simpler, faster way to go! See: https://diestelturkey.com/products/organic-bone-in-turkey-breast
  • Sausage, apple and herb stuffing – based on a recipe by Ina Garten. We used Gala apples – although Granny Smith was recommended and might provide a little more apple flavor to the stuffing. We used a half-pound of Jimmy Dean regular pork sausage that we cooked ahead of time prior to sautéing the other ingredients before adding to the bread mixture. Some may want to use the full pound of sausage. Seemed like the 1 cup of chicken stock wasn’t enough so we used some additional to further moisten the bread cubes before putting into a 300 degree over for 30 minutes. We used the same oven as the turkey – we took the turkey out and put the stuffing in while slightly lowering the oven temperature. See: https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/sausage-and-herb-stuffing-recipe-1943434
  • Butter-poached carrots – On a whim (actually based on a tip from Sam Sifton in his Morning newsletter for the New York Times) we made a small side dish of butter-poached carrots for the first time. “It doesn’t seem that butter, water and salt should result in carrots that taste this supremely of carrots, but the magic is evident in the incredible distilled carrot flavor, thanks to a little technique.” Couldn’t be easier – butter, water, salt – bring to a vigorous simmer for 10 minutes and you’re done. Instead of sliced carrots, I used a couple of handfuls of the mini carrots we get for snacking. Turned out great. A local steakhouse we enjoy visiting serves a side of broccoli and carrots with their steaks – and I’ll bet they’re using a simple recipe like this to prepare them. See: https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/1026250-butter-poached-carrots
  • Mashed potatoes and gravy – we used some local store-bought potatoes and gravy this year. Heated up in the microwave – couldn’t have been easier!
  • Missing this year: no rolls or bread (other than the stuffing). We also had some green beans we thought we’d sauté but decided that we had enough with the carrots, stuffing, etc. so skipped making them.
  • Dessert: For dessert we had a box of frozen chocolate cheesecake bits from Trader Joe’s which we just right – small but flavorful way to end the otherwise big meal! See: https://www.traderjoes.com/home/products/pdp/chocolate-cheesecake-bites-077104

We started cooking about 2 PM and sat down for dinner about 5 PM. Not too much work and a wonderful Thanksgiving meal!

Diestel Bone-In Organic Turkey Breast – after cooking

PS: that stuffing is even better the day AFTER Thanksgiving!

Christmas Dinner: A Dry-Brined and High-Heat Upside Down Turkey

Merry Christmas!

Today, for our Christmas dinner 2009, we’ll be cooking a 14-lb Diestel turkey that we’ve dry-brined this week using this recipe from an article in the Los Angeles Times. Dry brining requires thinking ahead – like three days ahead when the turkey needs to be salted and tucked away in the back of the refrigerator.

We’ll be cooking the bird today using our high-heat upside down roast turkey recipe, a family favorite that produces wonderful results.

Friends are bringing a couple of side dishes to have along with the stuffing we’ll be making. Yum! – getting hungry already!

Update: Just a quick note to report that the Christmas turkey turned out to be excellent – moist white meat, great flavor! Our little experiment in dry-brining the holiday bird was a big success! Thanks to Russ Parsons for his article and recipe!