A few weeks ago, we got an email from a local farm saying they were now taking Thanksgiving orders for heritage turkeys. โThat is awesome. Letโs do it!โ Andy said. For about a millisecond, I was on board, until I remembered that when it comes to the turkey, itโs not my call to make. Andy and I have free rein to go all rogue (within reason) on the sides โ adding anchovies to roasted cauliflower or oranges and mint to the cranberry sauce โ but my Mom owns the turkey and gravy. If itโs going to be anything other than a 14 1/2 pound Bell & Evans bird, itโs Mom who has to sign off on it. And letโs be honest, if you own the turkey, you own the holiday. My sister hosts, my brother brings snacks and pies, my father is on wine patrol, but my mom is President and CEO.
And also Secretary. I like to think that the reason why Thanksgiving teeters on the happy side of the chaos spectrum in our house is because of my motherโs Post Feast Analysis System. Every year, on the morning after Thanksgiving, she grabs her legal pads (sheโs an attorney and I donโt think she ever leaves home without them) and starts taking detailed notes on the holiday: Date, menu, number and names of attendees, temperature, who cooked what, who bought what and where, what she needs more of next year, what she needs less of,ย what worked, what didnโt. Naturally, Iโm not nearly as fascinated by the menu as I am by the details that surround the menu. What makes her system awesome is not just that it reminds us that we ate sweet potato casserole in 2011 and 2012 โ itโs the little detail that my then 9-year-old niece requested fewer pecans in the casserole next time around. Itโs not just that we auditioned a new cranberry sauce last year โ itโs that my then 11-year-old niece was the one in charge of spearheading it with me. (Mom was also sure to note sheโs not willing to give up on her old-school sauce just yet.) Of course, I look to the notes to see how I can improve my performance next time. Last year I did a couple things right (I provided โsuperbโ homemade stock for the gravy โ which was like getting a gold star) and also a few things wrong (in the mashed potatoes department: a simple โtoo muchโ). But at least I didnโt mess up the turkey.
Hereโs a sneak peak of my momโs post-game report. Is there any question who I inherited the recording gene from?
So awesome! I think that is a great idea!
I. love. this. Like mother like daughter, right?
My girlfriendโs husband literally wrote 3 pages (FRONT AND BACK) just about cooking the turkey one year. I mean, Iโm all about writing down notes and details, but 6 pages? Itโs one turkey! We still tease him about it ๐
how long back does she have these notes? you should bind them together in a book for everyone one year for christmas.
http://semiweeklyeats.blogspot.com/2013/11/weekend-outfit-2.html
I do this too! With every holiday.. Iโm glad Iโm not the only one.. And also that weโre pretending this is a cool (and not crazy) thing to do ๐
Not related to this but I downloaded my December Bon Appetit last night and I love your article on the Christmas dinner! Our dinner is the same way!
Ahh, I so want to do this! Post-mortem is not my strong suit, but I very much love looking back at them after the fact. Great motivation!
How to improve my perfomance? Perhaps by not deciding on Christmas morning to make a tarte aux fraise from scratch โ yes, from the spontaneously disintegrating pรขte sucrรฉe to the crรจme pรขtissiรจre that refused to thicken. And booking to leave on holiday the day after.
I love this! Btw, I finally got around to reading your book (and then promptly thereafter rereading Sam Stiftonโs Thanksgiving) and I cannot even begin to say how much both books are really excellent. I havenโt read very many books that got me so excited about the idea of (eventually) having a family and getting to introduce my kids to family dinner as yours did, and it really made me appreciate how incredibly lucky Iโve been to have grown up in a family that prioritized family dinner in a huge way.
I have to smile as I read your post as my mother-in-law does the same post-analysis after every single get together/pot luck gathering (the later we have no control of what or how much the guests bring but the analysis is done in any case). It used to drive me crazy and but now I truly appreciate the this in the interest of food management and tastiness. Of course, my m-i-l is *very* precise, as in โWe have 8 people coming, they get two spring rolls eachโ whereas I would tend to err on the side of more (fried food? 50 always sounds good to meโฆand looks better on the plate!) and doggie bags which nobody ever seems to refuse. But the post-analysis has helped me create better food next time as well as minimize excessโฆwell, kind of. ๐
Love this idea
#newslettergiveaway
This is my favorite idea of the day. Possibly month. Doing it now!
Also โ what was in the โsuperb home made stock?โ
What is a โquoqueโ that your mum has written in the header of each review?
Thanks,
I canโt believe thereโs a kindred family out there that does this. We actually have a spreadsheet to fill out ever year. We list who was there, what food was served, opinions and ratings of the food, entertainment, and a best dressed category. I love looking through past Thanksgivings and being reminded of things like the time my college-aged nephew wrote โno molasses cakeโฆ this is bullshitโ.