Joyeux Thanksgiving from the French Friday with Dorie gang.

CROQUANTS, VERY POPULAR IN FRANCE, DELICIOUS WITH TEA OR ESPRESSO

Yes, Thanksgiving is a North American celebration but what’s unique about families and friends gathering to enjoy traditional foods and the company of others? The first Thanksgiving meal probably occurred in 1621 between the colonists and the Wampanoag, the Plymouth colony Indian tribe. Sans dishwashers, Cuisinarts, Convection ovens and TV Football, I might add.   It became a national American holiday in 1941 and is arguably our favorite holiday. If the scales be damned, Thanksgiving could even become a two-fer.  In Canada it is celebrated in October, coinciding with the Fall harvest. (I just received greetings from my Canadian friends and will return the favor, if not the meal,  in October.)

To celebrate this holiday of largesse this week, we created a potluck of recipes at FFWD. Cook’s Choice.  See what others picked at http://www.frenchfridayswithdorie.com/

Such a simple-to-bake, simply delicious French cookie, a platter of Croquants

For Le Jour de Merci Donnant, I decided to bake Croquants, a popular French cookie. Easy to make. Sublime to eat. A crunchy combination, really, of sugar (white) and nuts (I used the traditional salted hazelnuts/almonds combo.).  I first tasted a Croquant at Berthillon, Paris’s most famous glacier, when it was served with my Chocolate Noir ice cream. Discovering that Dorie could help me duplicate this tasty treat is a real bonus! At Christmas I’m even going to add tiny slices of dried cherries to make them look more festive for my holiday cookie platter. This cookie begs for variations, I think.

The bonus here?  Google this recipe – it’s on the Internet. http://www.chow.com/recipes/28335-croquants

 

A Midwestern Tradition – Chex Mix – There Are Not Words to Describe How Addictive This Is.

Since, after all, Thanksgiving is a North American holiday and reeks of tradition, I also made gallons, yes, gallons, of Chex Mix yesterday. I know! I know! There is nothing nutritious nor healthy about Chex Mix.  That pound of butter I used in the Mix shouts heart-unfriendly. It’s during these times that I bless Julia Childs. She loved butter. Then there’s Paula Deen. You gotta love Paula.

I cannot remember a holiday season in my Manchester, Iowa, home without Chex Mix. God Bless my Mom, a lady who never let butter-anxiety get in the way of delicious baked goods. My defense to this treat is that I only make it at Thanksgiving and, most importantly, my son-in-law and I bonded over my Chex Mix. Now is not the time to test loyalties.

Chex Mix and the Holidays – my Iowa family’s tradition for more than 60 years.

 

Hopefully, you, like me, have much to be thankful for this year. This is a day devoted to just that – giving thanks for family, friends, and  loved ones. Happy Thanksgiving.