Saturday 6 October 2012

Canadian Thanksgiving, London-style

 Exactly one year ago this weekend, I decided to attempt to cook my very first Thanksgiving feast. Despite partaking in this annual tradition since I could eat solid food, I have always been on the eating side of the meal, rather than constructing it in the kitchen. That first attempt was a delicious success (if I do say so myself) and I’m getting myself organized today to try to replicate it.

All of my Thanksgivings growing up were a Canadian cliché (in the best possible meaning of the word), from the food to the family to the location. For the latter, we were either at my aunt and uncle’s house, surrounded by family, or at our friends’, the Gibson’s, picturesque cottage, perched on an Ontario lake, as the seasonal colours changed around us. Bottom line, it was pretty damn Canadian.

And the food was always traditional as well. The usual fixings included: a massive turkey, melting after hours in the oven; stuffing, which usual consisted of bread, herbs and mushrooms, and cooked inside the cavity of the bird; roast carrots, beets, parsnips and turnips; creamy mashed potatoes, whipped to perfection; thick gravy to garnish all of the above; and, finally, both pumpkin and apple pies, to suit any preference.

Yes, food is a big part of Thanksgiving. But, equally, as is evident in the name, it is about being with the people you love and sharing the things you are thankful for. Over here in the UK, there is no equivalent to the North American tradition. The nearest I can think of is the Sunday roast – a weekly staple for some and a special treat for others ­– but it is not grounded in the same customs as it is back home.

Brits often ask me what Thanksgiving is all about. I usually give them a glib response: eating turkey and pie, while getting your first three-day weekend after the return to school. I know that’s not entirely true, but the history of the harvest is honestly a bit of an afterthought for me.

So a quick Wiki search brought up the following: The origin of the first Thanksgiving in Canada goes back to the explorer Martin Frobisher, who had been trying to find a northern passage to the Pacific Ocean. It was not celebrated as a harvest, but in thanks for surviving the long journey from England. This was in 1578. The origins can also be traced back to the French settlers who came to New France with explorer Samuel de Champlain in the early 17th century. He also took to celebrating successful harvests. As more settlers arrived in Canada, more celebrations of a good harvest were common. In the US, Thanksgiving also traces back to early settlers. The first celebration is commonly recorded in 1621 at Plymouth in present-day Massachussets. It was also prompted by a good harvest, as a way to feed all the colonists in an annual festival.

The term harvest carries with it visions of crops, fruitful at the end of the summer season, and the stunning colours of autumn, the vermilions, garnets and golds that blanket the foliage as the seasons change. It is also defined by the sun spending less time in the sky, a crisp chill filling the air, and the glorious crunch of newly fallen leaves under your feet.

London, today, is demonstrating a few of these qualities; It is a blindingly sunny day, though the air is noticeably cool, and, where greenery can be found, the colours are turning to dark reds, oranges and yellows. This is one reason I’m inspired to cook up a Thanksgiving meal tomorrow, but it is also the pang of homesickness, the early October craving for turkey, and the desire to get my hands dirty in my new kitchen.

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