Thanksgiving–2025

Happy Thanksgiving!

This will be my only post today for I will be out of pocket with cooking, eating, napping…..

Since traffic is down on this day of days….I will keep it short and sweet….after all I do not want to interfere cooking, eating and napping…..

Today I will be preparing Roasted  turkey, mac and cheese and yeast rolls….my daughter will be cooking the bean casserole and sweet potatoes and preparing the appetizers….and peach cobbler will be dessert.

And since I enjoy history I thought I would pass on some to my readers…..

Thanksgiving Day is a federal holiday in the United States, and in 2025, it falls on Thursday, November 27. In 1621, the Plymouth colonists from England and the Native American Wampanoag people shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies.

For more than two centuries, days of thanksgiving were celebrated by individual colonies and states. It wasn’t until 1863, in the midst of the Civil War, that President Abraham Lincoln proclaimed a national Thanksgiving Day to be held on the last Thursday in November. Americans have collectively observed the holiday ever since.

Thanksgiving is not without controversy. Many Americans—including people of Native American ancestry—believe Thanksgiving celebrations mask the true history of oppression and bloodshed that underlies the relationship between European settlers and Native Americans.

In November 1621, after the Pilgrims’ first corn harvest proved successful, Governor William Bradford organized a celebratory feast and invited a group of the fledgling colony’s Native American allies, including the Wampanoag chief Massasoit. The three-day festival is now remembered as America’s “first Thanksgiving”—though the Pilgrims might not have used the term at the time. No record exists of the first Thanksgiving’s exact menu. Much of what we know about what happened at the first Thanksgiving comes from Pilgrim chronicler Edward Winslow, who wrote:

“Our harvest being gotten in, our governor sent four men on fowling, that so we might after a special manner rejoice together, after we had gathered the fruits of our labors; they four in one day killed as much fowl, as with a little help beside, served the Company almost a week, at which time amongst other Recreations, we exercised our Arms, many of the Indians coming amongst us, and amongst the rest their greatest king Massasoit, with some ninety men, whom for three days we entertained and feasted, and they went out and killed five Deer, which they brought to the Plantation and bestowed on our Governor, and upon the Captain and others. And although it be not always so plentiful, as it was at this time with us, yet by the goodness of God, we are so far from want, that we often wish you partakers of our plenty.”

Historians have suggested that many of the dishes were likely prepared using traditional Native American spices and cooking methods. Because the Pilgrims had no oven and the Mayflower’s sugar supply had dwindled by the fall of 1621, the meal did not feature pies, cakes or other desserts, which have become a hallmark of contemporary celebrations.

https://www.history.com/articles/history-of-thanksgiving

There is always more to the story than the little plays by school children.

I’m done trying to educate for the day….

I am most thankful for the great people that have taken time to visit and comment here on IST……Thank you all so very much…..

I hope everyone has a wonderful day of food, family, fun and if you are a sports fan, football….please also to always Be Careful and Be Safe….

Peace out my friends.

I Read, I Write, You KNow

“lego ergo scribo”

Thanksgiving Day–2024

HAPPY THANKSGIVING!

Today is the day that most of the nation gets together with family and friends and give thanks for all that has occurred in the past year.

Since it is Thanksgiving how about a little history? 

The Great Cranberry Scare of 1959…..

On November 9, 1959—just two-and-a-half weeks before Thanksgiving—the U.S. secretary of Health, Education and Welfare made a startling announcement: some cranberries grown in the Pacific Northwest may have been contaminated by a weed killer that could lead to cancer in rats. This meant that cranberry sauce, a popular staple of Thanksgiving dinners, might not be on the menu anymore.

“If housewives are unable to determine where berries were grown,” the New York Times reported, “the Government advises them not to buy, either in canned or fresh form, despite the approach of Thanksgiving.”

Thus began the cranberry scare of 1959, a crisis that temporarily crashed the cranberry market and sent Americans scrambling for alternative fruit-based dishes for Thanksgiving (Life magazine provided a few interesting suggestions, including pickled watermelon rind).

https://www.history.com/news/great-cranberry-scare-thanksgiving-1959

A little known fact in our history with Thanksgiving…..and no one ran out to buy toilet paper.

