The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (2024)

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (1)

Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday - the parade on TV in the morning(the local Philly parade), food in the oven and on the stove all day (house smells great), friends and family, comfortable clothes (no fancy holiday dresses here), football in the afternoon, and of course, way too much food (and wine). Since we had our daughter Christmas is has become my new favorite holiday for different reasons, but Thanksgiving will always be my favorite food holiday.

Several years ago I was lucky enough to host my parents, aunt, uncle, 2 cousins, my brother-in-law and sister-in-law and their 2 boys. There were 13 of us in total and I had SO much fun setting up, planning, decorating, cooking, and hosting. My house felt so warm and happy and was full of laughter and the sound of children playing and running all day. .I loved every minute of it.


The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (2)But I can't lie, the thought of hosting did stress me out a bit.So what do I do? Make lists, of course. I LIVE by lists and always have one on my phone and update it daily. For last year's Thanksgiving I had lists for my guest list, menu, food shopping, "stuff" shopping (new tablecloth, décor, etc), prep sorted by the type and day, and a day-of timeline. Having these things all written out in front of me gets them out of my head and on paper so I no longer need to obsess overevery little thingbut instead can just look at my lists.

Our day and the days leading up to the big day went so smoothly that I thought I'd share my timeline and some other things that worked for me. I know hosting, especially for the first time, can be stressful so I hope I can help!

Being prepared and organized will mean you can enjoy your day with your guests, and isn't that what it's all about?

My Timeline
I'm listing the times I used, but to make your own timeline, start backwards. First put down the time you want to eat and go backfrom there. And it may seem silly to list every little thing like I did, but when you have a menu of 12 things while a bunch of people are hanging out in your kitchen it's easy to get frazzled and forget the little things.

3:00 PM
Dinner

2:55 PM
Rolls out of oven and into a serving dish or basket
Gravy into serving dishes

By 2:45
Carve turkey and turkey breast; put on platters
Put "in-the-bird" stuffing ina serving dish
Take green bean casserole and"out-of-the-bird" stuffingout of the oven
Put rolls in the oven
Pull cranberry sauce, cucumber salad and coleslaw out of fridge (already in serving dishes)
Light candles in dining room
Put allhot items in serving dishes (refer to your menuto make sure you don't miss anything)

2:40 PM
Open wine
Put rolls on baking sheet

2:35 PM
Make gravy; keep warm on stove.

2:30 PM
Make corn and peas
Put green bean casserole in upper/main oven

2:15
Turkey out of oven
Mash the potatoes

1:45 PM
Boil potatoes
Put the "out-of-the-bird" stuffing in the lower/second oven
Take butter out of the fridge

1:20 PM
Heat lower/second oven
Start to prep green bean casserole

1:00 PM
Prep and put out appetizers
Fill ice bucket

12:00 PM
Put turkey breast in oven

10:30 AM - 11:00 AM
Stuff bird, prep/season bird, tie legs, put turkey in oven* (See my note below about brining)

10:20 AM
Pre-heat main oven

9:00 AM
Make stuffing

About the Turkey - to brine or not to brine? I never did until this year - I brined a whole chicken and I will never, ever make another roast chicken or turkey without brining so my answer is YES, BRINE!!! Why? The meat is juicier and so tender, the brine adds flavor, and the skin gets crispier.

Click here to read more about brining and for a recipe.

Just look at this brined chicken!

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (3)

Here is my brining timeline:

- Tuesday morning: make your brine and put it in the fridge to chill completely.
- Tuesday night: place your bird in the cold brine and return to the fridge (or a cooler stocked with ice - keep that bird cold!!)
- Wednesday night: take the bird out of the brine and pat it dry. Place it on a large tray and return it to the fridge, uncovered, to dry.
- Thursday morning: continue with your turkey prep as noted in the timeline above. You'll still want to stuff and season it even after being in the brine.

Someof My Other Tips
Just a few tips for things to do early, some helpful advice, and some Type-A things I do to make the week less stressful!

