Our Semi-Vegan Thanksgiving

I know. Thanksgiving is over. It’s time for Christmas trees and cookies and carols and memories of Christmas past. But before I fully enter into the next holiday, I need to finish with the last one. So I’m going to preserve my Thanksgiving menu here where I can find it next year.

I had to make some adjustments this year as one of my daughters is following a vegan diet.  A vegetarian diet has never posed much of a problem – a few modifications (vegetable broth instead of chicken broth) – and simple avoidance of the turkey. But a vegan diet eliminates eggs, cheese, milk and butter – ingredients that make Thanksgiving dinner rich and decadent and so satisfying. I was doubtful.

Her birthday also falls on or near Thanksgiving, so I needed to make her a vegan-friendly birthday cake just a couple of days later.

So today, I’m recording my Thanksgiving dinner menu and recipes – and the cake. If you are interested, read on. If not, I understand. See ‘ya next time!

I’m going to begin with the cake because I took a picture of it. I didn’t take any pictures of Thanksgiving dinner. 🙁 All of the words in blue are links back to sources.

After searching the internet for a vegan cake, I realized that some of them sounded an awful lot like a cake I had made before….  a “depression” cake… the kind women of my grandmothers’ generation made during the depression and during war rationing. No eggs. No butter. No milk. …… Ah ha! Vegan!

Chocolate Depression Cake

  • 3 cups flour
  • 2 cups sugar
  • pinch salt
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 10 level tablespoons unsweetened cocoa
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 3/4 cup salad oil
  • 2 tablespoons vinegar
  • 2 cups cold water
Sift dry ingredients into a large mixing bowl. Add remaining ingredients and mix with a large spoon until smooth. Spoon into a greased and floured 13x9x2-inch baking pan. Bake at 350° for 30 minutes. Frost with your favorite frosting.
1/4 cup virgin coconut oil
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup unsweetened natural cocoa powder
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 cup coconut milk (I used almond milk)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract

Melt the coconut oil in a medium heavy-bottomed saucepan. Stir in the sugar, cocoa powder, and salt.

Add the coconut milk, stir well, and bring the mixture to a boil. Adjust the heat to a steady but gentle boil and cook for 5 minutes, stirring often. The mixture should begin to thicken.

Remove from heat and stir in vanilla. Set the chocolate mixture aside to cool for about 20 minutes.

Beat the frosting until it thickens, about 20 strokes with a wooden spoon. Spread it over your cake layers.

Any leftover frosting can be poured in a pan, allowed to harden, and cut into squares like fudge.

We enjoyed the cake. It was chocolate. It was moist. The frosting was fudgy. I didn’t cook it long enough or it didn’t cool fast enough. Whatever – I ended up putting it in the frig for about five minutes so it would thicken. If you don’t mind having a cake that looks a little messy, just do what I did and pour a lot of the frosting on top, smooth it around and let it drip down. I tried to smooth it out, but I didn’t do a very good job. But really, that has nothing to do with taste. The taste was good – but there was a little coconut flavor from the coconut oil.
Now on to Thanksgiving:

1. Turkey – Like I said, it was a semi-vegan meal. Younger daughter said to me a day before Thanksgiving, “I’m not that into turkey.” I’m thinking, “Great. I just spent a lot of money on a fresh no-hormone turkey and hubby and I will have to eat the whole thing.” But when she took a bite of that fresh, hormone-free turkey she said, “This turkey is good!” And she ate lots of turkey sandwiches over the next few days. Cooked simply in an oven bag with a few vegetables around and poked inside. No Brining. Nothing special.

2. Dressing – I used a recipe I got from one of the ESL teachers the year we prepared a feast for our students. Instead of the cornbread called for, I used 12 cups of wheat French bread. I thought it was a little too moist and maybe needed a little more bread or a little less (vegetable) broth. But my family – who tend to like undercooked dough and bread – liked the stuffing just as it was. (Left out boiled eggs.)

3. Mashed potatoes – Mashed potatoes made with butter and milk are one of my favorite comfort foods, but this was a great substitute. I didn’t have vermouth and just did other ingredients to my liking. I did not use 20 cloves of garlic or a whole cup of olive oil! And I don’t have a food mill, just a potato masher.

