My ideal holiday consists of just two things
Hi everyone, Thanksgiving has always ranked as one of my favorite holidays. As someone who moved far away from home for college, the four-day break was the first time I experienced friends coming together as a satellite family, and capturing that feeling of home from afar. Celebrating Thanksgiving — a holiday with complicated, colonial origins — became more of an event as time went on. My freshman year, the first time I spent the holiday in the U.S., consisted of a bunch of friends from colleges throughout the Northeast gathered in my dorm room only to find that none of us knew how to work a can opener. Eventually, we caught onto the fact that Thanksgiving is one of the best times of year to travel if you pick your dates right, leading to reunions in Vegas and tacos in Mexico City. Along the way, I've hosted my fair share of Thanksgivings and Friendsgivings, too. Our most memorable dishes include five-spice turkey served in Chinese bao, my friend's infamous corn casserole (adapted from the recipe of a notorious Southern chef I'd rather not name), and endless variations on Brussels sprouts, potatoes, and pie. In more recent years, we've embraced Sidesgiving, where we pick up roast meat from Chinatown and everyone chips in with sides — truly the best part. For the past few weeks, the Eater team has been sharing their own Thanksgiving strategies — snacking through the day, making a different menu every year, or embracing the tried-and-true — as well as recipes worth building a meal upon (yam gnocchi, anyone?). Despite all this inspiration, my Thanksgiving is still completely up in the air. We'll likely host a low-key meal for the family, and I've volunteered to make sure we have no shortage of pies and cakes. I don't love not having plans set in stone, but I'll admit this is part of Thanksgiving's appeal — four whole days off with barely any prescribed activities. The only things that are guaranteed? A decent amount of carbs, and a whole lot of time with loved ones. Below, as always, you'll find some of my favorite reads from the past two weeks. If you liked this email, please forward it to a friend or encourage them to sign up here. |
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Some of the best food gifts to buy this holiday season. | Eater |
- Why Heinz devoted a ton of time to redesigning the ketchup cap, from Fast Company.
- The Strategist's shopping guide to objects that look like food.
- Our sister publication, Punch, did the hard work of taste-testing dirty martinis across the country to find the best one.
- From Polygon: Does the Studio Ghibli and Lucasfilm collaboration mean that decent-looking food is finally coming to the Star Wars universe?
- A Slate writer decided to say yes to every PR email he got for a day.
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