Sometimes a Thanksgiving dinner needs some livening up. There should be splashes of color amongst the tans and browns along with a fresh harvest taste. It;s time to add some greens, purples and red to have a vibrant lively table.
Regular contributor Melissa Clark wrote about this and created recipes for her A Good Appetite column in yesterday's New York Times Wednesday Food section. Vegetables are an excellent addition to any table. They add nutrients and vitamins to a starchy, high caloric meal. Their flavor is also a nice change up too, providing afresh from the garden taste amidst all the bread and gravy. The first recipe is a springy green beans with lime and red onions. These have to be made right when you're ready to serve the turkey but it's not a labor intensive dish.Herbs such as coriander and lime juice bring them to life. Another Thanksgiving dish that gets a makeover is squash. It's sliced and de -seeded and then glazed with maple syrup. Home chefs can use any combination of squash - delicata, honey nut, butternut and kabocha. Charred lemon give it that zing that goes well with the maple which is also mixed with butter and pepper. The lemons is first boiled This is spread over the squash and lemons and then pan roasted.
The other dishes are just as bright and tasty.Every Thanksgiving table needs a salad. WHy not have one that features ruby red cabbage highlighted with walnuts and feta .Cabbage wedges are first roasted to bring out their sweetness. Feta adds creaminess and saltiness, a perfect foil for the cabbage's sweetness. Walnuts are added for crunch, Pomegranate seeds add crunch and more flavor. The dressing is a vinaigrette punched up with Dijon mustard. Another side which would even be great at any holiday party is a giant roasted vegetable platter. THis is perfect for those who like to pick and choose their sides.This is a roasted mix of purple, white or yellow cauliflower and winter squash such as kabocha, delicata butternut or honey nut. There's also broccoli or broccolini fennel and carrots. It requires three parchment lined sheets and the roasting times all vary for the veggies. Broccoli takes takes ten to fifteen minutes fed onions fifteen to twenty, fennel twenty to twenty-five cauliflower twenty-five to thirty-five, squash thirty to thirty-five and carrots thirty to forty minutes(actually airfrying them will be shorter timewise). The dressing is a garlicky yogurt, spiked with lemon juice,THis is drizzled on the veggies along with apple cider vinegar and hot honey (this is mixed with red chili flakes.). It's a pick and choose platter for fussy guests.
Give Thnaksgiving a burst of color with these veggie dishes. They're exciting and tasty. They're the perfect foil for all those tans and browns of the holiday table.
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