Mario Batali’s Caramelized Garlic with Potatoes

  • 3 pounds Yukon Gold Potatoes (peeled)
  • Kosher Salt and freshly cracked Black Pepper
  • Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • 20 cloves Garlic
  • 1/2 cup Sweet Vermouth

In a large pot, cover the potatoes with cold water by at least an inch. Bring the pot to a boil and season generously with salt. Cook the potatoes until a knife easily pierces through the potatoes. Strain.

In a small saute pan over medium heat, add about 4 tablespoons of olive oil. Caramelize the garlic until the cloves reach a deep golden color. Remove the garlic from the  pan and deglaze with Vermouth.

Working in batches, add the potatoes to a food mill. Once all the potatoes are milled, toss in the garlic and the deglazed Vermouth. Stir in about 1 cup olive oil and stir until the mixture is smooth and creamy. Adjust seasoning and serve while still hot.

4. Gravy – I’m terrible at making gravy, but this was easy and delicious. And it smelled so good while cooking. My only problem was that I didn’t have low-sodium soy sauce and it did taste a little too salty for me.

Portobello Gravy

  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
    1 medium onion, finely chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 1/2 cups chopped cleaned portobello mushrooms, (2 medium)
  • 2 1/4 cups vegetable broth
  • 3 tablespoons tamari, or reduced-sodium soy sauce
  • 1/4 teaspoon dried thyme leaves
  • 1/8 teaspoon crumbled dried sage
  • 1 tablespoon cornstarch
  • 2 tablespoons water
  • Freshly ground pepper, to taste
  1. Heat oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add onion and garlic; cook, stirring often, until softened, about 5 minutes. Add mushrooms and cook, stirring often, until they begin to release their juices, about 10 minutes.
  2. Add broth, tamari (or soy sauce), thyme and sage; simmer for 10 minutes. Mix cornstarch and water in a small bowl. Stir into the sauce and simmer, stirring often, until slightly thickened, about 10 minutes more. Season with pepper. If you prefer a smooth gravy, pass it through a fine sieve (discard mushrooms and onions). Serve hot. Can make ahead – cover and refrigerate for up to 2 days. 

5. Cranberry Sauce – I try little changes each year and none ever please me exactly. This year it was cranberry sauce cooked with cinnamon sticks and whole cloves. One caveat here – it’s really hard to find 6 whole cloves just thrown into the sauce fixings. Had to spend 10 minutes trying to find them and still came up one short. Hubby found it, though. When he was eating it.  I made this Spiced Cranberry Sauce from Epicurious.com.

6. Yellow Squash Casserole – I love this stuff and made no attempt to veganize it. It was one she just had to miss out on. From The Ultimate Southern Living Cookbook

7. Green beans – Cooked the way I usually cook them – in a skillet with a little (hardly any) water and seasoned salt. Stir around until the beans have turned bright green and the water is gone. Add olive oil and saute’ till roasted and some are brown and wrinkled.

8. Honey-kissed Carrots – Made as usual, just used vegan margarine. Also from Southern Living Cookbook.

9. Sweet Potato Casserole – I should have just stuck with what I usually make and left out the eggs. Instead, I tried Sweet Potato Casserole with Pecan Topping from the Fat Free Vegan Kitchen blog. It was good, but Thanksgiving is all about tradition and favorite foods – not the time to try a recipe with a new, orangey flavor.

10. Pumpkin Pie – Didn’t try a vegan version this year. Maybe next time, if we have more people to eat with us. Just used the recipe on the can.

11. Cranberry-Apple-Raisin Pie – Vegan friendly if you dot with vegan margarine. I don’t remember where I got the recipe – probably a Southern Living something or other.

So that’s it. The few tweaks to make dishes vegan friendly were not really a big deal. There were a couple of things she couldn’t eat, but there was plenty for all of us to enjoy. And everything was good.

I’ve had a few spacing issues with this post, but I’m done. Not perfect, but good enough.

Now on to Christmas!

As soon as I throw out the decorative pumpkin….

 

Sepia Saturday – Sisters, But Not

Sepia Saturday provides bloggers with an opportunity to share their history through the medium of photographs. Historical photographs of any age or kind become the launchpad for explorations of family history, local history and social history in fact or fiction, poetry or prose, words or further images.

Today’s prompt image is a photograph of Lala Williams and Elgie Crook from the Samuel Bell Maxey Collection at the Texas State Archives. Upon first glance, we might assume that the two young girls are sisters. We would be wrong – but not entirely. Elgie’s mother and Lala’s father were siblings. Elgie’s mother died when she was a little girl and she was sent to be brought up by her uncle. The cousins grew up as sisters.

