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Gobble Up Savings With Turkey Leftovers

Posted 6:15PM 11/08/11 Savings Experiment, Food & Beverage |
Savings Experiment: Turkey Leftovers

You can't pick your family, but you can pick your Thanksgiving turkey. And if you keep Thanksgiving leftovers, you can pick at it again and again.

Early Bird Special

Thanksgiving is a time to be thankful for all the good things, but you may want to guard those leftovers from your nearest and dearest, no matter how selfish it sounds. Right after the Thanksgiving feast -- when everyone says they can't imagine eating another bite -- is the perfect moment to salvage the remaining meat.

First, extract the meat from the carcass. Then store it in sealed containers or plastic bags. Do save the skin, scraps, and brown bits from the bottom of the roasting pan in a separate container, as the oils and juice can be used later as well. If you do this the day of the meal, you'll also save room in the fridge. Prepping turkey leftovers is a good excuse to snag some alone time or catch up one-on-one with a relative while you pick away.

Once you have all that turkey meat, you'll need to take stock of your -- well, stock.

Savings Experiment: Turkey LeftoversStocking Up

There are several easy ways to make stock, a base that can then be used for soups. Mark Bittman, The New York Times food columnist and esteemed author, says to just throw the leftover meat and veggies into a pot with water. You can simmer it, according to Bittman, until "the meat falls off the bones -- a technique that produces decent if somewhat crude results." For a rich turkey stock, Bittman recommends using the very pan in which you initially roasted the turkey. Cooking the stock in that pan, Bittman writes, will generate "a strong, sweet, and meaty turkey stock -- good enough to eat unadulterated as plain broth, and a perfect base for almost any other soup."

Of course, making soups from leftovers doesn't have to be bland. Wendy Weiden, a Sustainable Food Specialist, recommends Turkey Tortilla Soup. Weiden, who studies food systems at Presidio Graduate School, says it's possible to cut costs, and make healthy, environmentally sound meals, that are, most importantly, delicious.

For the Turkey Tortilla Soup, Weiden says to start by simply shredding the turkey. Then add the sliced and diced meat to what Weiden calls "a basic (and usually pretty cheap) tortilla soup recipe." Freezing the stock extends its expiration date, so that, as Weiden jokes, "you can enjoy it later, when you're less sick of turkey."

Love Birds

In addition to a host of yummy soup options, Joan Nathan, a James Beard Award-winning cookbook author, recommends substituting shredded turkey for ground beef in dishes. Weiden agrees and says that "turkey pot pie is a good way to use leftover vegetables that didn't make it into Thanksgiving dinner." Post-Thanksgiving, Nathan makes Pasta del Papa, a potato meat pie that she has the recipe for in her cookbook, The Flavor of Jersulem. Pasta Del Papa is a perfect recipe for Turkey leftovers, as well as leftover veggies. As Nathan says, during the holiday season, "Most people will have mashed potatoes on hand."

To start cooking, Nathan preheats the oven to 400 degrees. She then peels and boils the potatoes in a covered pot, if she doesn't already have them cooked on hand. As the potatoes simmer, typically for around twenty minutes, Nathan sautés the tomatoes, green pepper, and turkey in hot oil until the turkey browns. By then the potatoes are ready to be mashed, so Nathan adds warm milk, butter, and salt. She then beats the potatoes until they are creamy.

Once the mashed potatoes are ready, Nathan removes the vegetable and turkey from the heat and stirs in paprika, salt, pepper, eggs, raisins, and olives. She blends them, pours the resulting mixture into an ovenproof casserole, and covers it with mashed potatoes, a sprinkle of paprika and a dot of butter. It takes about 20 minutes to bake and serves eight.

That's a lot of good food to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. Of course, the most important ingredient in whatever dish you prepare is fun. Mark Bittman says that when you start to feel overwhelmed, remember: "Nearly everyone -- the in-laws' odd friends aside -- is appreciative of your time and effort. They really don't care if your serving spoon is a spatula." Now, if you'll excuse me, I have some leftovers, I'd like to eat in peace.

Pastel de Papa (Potato Meat Pie) from The Flavor of Jerusalem (Little, Brown) by Joan Nathan
8 medium sized potatoes
1 tomato, chopped
2 large onions, chopped
1 green pepper, chopped
1.5 pounds shredded turkey
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1/2 cup warm milk
4 tablespoons butter
1 1/2 teaspoons paprika
salt and pepper to taste
4 hard-boiled eggs, chopped
1-cup raisins
1 1/2 cups pitted green olives, halved
1-teaspoon butter

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mvoplinger

Yuck

November 11 2011 at 9:30 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
dubbgatcrib

Never seen where the 2 large onions, chopped comes in at? Im guessing they go in with the turkey and the veggies, during the sautee process?

November 11 2011 at 5:45 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
dubbgatcrib

neve seen where the 2 large onions come in at???

November 11 2011 at 5:44 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
typhoonjax

"Recipe's"? not apostrophized.
I'm still waiting to be hired as a copy-editor, here... Seven Years Later.
SIGH,

November 11 2011 at 5:38 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
REDTAG

Nothing new.

November 11 2011 at 5:31 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
psn0ball

Leftovers are darn good. we get milage out of that bird as we buy a bigger than neccessary. After dinner we slice the good carving meat off the bird and then the rest is cut in small chunky pieces.Yo know where slice go but the small chunks we make turkey enchiladas. pans, some get frozen and some get eaten right quick. They are simple to make. We do our with a red enchilada sauce. Each pan is good to ten portions. A 25 pound bird, now .59 cents # is about $15 and makes meat for 30 meals. serving 6 to 8 to start.

November 11 2011 at 5:01 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Alane

Who can afford turkey and ham????

November 11 2011 at 2:09 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
mstelo

They're nuts if they think it costs $21.60 not counting the turkey that was already paid for to make a large pot of delicious soup.

November 11 2011 at 1:06 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Avice

I don't have to worry about what to do with turkey leftovers. I never have turkey leftovers because I don't eat turkey. We used to try to find something completely different for Thanksgiving--lobster, oysters, duck, anything but turkey. My grandmother raised turkeys and they were nasty. Then my mother-in-law, the world's worst cook, tried to cook turkeys ffor the family dinner. The only thing worse than her turkey was her dressing--which had a snot-like consistency.

SOUNDS GROSS TO ME.

November 11 2011 at 1:05 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Avice's comment
Steve

That is funny and sad at the same time. Maybe you just never had a good turkey. Memories of my mother and grandmother making turkey at Thanksgiving are some of the best ever, and it was always delicious. Maybe you just need to find a way to keep your mother-in-law from doing the cooking. Good luck whatever you have and Happy Thanksgiving!

November 11 2011 at 1:22 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
corene

SOUNDS YUMMY TO ME

November 11 2011 at 12:10 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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