mistletoe misfit wrote:70 Days till American Thanksgiving and your Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade! I try to watch it every year. It's my second favourite Christmas parade to watch on TV. The first being the Toronto Santa Claus parade.
Tomtemor wrote:mistletoe misfit wrote:70 Days till American Thanksgiving and your Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade! I try to watch it every year. It's my second favourite Christmas parade to watch on TV. The first being the Toronto Santa Claus parade.
Swedish Thanksgiving, is October 9. Unfortunately, there are no Swedish "thanksgiving specials" so we watch A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving followed by a Charlie Brown Christmas. We have our holidays a bit mixed up: swedish thanksgiving (this year on Oct 9), halloween (oct 31), All saints day (nov. 1), all souls day (nov. 2) swedish halloween (this year on nov. 4), Swedish all saints day (this year on nov 5), swedish all souls day (this year nov. 6), American thanksgiving (this year on Nov. 24), then it´s almost Christmas! We have a disagreement of course on when it IS actually "christmas", but that is a tale for another time.
mistletoe misfit wrote:There is only one day between Swedish and our Canadian Thanksgivings. Ours falls on October 10th this year! So only another 24 and 25 days to go!! Usually they bring egg nog out for a couple of weeks before Thanksgiving here, then it disappears until about a month before Christmas.
Tomtemor wrote:mistletoe misfit wrote:There is only one day between Swedish and our Canadian Thanksgivings. Ours falls on October 10th this year! So only another 24 and 25 days to go!! Usually they bring egg nog out for a couple of weeks before Thanksgiving here, then it disappears until about a month before Christmas.
Tomtemor wrote:Tomtemor wrote:mistletoe misfit wrote:There is only one day between Swedish and our Canadian Thanksgivings. Ours falls on October 10th this year! So only another 24 and 25 days to go!! Usually they bring egg nog out for a couple of weeks before Thanksgiving here, then it disappears until about a month before Christmas.
What do you cook for Canadian thanksgiving? Is it as big in Canada as in the US? Here in Sweden "thanksgiving" is mostly just a church day. If you are not someone who goes to church, it is just a word on the calendar. I asked Anders today what Swedes traditionally have for thanksgiving. He said there is no specific "meal" like in the US. After three years, it finally occurred to me that Skördefest (sort of pronounced SHER-da-FEST) means harvest festival and these are the recipes I should be looking at. We make a bigger deal out of than most, using the thanksgiving china I brought from the US so it gets more than one use a year. :-)
We actually have turkeys in the store nearly year round now. I did the math and a 4 kg turkey would cost around $32 US dollars. Not sure I am ready to spend that much now. But we can get a couple of high quality breast filets. The turkey did have alot of meat on it, not scrawny like when I first got here. We shall see. Now that we have the freezer up and running I could get one and put it up for Christmas. :-)
AND, we found real cornmeal, so I could even make cornbread dressing. hmm mmmm good. Christmas here we come.
mistletoe misfit wrote:able to pick up a turkey for about $2 a pound within in the next week or so.Cornbread stuffing sounds delicious! We don't really have much cornbread here. I have had corn bread muffins a couple of times when I have been to the States, and loved it!!
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