Today I am cooking for 8….Roast turkey, green peas, green bean casserole, yams, mash potatoes, mac and cheese (my granddaughter’s request), gravy and yeast rolls with peach cobbler for dessert with ice cream.

Enjoy your day with family, food and football….take a little time out in your busy day to give thanks for all the blessings that have come your way in the past year.

I would like to thank all the wonderful people that visit IST every day and comment when they find it appropriate…thank you and I appreciate your valuable time.

I leave you with a Thanksgiving tradition of sorts….Arlo Guthrie….

Recently Alice Brock passed away….she was the inspiration for the Guthrie song….

Alice Brock, whose Massachusetts-based eatery helped inspire Arlo Guthrie’s deadpan Thanksgiving standard, “Alice’s Restaurant,” has died at age 83. Her death, just a week before Thanksgiving, was announced by Guthrie on the Facebook page of his own Rising Son Records, per the AP. Guthrie wrote that she died in Provincetown, Massachusetts, her residence for some 40 years, and referred to her being in failing health. Other details were not immediately available.

Rest in Peace……

That does it for me I must get back to making the dinner for family and friends.

I hope everyone has a wonderful Thanksgiving…..please if you are celebrating be careful and catch a cab…..and for those internationally please have a good day and enjoy life.

As always….Be Well and Be Safe….

Thanksgiving–2022

Today we celebrate a day of thanks…..giving us time to think about all the things we could be thankful for in the past year.

Thanksgiving Images – Browse 892,138 Stock Photos, Vectors, and Video |  Adobe Stock

I will be enjoying our traditional meal with Sue, my daughter, granddaughter, Sue’s son and MoMo….the traditional meal is turkey (of course), mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, peas, mac and cheese, green bean casserole and yeast rolls and for dessert blackberry cobbler.

I hope my readers will have an equally enjoyable day and have fun, food and family.

This will be my only post today for I shall be a bit busy and most people will be elsewhere and not reading blogs.

Have a great day my friends….

Happy Thanksgiving 2022 SVG Thanksgiving Sign SVG Turkey - Etsy

Be well and Be safe….

More Info On Thanksgiving

This is for those last minute food shoppers for the Thanksgiving meal…..

Just days away from the big day when families and friends get together and enjoy a meal and some time together…..as we all know inflation is eating away at our budgets and your big meal will be really expensive this year.

Thanksgiving dinner will be pricier than last year, according to economists, who say it might actually be cheaper to eat out. The cost of a turkey is expected to rise 23% compared to the fourth quarter of 2021, according to a report from Wells Fargo analysts Courtney Schmidt and Brad Rubin. However, the New York Times recently reported turkey prices could double over last year as a result of avian flu outbreaks, drought, and higher costs of feed, fuel, and labor. In the week of Oct. 21, the average retail price for a frozen turkey was $1.99 per pound, up 73% from 2021. And “more limited” supplies mean you won’t necessarily get your pick of the bunch, per Fox Business.

The cost of eggs, butter, flour, and fruits and vegetables are already up 32.5%, 25.8%, 17.1%, and 7.3% respectively year over year, according to the report. Cranberry sauce is expected to be more expensive than last year “due to cranberry producers that faced rising input costs.” While cooler spring weather has delayed crops of white potatoes in Idaho and Washington, meaning “prices will be higher based on supply and demand principles,” sweet potatoes “have a surplus at the moment,” Rubin tells Fox. If you’d rather not cook, eating out is a “great value this year,” he adds, noting the “cost of eating out has increased slower than at home.” For a family of four, eating out could cost roughly the same as dining at home, though it will be less economical for larger groups.

Have a great Sunday and enjoy your time……

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

Happy Thanksgiving 2021

Thursday , 25 November Thanksgiving 2021

Today is the day when families gather for food fun and football. My family is no different. This will be my only post today for I will be cooking my butt off.

