Good Food
Cutting through the richness with acid and some greens
When the palate becomes coated with butter, salt, and cream at the Thanksgiving table, reach for the salad.
When the palate becomes coated with butter, salt, and cream at the Thanksgiving table, reach for the salad. Genevieve Ko makes sure that she highlights the tartness of cranberry sauce and will add ginger, and uses citrus to curb the richness in dishes. Evan Kleiman remembers having a salad at every meal growing up and Thanksgiving was no different. A good dressing on a sturdy green like collards or Brussels sprouts is simple. Add persimmon and dates for sweetness, and salted nuts and Parmesan for some savory, suggests Ko, then drizzle with lemon and a roasted nut-based oil. Another way to mix up flavors at the table is to add spice.
The full episode
11 of 13- 0:00Remembering first Thanksgiving tastes of green beans with fried onion
- 4:00Control freak how to’s for delegating tasks on Thanksgiving
- 6:47Getting the party started with jollof rice
- 8:45Bringing Korean vegan dishes to the Thanksgiving table
- 14:22In the battle of potato salad, Bryant Terry’s vegan version wins hands down
- 17:25Substituting turkey with cauliflower, mushrooms, cabbage
- 25:23Encountering one Thanksgiving’s biggest greens for the first time
- 27:33Looking for little effort to serve pescatarians, prepare a whole boneless fish
- 30:24French lessons learned for roasting a Thanksgiving turkey
- 32:59Using fish sauce with a Thanksgiving turkey
- 36:58Cutting through the richness with acid and some greensYou’re reading this
- 42:19Flashing back to a first Thanksgiving in Philadelphia with Anya von Bremzen
- 46:34Can heirloom apples be used in Thanksgiving pie?