Friendsgiving Part One with American friends @ Buitengeluk
photo by Ricardo Palomar |
photo by Will Perry |
Thanksgiving tree |
photo by Ricardo Palomar |
Friendsgiving Part Two with South African friends @ Valley Lodge
A couple of weeks before Thanksgiving, the New York Times published an
article featuring a list of recipes which they felt represented every
state in the US. I looked at our traditional Thanksgiving menu and found
that with very little massaging, it would be easy to incorporate a
sense of place into this year's Friendsgiving menu.
tables set with Maasai shukas and shweshwe |
We found that every one of our favorite recipes were actually attributable to every state that Vince and I have lived in and even the ones where we regularly vacationed and even sometimes spent Thanksgiving. In fact about all we had to do to our traditional menu was to add cheddar cheese to our Thanksgiving mashed potatoes to represent Vermont.
If we were back in the US, we would have used real Vermont cheddar but we're not ... so our cheddar came from the Karoo. And our wines would probably have included at least one California wine from our cellar, but our wine is back in the US and we are in SA ... so we served exclusively Cape wines.
roasted, fried and braaied |
Of course we had all-American Turkey, Dressing and Giblet Gravy. We had three turkeys actually. One roasted, one fried, and one Vince cooked on the braai. And we made fresh pumpkin pie completely from scratch.
write something you are thankful for ... |
... and hang it on the Friendsgiving tree |
make a wish |
blurry action shot of pinky-pulling the wishbone |
In South Africa, they do this with an ostrich wishbone! Using their pinkies!
a toast |
Lou & Serge have a new BFF |
post-it timeline |
after 16 guests and 3 turkeys ... |
Thankful for leftovers for turkey soup.
Our Thanksgiving tree is full! |
Just so very thankful!