My deal with Sue is I cook she cleans (she got the worst of that deal for I am a messy cook)…..on the menu today is turkey (of course), potatoes gravy, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole (my daughter’s favorite), peas, my famous Mac and cheese (according to my (granddaughter), bread and peach cobbler for dessert.

I hope everyone has a very nice Thanksgiving day……enjoy your food, family and fun.

****update my new laptop came yesterday so I will be spending my spare time for the next couple of days getting use to the new work space.  Hopefully I will be back to working order by the first of next week….thanx for bearing with me during this time of chaos.****

Have a great day my friends….be well and be safe…..

Closing Thought–10Nov21

It is that time again when we get together with family and friends to have a large meal and some sort of sports (no doubt)….it is Thanksgiving time again.

My family serves up Turkey, mashed potatoes, sweet potato casserole, green peas, mac and cheese (my granddaughter’s favorite), green bean casserole, bread…..sort of typical…..but this year we will be paying money cash for our meal….

The American Farm Bureau says the average cost of preparing a Thanksgiving dinner fell to its lowest level in a decade last year—but 2021 is a very different story. Price hikes on numerous items for a variety of reasons are set to make this year’s Thanksgiving feast the most expensive on record, the New York Times reports. Canned cranberries will cost more because of a steel shortage, turkeys will cost more because the price of the corn they eat has more than doubled, and dinner rolls will cost more because the price of baking ingredients has gone up.

“When you go to the grocery store and it feels more expensive, that’s because it is,” Farm Bureau economist Veronica Nigh tells CBS. The bureau predicts that a typical turkey dinner with all the trimmings will cost up to 5% more than it did a year ago. Supply chain issues and labor shortages are also driving up prices. Norman Brown at Wada Farms in Raleigh, NC, says he is paying truckers almost double the normal rate to haul sweet potatoes. “I never seen anything like it, and I’ve been running sweet potatoes for 38 or 39 years,” he tells the Times. “I don’t know what the answer is, but in the end it’s all going to get passed on to the consumer.”

Analysts say turkey prices per pound are on course to top the record of $1.36 set in 2015. It’s not clear whether consumers will face shortage of ingredients, though some have started stocking up already. “I picture a perfect storm of increased demand and lack of supply,” says food writer Matt Lardie. Nigh at the Farm Bureau, however, says people should be able to find whatever they want, though they might pay more for it. She says this is a normal production year for turkeys, but many farmers kept them on feed longer to deal with an expected rise in demand. “If you can’t raise more turkeys, raise turkeys that are a little fatter,” Nigh says.

Sorry for the bummer news….but I felt I should let my readers know ahead of time so they could make any adjustments that they may need.

Be Well…..Be Safe…..

I Read, I Write, You Know

“lego ergo scribo”

Thanksgiving–2020

Today is when families get together and enjoy some time away from the tribulations of dealing with the pandemic which is still raging across this country regardless of the crap you see and hear….

This will most likely be the only post I do for the day…..I will be cooking the turkey and mac and cheese and my daughter will be doing the rest and we will meet at the house and enjoy some quality time…

Free Thanksgiving eCards & Greeting Cards 2020

Please enjoy your day and your time with family and friends…..please be safe and be well…..

Patrick Corrigan: Happy Thanksgiving | The Star

We Americans give thanks for our ‘blessings’……me? 

I am thankful for my family and that we finally have someone that can claim and mean the statement…”I am really smart person”….

Onto the nightmare of a Black Friday……I will be inside and safe…..there is not enough savings to get me to attempt a shopping spree….

Be Well….Be Safe…..

Enjoy family, fun and food….I will return tomorrow

“lego ergo scribo”

Closing Thought–25Nov20

Tomorrow is Thanksgiving and with the pandemic there are a few things that need doing to be sure that the day is for fun and food and not the virus……

I live in Mississippi and our health department has issued some guidelines for a healthy day…..