  • The amount of shopping you will need to do may seem overwhelming, so when making your shopping list, make one master list with absolutely everything you willneed. Then, break it up into things you can buy a few days or a week early (dry goods, frozen things, soda, beer, wine) vs things you will need to buy fresh (veggies, fresh flowers, bread, etc.). I also break my list up by store - supermarket, produce store, wine store, beer store (PA is weird like that) and miscellaneous stores. Even better - make your list in Excel so you can easily sort and move things around.
    The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (4)
  • Get all of your serving dishes out the night before and figure out what will go in each one. Doing this early will save you from digging through cabinets at the last minute and will help you make sure you have enough dishes, bowls, and platters.

  • While you are at it, get outall of your serving spoons and forks, too.

  • If you are making a buffet, lay out your dishes the night before (if possible and if it won't be in the way of your prep space). At one party I even put post it notes in the dishes on my buffet so if anyone offered to help they would know what went where, and so I would remember how I laid out my buffet.

  • Ask people to help, especially in that last hour as there is a lot happening. My husband loves to cook and he's in charge of the main things on Thanksgiving - the turkey, stuffing, and gravy. My dad makes the best mashed potatoes so he did the mashing. My nephew did a great job at stirring the mushroom sauce for the green beans and he was thrilled to help. My mom and dad bake the desserts. People will be happy to chip in and do things like lighting the candles, taking dishes to the table, or staying out of the way and in front of the TV if that is what you want them to do!

  • Set a self serve bar in an area away fromwhere all the cooking and prep will take place- ice bucket and tongs, wine glasses, other glasses, corkscrew, mixers, cocktail napkins. If you need limes or other garnishes for your bar, cut them the day before and have them ready in a serving dish. Make sure your soda and beer are cold, either in a second fridge or cooler (and don't forget the ice for the cooler!).

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (5)

  • Set your table a day or two in advance - move any furniture needed, iron your tablecloth, set the dishes, make the centerpiece, etc. This is one task you won't want hanging over you on the day of your gathering or while your guests are there.

  • Prep as much food as you can ahead of time. Wash your veggies, peel and quarter your potatoes and store them in water in the fridge for a day or two, blanch your beans, put butter on/in a serving dish, set out all of the dry goods you will need (flour, broth, salt, pepper, etc), get all of your pots and pans and cooking utensils out and ready.

  • Put your cold items in serving dishes so you can go from fridge to table (the cranberry sauce, salad, etc.)

  • Take people up on their offer to bring something. If you like having control over the menu, ask them to bring an appetizer, dessert, or drinks.

  • Make sure your salt and pepper shakers are full and on the table.

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (6)


  • Buy a bunch of extraplastic/to-go containers or Ziploc bagsso you are ready to send everyone home with leftovers.

  • If you are having a few or more kids (younger kids, especially), pick up some crafty turkey day things they can do. I picked up these paper cup turkeys from Michael's and the kids, and even a few adults, had so much fun putting them together and then decorating with them.

  • If it is cold where you live, turn down the heat an hour before people get there. It's going to get hot fast especially with the kitchen on overload.

And Finally, My Thanksgiving Day Menu
My menu is pretty simple and traditional -

Appetizer: Endive with Pears, Gorgonzola and Crushed Pecans; Cheese/meat/fruit/cracker platter

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (7)

Turkey stuffed with my husband's stuffing (his mom and grandmom's recipe)

Turkey breast because you can never have too much and leftovers are awesome

Gravy

Stuffing for those who like it out-of-the-bird

Mashed potatoes

Green bean casserole with fried onions

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (8)

Peas

Corn

Cole slaw

Dinner rolls

Spiked cranberry sauce

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (9)

Cranberry sauce - canned. Some of uslike that kind :)

Dessert:Dad's Apple Pieand Mom's pumpkin pie

I didn't have room for anything else on the menu, but here are some of my other favorites that sometimes make an appearance on a holiday menu -

Green Beans with Caramelized Shallots and Bacon

Autumn Salad

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (10)

Cauliflower-Broccoli Gratin with Mustard-Sage Cornbread Crumbs

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (11)

Creamed Onions

And for those leftovers, here is something different - Bubble and Squeakor Mini Chicken (Turkey) Biscuit Dinner

I'd

love

to hear from all of you - what are some of your favorite entertaining or holiday hosting tips? What have you learned along the way?