And so I have chosen a picture of two (older) girls who are not exactly sisters, yet they are.

Pals

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The young woman kneeling is my grandmother, Eveline Coates. She is pictured with Edna Hoskins. On the back of the photograph, my grandmother wrote “Pals”.

And so we know that she and Edna were close.

Eveline and Edna grew up in the small communities of Walnut and Mystic, Appanoose County, Iowa. In the 1920 U. S. Census, their family homes are separated by one house. Eveline and Edna both married in 1923 – Eveline in February and Edna in August. With the marriage of Eveline Coates to Thomas Hoskins, Eveline and Edna became sisters…in law.

I have a picture of Edna that may have been taken on the same day.

Edna Hoskins

I think Edna looks happier in the company of Eveline. Or maybe she just didn’t want to stand in the cornfield.

And here is a picture of Eveline wearing the same dress – but this doesn’t look like it was taken on the same day. Her hair is different. She is in a different location. And she has a pretty lace hat.

Eveline Coates

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It is hard to tell, but Eveline may be wearing a ring on her left hand – possibly her wedding ring, which would date this picture (or both?) as 1923 or later.

A few years ago, I found a heritage craft in a magazine that I took inspiration from and made this little tribute to Eveline and Edna.

To see what others have created with today’s sisterly prompt, visit Sepia Saturday.

 

 

Sepia Saturday – My Childhood Library

Sepia Saturday provides bloggers with an opportunity to share their history through the medium of photographs. Historical photographs of any age or kind become the launchpad for explorations of family history, local history and social history in fact or fiction, poetry or prose, words or further images.

All those books!

I could begin with a picture of the stacks of books I have purchased but still haven’t read. Libraries, book stores, used book stores, estate sales, book jackets, jacket-less books, amazon.com – they all call to me! Read this! Read me! And some that I have already read join in and call, “Read me again! You know how much you love me!”

Seems like I spend a lot of time reading blogs these days and very little time with my books. The stacks grow taller.

I do love books and places where there are books. But I don’t recall having many books when I was a child. Only a few, I think.

One of my favorites was – and still is – “The Little Engine That Could”. I love the illustrations. And, like all kids, I loved the repetition. And the story of the little engine that succeeded because of kindness, hard work, and determination.

I no longer have the book I read as a child, but I have the one I read to my children.

 

I also enjoyed this book of nursery rhymes. But this book stands out for another reason. When I was little, I sometimes had trouble going to sleep. There were snakes under my bed and monsters lurking in the dark. I would feel afraid and unable to close my eyes and fall asleep. I found a mental image that helped me overcome these feelings and nudge me to a restful state. It was the image of monkeys running around in a tree and acting silly. I think I got the idea from this book.

 

And then there is the story of “Snoopy – The Nosey Little Puppy” who was rescued from the pound. I was going to scan all of it to add here, but I had some little sisters who did a lot of scribbling in it. Let’s just call this one well-loved.

Another book I remember owning is one I no longer have nor can I remember the title or the name of the main character – although I did for many years. It was red, with the cloth library-type cover and simple black line drawing on the cover. The story was about a little girl who went to the circus alone for the first time. She bought cotton candy as soon as she arrived and then couldn’t find her ticket. The story was about her going from place to place and person to person, trying to find her ticket – which was, of course, stuck to her cotton candy. Not sure why I liked or remembered this book, except that, as I said, I didn’t have very many. If this story sounds familiar to anyone, I’d like to know!

Since American Thanksgiving is next Thursday, I’ll close with one last book from my childhood – although I really don’t remember it. Guess it wasn’t a favorite.

It claims to be an illustrated version of a poem by Ralph Waldo Emerson. The Ralph Waldo Emerson Society, however, has this to say about the poem:
This three-stanza, 21-line poem has long been attributed to Emerson, but is definitely not by him. No author has been discoverd. It is widely reprinted in hymnals, and has been published separately as We Thank Thee (Racine, Wisc.: Whitman, 1955) and Father, We Thank You (New York: SeaStar Books, 2001).

It is always good to count one’s blessings!

If you would have preferred something that included a sepia photograph or two, I invite you to view a post I wrote about my great uncle who lived by his motto: If you can read, you can do anything. It fits the theme pretty well.

Please turn the page to the Sepia Saturday blog where you can read what other bloggers have created for today’s prompt.