Mississippi’s top health official delivered dire news last week about the state’s COVID-19 status, noting the “severe surge” that’s been stressing its health care system, with very few beds left in ICUs around the state. “Our fall surge is going in very much the wrong direction over the last week or so,” State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs said during a virtual Mississippi State Medical Association meeting on Thursday, per the Clarion-Ledger. In the wake of that news, Dobbs and other health officials are also looking with a wary eye toward Thanksgiving weekend, pleading with the public to keep their gatherings tiny—read: nuclear family members only—and warning that Christmas may not be so merry if they don’t. “We know this is the perfect milieu, having young folks and old folks and folks with chronic illness around the table—and then death,” he said on the video call, per the Mississippi Free Press.

MA President Dr. Mark Horne concurred, noting that “you’re going to say hi [to Mamaw] at Thanksgiving, it’s so nice to see you, and you’re either going to be visiting her by Facetime in the ICU or planning a small funeral by Christmas.” Mississippi State Epidemiologist Dr. Paul Byers also warned people to stay away from in-person Black Friday events, noting they would be a “disaster for potential transmission.” For those who choose to have even small Thanksgiving get-togethers, Dobbs implores them to adhere to social distancing and gather outdoors, if possible. If anyone does get sick, “our resources are tapped out,” he said Friday, per WLBT. As for the fatality numbers? “We’ve become a little bit numb to the deaths,” he noted in the Zoom call. “And it’s coming for a lot of people.”

Please enjoy your days of fun, family and food.

Be Well…..Be Safe….

I Read, I Write, you Know

“lego ergo scribo”

Thanksgiving–2019

Today will be a slow day here on IST for most readers interested in foreign policy and such are taking the day off to be with their loved ones.

But as an old professor I just have to explain/educate my readers…..first of all Thanksgiving had its beginnings in the Old World…..

https://www.ancient-origins.net/history-ancient-traditions/american-tradition-thanksgiving-harvest-festival-roots-old-world-004694

Today I will be spending quality time with my granddaughter so my posts will not be plentiful….there are a couple of days per year that I limit my posts and today is one of those shortened days.

Image result for Thanksgiving Day 2019 images

Hope everyone who celebrates the day will have a wonderful day…and that they could spend a moment to say a silent “thank you” to our troops and their families who are having to miss this special day for yet another year.

Image result for Thanksgiving Day 2019 images

I will give thanks for my family (immediate)…..my best friend MoMo….and my friends here on the internet…..thanx to all I appreciate your time.

I need to get to work….my granddaughter has asked me to make my home-made mac and cheese…..my wife wants my special dressing…..and MoMo just wants some turkey and sweet potatoes….and of course her morning walk.  (She does have a look when it is “that” time)

Image

Please enjoy your fun, food, family and if your are a fan…football…..

On a side note…in case you would like to try something paleo….how about some ancient Babylonian recipes?

https://www.ancient-origins.net/artifacts-ancient-writings/babylonian-recipes-0010531

IST will return to normal posting on Black Friday…Peace Out my friends!

Until my return….Have A Day My Friends!

“Lego Ergo Scribo”

Thanksgiving–A Short History

Most of us know T’giving by the myth of the settlers and NAs sitting down to a meal and all was right with the universe and had a happy ending…..

There is so much history around the day…..

Thanksgiving is the oldest national holiday in the United States. However, it’s observation is not a continuous presence in American history. While the celebration of Thanksgiving predates even the founding of the nation, it was proclaimed by George Washington, then ignored by Thomas Jefferson. From then on, it was sporadically observed until Abraham Lincoln, who once again introduced a National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving to the United States.

Indeed, it was Lincoln who set the day as the last Thursday in November. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt changed the day between 1939 and 1941, which was highly controversial. The days were called “Franksgiving.” Roosevelt changed the date because retailers communicated to him through the Retail Dry Goods Association and the Secretary of Commerce, that the late date of Thanksgiving that year (the last day of November) might negatively impact retail sales. It was considered bad form to put up Christmas decorations or put on Christmas sales before Thanksgiving.

https://www.blacklistednews.com/article/75563/thanksgiving-the-forgotten-history-of-americas-thanksgiving-and-what-it.html

I just wanted to show my readers that there was more to Thanksgiving than what we are use to in the elementary school play we all have sat through.

Peace Out.

“Lego Ergo Scribo”