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A Few Words About Thanksgiving

Don't Fret About the Feast
by Esmé Andrae

Pumpkins and gourds

'Tis the season to feast, that time of year that brings big festive dinners, eggnog parties and all sorts of seasonal treats. It is also the time of year when most people's diet resolutions crumble like holiday cookies. An average Thanksgiving meal contains more than 3,000 calories and 130 grams of fat. In fact, between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day, most people take in as many as 17,500 more calories than throughout the rest of the year, which can result in a five- to seven-pound weight gain. However, before you put down that forkful of stuffing, remember that what the holiday can do for your heart and soul (i.e. the benefits of socializing and being with loved ones) may outweigh what it does to your waistline.

Turkey

These days, most people gather around the Thanksgiving table with their families and gobble down classics like cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes and, of course, turkey. However, these traditions are relatively new, even though the holiday's origin dates back almost 400 years. According to lore, the tradition to celebrate Thanksgiving can be traced to a simple meal in 1621. Plymouth colonists and Wampanoag Indians sat down to a three-day feast celebrating the year's harvest. The meal consisted of venison, wild fowl, sea bass, cod, Indian corn, pumpkin and perhaps walnuts and plums. In the 17th century, meals didn't include many vegetables, and even potatoes and sweet potatoes were rather uncommon. The colonists had no sugar, either, so their feast was very different from today's Thanksgiving dinners, which usually contain sweet pumpkin pie or at least some kind of dessert. While the meal must have been—for the times' standards—an elaborate affair, it is hard to say if it is truly the origin of the Thanksgiving tradition since it was not repeated the following year. Instead, it might be more accurate to say that Thanksgiving as we know it has been progressively created over the centuries.

James W. Baker, Senior Historian at Plimoth Plantation on the History Channel says that the reason "we have so many myths associated with Thanksgiving is that it is an invented tradition. It doesn't originate in any one event. It is based on the New England puritan Thanksgiving, which is a religious Thanksgiving, and the traditional harvest celebrations of England and New England and maybe other ideas like commemorating the pilgrims. All of these have been gathered together and transformed into something different from the original parts."

The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth

The First Thanksgiving at Plymouth by Jennie A. Brownscombe
(1850-1936)

Over time, the Thanksgiving tradition in the United States developed into a national holiday. In 1676, the governing council of Charlestown, MA, proclaimed June 29 as a day of Thanksgiving. Then, in 1789, George Washington declared a National Day of Thanksgiving on October 3. In 1863, President Lincoln chose the last Thursday in November for the same purpose, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt set the date for Thanksgiving to the fourth Thursday of November in 1939, a decision approved by Congress in 1941. Clearly, what we celebrate today as Thanksgiving is very different from the first days of the holiday, but the point remains the same—taking time to recognize and give thanks for the year's blessings. And what better way to celebrate the good things in life than with great food and family?

Need help with your Thanksgiving festivities? The Thanksgiving Table cookbook might be just the thing you need to create an unforgettable feast. Then, see our list of wine suggestions to complement your meal. However, if you feel overwhelmed by all that needs to be done, see what restaurants in your area are serving a Thanksgiving feast. Not laboring in the kitchen all day can be one of those things you give thanks for!

For research purposes, we thank www.pilgrimhall.org and www.historychannel.com

(Updated: 10/29/07 AK)


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