
This Thanksgiving we will all celebrate, and ruminate on our blessings which are too numerous to count.
Remember that God does so much for all of us, and be thankful!
On the big day, don't forget that if you are the one responsible for baking the bird, and like me, are a questionable cook who relies on luck as her main ingredient, there is help... Butterball and Reynolds offer help via telephone from the pros!
As you can imagine, they field some doozies... Here are a few, courtesy of Snopes. (And I swear none of these calls were placed by yours truly!)
One of the more unusual questions handled by Butterball's Turkey Talk-Line (which the company has operated since 1981) comes from those who have mistaken a well-traveled joke for an actual recipe: They call to ask if they can pop popcorn in the turkey's cavity during the roasting process. (The joke's punch line is: "You know the turkey is done when the popcorn pops and blows the rear off the bird.") And no, you can't.
The hotline has heard from a gal who couldn't find the turkey she buried in a snowbank, a guy who wanted to know how to carve his bird with a chain saw, and a mechanic who worried about using motor oil as a baste.
Then there was the young mother who failed to notice her children playing near the oven-ready bird. The kids decided the turkey's cavity was a good place to park toy cars. Their mom didn't discover Ol' Tom was doubling as a garage until after the turkey had been roasted.
Another confused cook called the Butterball line after cleaning her turkey because she wanted to know how to get the metal pieces out. "Apparently," said one of the Butterball economists, "she had scrubbed her bird with a steel scouring pad." A West Coast woman who had taken anti-bacterial precautions too far called Butterball to find out how to get the bleach she'd used off her bird.
Butterball turkey experts still talk about the Kentucky woman who called in 1993 to ask how to get her dog out of her turkey. It seems the woman's Chihuahua had dived into the bird's cavity and become trapped there. The woman tried pulling the pooch and shaking the bird, all to no avail. A Butterball economist finally suggested the woman carefully cut the opening in the turkey wider to release the captive canine.
The Reynolds Wrap Turkey Tips Line (800-745-4000) took a query from a woman who wanted to know if she could cook her turkey by placing it in a Reynolds Oven Bag, putting it in the window in the back of her car, and letting the heat from the sun bake the turkey. (She was told that would be an uncontrolled heat source and was instructed to use an oven instead.)
The folks at Butterball have also dealt with cooks determined to roast turkeys on the back ledges of their cars. And they've had people call to ask if they could cook their holiday birds on radiators. Then there was the bride who had a small, apartment-size range and was worried the turkey would get larger as it cooked (similar to a loaf of bread rising) -she was fretting she wouldn't be able to get it out of the oven after it was done.
There are those whose problems are not how to get the turkey out of the oven, but when. Said Nancy Rodriguez, coordinator of the Butterball Turkey Talk-Line in 1985, "One lady in Arkansas had her five-pound turkey in the oven 24 hours: did we think it was done? Another caller wanted to know the best method for reattaching the thighs and drumsticks when they fall off. His 12-pound turkey had been in the oven since 8 a.m. the day before."
The self-cleaning option offered on a number of ranges has caused its share of Thanksgiving troubles when confused cooks have inadvertently started its cycle while their birds were in the oven. Others have different range-related questions, such as: "Your directions say to roast the turkey, but my oven says only bake or broil; how do I set it?"
Another myth is the infamous "Turkey will make you sleepy" tale. The tryptophan found in turkey is will not causdrowsinessss unless it is taken on an empty stomach and with no protein present... Something meat includes a lot of! Tryptophan is found in lots of common foods, like milk and beans. The food coma is caused instead by an influx of blood flow to the abdomen as the body attempts to digest the feast.So, it isn't the turkey making you sleepy, it's the huuuuuge meal you just ate!
All that said, I would like to leave my bloggin' friends with this Thanksgiving wish:
MAY YOUR STUFFING BE TASTY, MAY YOUR TURKEY BE PLUMP.
MAY YOUR POTATOES 'N GRAVY HAVE NARY A LUMP,
MAY YOUR YAMS BE DELICIOUS,
MAY YOUR PIES TAKE THE PRIZE,
MAY YOUR THANKSGIVING DINNER
STAY OFF OF YOUR THIGHS.




20 comments:
Happy Thanksgiving brooke. Myth or not, Turkey always makes me tired...as does warm milk.
Maybe I just eat too much?
it's the tryptophan, a.c.
happy thanksgiving, brooke and family.
thanksgiving always reminds me of a story...
Nanc-When we get to Heaven, I declare I'm going to sit on you in a corner and get all those, "now that reminds me of a story, stories..."
Have a Blessed and Happt Thanksgiving!
tmw
who do we call to roast Duhkks?
AC: It's all psychosomatic, brotha'!
Nanc: Happy Thanksgiving to you too, and all of yours!
AND TO EVERYBODY! :D
TMW: Good luck... She probably won't tell you there, either. ;)
EB: It doesn't matter. No one likes roast Duckkk anyway.
Beaker does!
I'm doing ham, neener-neener! With my infamous brown sugar/ginger/cashew sweet 'taters!
Brooke-I'm a Mother, I have ways of making you talk! Or Nanc! nanc-nanc-noo-noo!
Did you get your card?
tmw
I had to link this one Brooke.
Happy holidays girlfriend!..and yes I am cookin and baking and decorating..sheesh I'm tired already!..lol
hugz!
I found out the culprit that makes you sleepy....along with the large amount of food that is consumed.....it's the wine, the beer and some post meal tequila sipping.
Happy Thanksgiving.
TMW: Hehehehee.
I'll be hitting your place for dinner. ;)
I did get the card, yes ma'am and thank you!
Kevin: Thanks!
Angel: Take a nap! :D
Joe: I wouldn't know a thing about that... ;)
Brooke,
Happy Thanksgiving and all the best to you and yours.
Happy Thanksgiving Brooke. May this be a joyous time for you and your family! God Bless.
happy thanksging
Brooke,
Happy Thanksgiving! You know I think the world of you.
Ahhhhhh, basting with Motor Oil! Quaker State has the flavor, but PennzOil is much lighter! Heheheee!
Happy Thanksgiving! Eat well, drink wisely, and enjoy. :D
Oh, and by the way, since I think you need a few light moments, Brooke, you've been tagged!
Happy Thanksgiving Brooke. Look forward to the coming months, fighting the you-know-who. Stop by the Forum at the 910Group.com (http://910group.com/forum/index.php) sometime, register & say hello. Great bunch of people.
-No Apology
Thanks, all, and right back at 'cha!
Benning: Homework, huh? I'll have to get right to work. ;)
NA: Hi! I tried to register, but I don't think I did it right... Never got a response. I'll try again!
Since November 7th, we've all been wrestling with the turkeys who have come to gobble at our sires.
A big ole bird ain't nothin'!
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