*me, me* I do.......I VERY seldom cook a store bought turkey, we have SO many WILD turkeys up here (NO...not Wild Turkey 101 Liquor either


Also, what brand of turkey do you buy IF you don't hunt?
Dennis

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therock1811 wrote:Yes, we have turkey on Christmas.
Persepone wrote:We have wild turkeys running around (after years when you never saw them), but they are fairly tame, so it seems sort of unsporting to hunt them unless you were really hungry and did not have the money for the store-bought turkey... Not only are the ones around here fairly tame, but pretty stupid as well. You would not have to "hunt" them--you could go up and grab one! I've gotten out of my car to shoo them off the road and you can walk right up and actually touch them!
For many years we had a huge come-as-you-are turkey day party for 35-65 people--everyone was invited with no RSVP required--got everything from foreign students to firemen fighting a nearby blaze to nurses coming off shifts to college kids too far from home, to local elderly from the community and, of course our friends, etc.
The night before, we had a turkey day preparation party--and for that we served Wild Turkey (the liquid kind)... it was a "sleepover party" with sleeping bags, popcorn, movies on TV, etc. The Wild Turkey was required for shelling chestnuts (pounds and pounds of them) and other unpleasant chores in preparation for the following day. And we always had 2 HUGE storebought turkeys--one with chestnut stuffing and one that we called a "taco" turkey--a meat stuffing, tons of garlic, etc. etc. And this got various supplements--some Chinese turkey (think duck a l'orange), some smoked turkey, and rice and beans, regular rice, Pad Thai, etc. etc. etc. But we would go through about 50+ pounds of turkey--with no leftovers...
Good party... Often featured marathon Monopoly game.
Wild turkeys would have added feather removal to the chores. That would have been interesting. I can just imagine how 30 people would have 30 different ideas about how that would be best accomplished... I can imagine it now! We had enough trouble getting out storebought turkeys ready, the pies cooked, all other foods prepared, etc. etc. Since everyone had a different idea about what was "essential" to Thanksgiving, we had simply amazing variety. There were sweet potatoes (or were they yams?) with marshmallows, without marshmallows, salads, turnips, brussels sprouts, creamed onions, sushi, 3-4 different kinds of rice, tuna fish sandwiches cut in turkey shapes (for a kid who did not like turkey), etc. etc. etc. etc. But we did have lots of fun...
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