Happy Thanksgiving!! Wishing all of you a warm day with those you love and most importantly, full bellies :)

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (12)

The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (13)

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The Ultimate Guide to Hosting a Stress-Free and Fabulous Thanksgiving! Recipes, tips, and the perfect timeline. (2024)

FAQs

How to have a stress free Thanksgiving? ›

Here a few ways to keep stress at a minimum:
  1. Ask for help. Divide and conquer your to-do list with the help of family member or guests. ...
  2. Take a deep breath. Practice deep breathing. ...
  3. Enjoy the atmosphere. ...
  4. Make time for a turkey trot. ...
  5. Keep the meal manageable. ...
  6. Don't beat yourself up.

What order should you cook Thanksgiving dinner? ›

Thanksgiving Day:
  1. Defrost premade bread. ...
  2. Chill wine and beer.
  3. Prepare the stuffing stuffing. ...
  4. Roast the turkey. ...
  5. Prepare other side dishes while the turkey roasts. ...
  6. Remove the fully cooked turkey from the oven and rest it for 1 hour. ...
  7. Make the gravy.
  8. Re-heat anything that needs to be warmed.
Oct 20, 2021

How far in advance can you prep Thanksgiving food? ›

Casseroles. Whether your family demands green bean casserole or scalloped potatoes alongside their turkey, these dishes can be prepped and assembled two whole days before the big event. Make sure to cover and refrigerate them, then stick the dish in the hot oven once you've taken the turkey out to rest.

How can I make Thanksgiving more enjoyable? ›

There's no better to infuse a little humor into the situation than during a family gathering. Gather a supply of Thanksgiving jokes, puns or even good ol' fashioned dad jokes and you'll have everyone laughing around the table in no time.

How can I make my holidays stress-free? ›

10 tips to reduce stress and take care of yourself during the...
  1. Don't over schedule yourself. ...
  2. Simplify travel and limit car time. ...
  3. Manage gift giving. ...
  4. Be responsible about food and alcohol consumption. ...
  5. Enjoy family on your terms. ...
  6. Respect differences. ...
  7. Take time for yourself. ...
  8. Honor the losses of the year.
Dec 12, 2023

How to host a successful Thanksgiving dinner? ›

  1. Never turn down help. ...
  2. Make as much ahead as possible. ...
  3. Don't experiment with new recipes. ...
  4. Start early on your non-food prep. ...
  5. Consider making the turkey the day before. ...
  6. Set the table the night before. ...
  7. Have a cocktail (or wine) ready to go. ...
  8. Don't make a big deal over appetizers.

What do you eat the night before Thanksgiving? ›

If any night is the most critical, it's the night before, when many Americans will bake pies and prepare reheatable dishes, like casseroles and soups, so that Thursday morning doesn't dissolve into chaos.

What is a good pre-Thanksgiving dinner? ›

Pasta with Sausage and Arugula

It's easy to justify a pre-Thanksgiving pasta dinner when it feels like a salad, and this recipe does just that. Crumble up bits of spicy Italian sausage and roast them with sliced red onion and fennel: the sausage bits get nice and crispy and help season the vegetables as they cook.

How do you prepare to eat a lot on Thanksgiving? ›

Exercising earlier in the day is also a good idea. Physical exertion can stimulate the appetite. And a brisk walk or run helps move food through your digestive system and empty out your stomach in preparation. Finally, it's easier to eat a lot if you're relaxed.

Why do I get anxiety during Thanksgiving? ›

“The Holiday Blues” is a condition that begins around the Thanksgiving holiday, causing stress and anxiety throughout the winter and until after New Year's. According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the feelings may be associated with extra stress, unrealistic expectations or sentimental memories.

How do you not feel guilty on Thanksgiving? ›

Invite someone that you know will be alone this holiday to have the thanksgiving meal with you. You can visit a nursing home or organize a food drive. By funneling your feelings of guilt into actions, you can alleviate your own sense of helplessness.

What to do if you don't want to celebrate Thanksgiving? ›

Find other things to do. Not everyone enjoys sitting around the table and eating all day. If that's not your thing, suggest going for a walk or playing games together. This can be a great way to bond with your family that puts the focus back on connecting with your loved ones.

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