Sponsor
Support The Splendid Table with your Amazon.com purchases
Search Amazon.com:
Keywords:
  • News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

November 22, 2008: Happy Thanksgiving!

Listen now | Subscribe to the podcast

It's our annual Thanksgiving show and we're celebrating with a lineup of great eating and stories. Chef Jeff Henderson tells his story, from Los Angeles street kid to drug dealer to prison to food transforming his life. You've seen him on the Food Network's Chef Jeff Project and his new book is Chef Jeff Cooks: In the Kitchen with America's Inspirational New Culinary Star.

The Sterns report on what Jane calls "the best candy in the world" from Enstrom Candies in Grand Junction, Colorado. Gourmet magazine's John Willoughby talks Thanksgiving menus and myths, with and without turkey, and Lynne has ideas and recipes for feasting on a shoestring.

Ethnobiologist, conservationist and farmer Gary Nabhan has the story of a profound visionary who set out to end famine, and the price he paid. Gary's latest book is Where Our Food Comes From: Retracing Nikolay Vavilov's Quest to End Famine.

Gadget guru Dorie Greenspan, author of Baking: From My Home to Yours, tells us what we need to know about measuring cups and spoons, then it's a local Thanksgiving celebration with one of our Locavore Nation participants.

Recipes

Roasted Turkey Drumsticks

These turkey legs are delicious and economical. Roast a batch to supplement the big bird and make all the drumstick eaters at your table happy. Get the full recipe

Mushroom and Farro Pie

This impressive pie of flaky pastry enclosing a lush mix of barley, mushrooms and creamy ricotta will delight everyone, not just the vegetarians at your holiday table. Get the full recipe

Lynne's Thanksgiving on a Shoestring

In this difficult economy all of us are looking for ways to trim the food bill. Lynne's menu-on-a-shoestring features lots of delicious sides using budget-friendly seasonal vegetables to go with the big bird.

Features

Jane & Michael Stern: Enstrom's Toffee, Grand Junction, CO

Listen

Jane says it's simply the best candy in the world. Michael loves the way the crunchy part melts over your tongue. This luxurious deliciousness has been a Colorado tradition since the 1930s when the Enstrom family began making their almond toffee and opened a store in Grand Junction. Now there are outposts in Denver, Arvada, Littleton and Broomfield, plus a tempting online catalog.

Enstrom's toffee is always freshly made from pure Colorado butter. Then it's coated with rich milk or dark chocolate and a dusting of ground almonds. Because it's so fragile and the ingredients so pure, it must be kept refrigerated or frozen.

Enstrom Candies
701 Colorado Avenue
Grand Junction, CO
970-683-1000

Mesa Mall
2424 Highways 6 & 50
Grand Junction, CO
970-256-9374
www.enstrom.com

Measuring Cups and Spoons

Listen

Award-winning cookbook author and gadget guru Dorie Greenspan test drives equipment and kitchen gadgets and reports on her findings as a contributing editor for Bon Appetit magazine. She also blog about food, travel and cooking at www.dorriegreenspan.com.

We asked Dorie what we need to know about buying and using measuring cups and spoons. The overall thing to remember is that there are measuring cups for dry ingredients and for liquid ingredients and they are not interchangeable.

Dry Measuring Cups:

Get two sets of heavy plastic ones so you don't have to stop to wash a dirty cup before using it for another ingredient. If the cups come on a ring, remove it.

There are two methods for measuring dry ingredients: "spoon and sweep" and "scoop and sweep." Check the cookbook you are using - the author usually will mention the method used when developing and testing the recipes. Measurements can vary by as much as 1/4 ounce between methods.

  • Spoon and Sweep: Lightly spoon the dry ingredient into the cup until it is overflowing then sweep the cup level with the flat edge of a knife.
  • Scoop and Sweep: Lightly aerate your container of flour, for instance, using a whisk or knife. Dip the measuring cup into the container and scoop up the flour until the cup is overflowing then sweep it level with the flat edge of a knife. This is the method Julia Child used and the one Dorie prefers.

Liquid Measuring Cups:

Buy clear glass measuring cups with easy-to-read markings. To accurately measure, pour liquid into the cup then bend down until you're eye level with the markings on the cup; don't lift the cup up to eye level.

OXO makes a clever cup that has an angled measure within the cup so you can read the measurement looking down into the cup instead of having to bend to eye level.

View previous episode


Program Archive

The Splendid Table Store
Locavore Nation

Follow along as 15 bloggers from around the country commit to eating a local diet. Locavore Nation® will chronicle their ups and downs throughout 2008 as they try to make a difference through sustainable eating.
Follow the Nation!


Weeknight Kitchen E-mail Newsletter

Weeknight Kitchen® is a free weekly e-mail newsletter full of new recipes and tips from Lynne and our guests.
Sign up now!


The Splendid Table Podcast

The Splendid Table®, is now available for free in podcast form. Follow the Sterns as they travel the country, hear all our unique and wonderful guests and, as always, Lynne takes your calls, downloaded direct to your computer every week.
Get the podcast


The Splendid Table Google Gadgets

Get our recipes delivered straight to your iGoogle account with our new Google Gadget. It's free. It's easy. Find out how you can install this new feature on your Google Homepage.
Learn More