The Fog of Thanksgiving: Redux

pie.jpeg

This Thanksgiving we're hosting a small gang of friends who are family and family who are friends. When it comes to the holidays, I'm consumed by the internal debate over which I prefer more -- the approach and giddy anticipation of the event or the actual event itself. Both have their merits, so 'all of the above' is a completely reasonable call, but if I'm being honest, this debate is really just a distraction from the anxiety and fear that comes with an event's recession into memory. I've developed an acute, if dysfunctional, barometer for the moment an experience peaks and becomes the past. Every summer at the beach I lay flat on my back in the sand to let the surf wash over me, indulging in its zen warmth; then, just as quickly as it arrived, it recedes, leaving my skin prickly, my soul shivering. That's the most poignant living metaphor for this real-time separation anxiety I experience. It's something of a curse, for it probably holds me back from absolutely embracing the present. I like to think that as I get older this will dissipate, but it hasn't yet. In the meantime, I spend much of life in reflection mode -- revisiting experiences, reveling in memories -- which really isn't so bad. These days I put a lot of stock into what Paul Auster once said: Memory is the space in which a thing happens for a second time. So I live with it. 

Looking ahead to the next, I've been sorting through my own Thanksgiving memories and asking friends about theirs. Processing these conversations, I discovered a common thread: the absence of many, if any, specific monumental memories. Most of the stories seem to be generic amalgams and generalizations that amount to little more than accounts of Thanksgiving's Greatest Hits -- food and football. Yawn. I think two things might be at play here: we're going through the motions too much instead of stamping the day and/or we're just getting too plastered to remember much about it. 

This year I feel the need to have a game plan so I developed a few Thanksgiving mechanisms and strategies. Most of the following suggestions stem from regrets and some lessons learned the hard way.  

Balls Out

Football is the traditional sport of this holiday. I get that. But it's not exactly universal since typically the teams in these friendlies consist of men and boys. In this post-election world, where lines have been drawn in the sand and family members have sufficiently alienated each other on Facebook because of politics, may I suggest a game that all sexes and ages can enjoy regardless of athletic ability, one that evokes the nostalgia of everyone's less complicated childhood days? I'm talking about a good old throwback round of kickball. 

Last year our crew donned ragged clothing and had such a wonderful time working up an appetite while the bird clocked its final hour in the oven. A new kickball has been purchased for this year's game along with a mobile bar set for quick refreshment between innings (see below).

An added benefit you can't really embrace in a game of touch football, one that I think politically shattered families across the country might get into: kickball is the perfect passive-aggressive avenue for taking shit out on others. Say your uncle voted for a certain orange-haired hamster and has rubbed it in ever since November 9. Now, say he's rounding first, inexplicably trying to stretch a bloop single into a double on a bum knee. Bearing down on him from right field, you could just score the out with a harmless bounce pass. Or you could unleash a heater that takes his legs out and drops him to the hard frozen tundra. Wouldn't that feel good? (Sure, this could go both ways, but this is my fantasy. Get your own.)

 

Punch the Clock

In six weeks when we're fat and slow, cursing the fact that our skinny jeans no longer fit, and perusing the health club's fitness class schedules, we'll quickly point fingers at the buffet tables that flanked the room of every holiday gathering we attended. But we all know the siren that sang us to self-loathing shipwreck was not the food -- it was the booze. Not only does alcohol obviously crank up the calorie count, it blurs and slurs the whole experience. The older I get, the more that whole adolescent warning about alcohol killing brain cells matters. It may be too late for me in the grand scheme, but I've developed a novel ambition to hold onto what I have left in the tank.

None of this is to say I won't be hammered Thursday -- I just want to pace myself down that road, which is why I hit up my friend and cocktail mad scientist Jeff Faile back in DC for a punch recipe to kick off the day. It's goes without saying that an open bar straight away will leave you and some guests too drunk when the bird lands on the table.

IMG_3968.JPG

 

We're calling this punch the Doppler Effect, because it seems to encapsulate the whole motion of approach, pass and recede that haunts me these days.  

Ingredients: 

6 ounces Aperol
5 ounces Jim Beam
8 ounces prosecco

8 ounces soda water
2 1/2 ounces honey
2 1/2 ounces hot water
4 grapefruit wedges
3 sprigs rosemary

Directions:  

  1. Pour Aperol into a glass, add one rosemary sprig, cover and set aside for 24 to 48 hours at room temperature.
  2. Fill a medium-sized container or pan with water and freeze to make a large ice block.
  3. In a shaker, mix honey and hot water and shake well.
  4. Chill rosemary-infused Aperol, whiskey, and honey syrup for one hour then add to a punch bowl with the ice block. Squeeze grapefruit wedges into punch bowl and throw in the rinds. Add rosemary sprigs to garnish. Finish it off with the prosecco and soda water. 
  5. Taste and adjust as necessary.

Pass on the Grass

Chances are, your hosts have been project planning and grinding for several days on the preparation, cooking and staging of this big day. By the time you and other guests arrive, they are running on not much more than fumes of adrenaline. They are all smiles but underneath it whimpering with exhaustion, pining for a second wind. If for nothing else than respect for them, lay off the weed at least until after dinner. You'll be doing yourself (and your date) a favor by not being the loser at the table scarfing everything down, failing to savor a single bite because munchies turned you into a slob. Your hosts didn't cripple themselves for this dinner party so some cat could go Cheech & Chong on the fruits of their labor. If you want to contract the munchies and gorge yourself, save it for any other day and Taco Bell.     

That being said, fire and brimstone probably won't rain down if you sneak out for a one-hit in the window between the table clearing and the spread of pies being set. It's possible you'll need those munchies to excavate space in your gut for more food anyway. Just remember that if it's cold outside, the reefer stench will especially stick to your clothes, so beware who you chat up when you re-enter because they will smell it all over you.   

Show and Tell

By now you should know not to show up empty handed to any party, not just Thanksgiving. If you don't, you can saddle up to the kid table. It's fine in some cases to grab a random bottle on your way to a dinner party, but for special occasions it's better to put some thought and heart into it. If it's wine you brought, at the table you might share some context about the bottle you chose. Say it's one of your favorites -- tell us when you discovered it and what you love about it. Or if it was recommended by the wine expert at your liquor store, share what you gathered from him/her. I know very little about wine -- that's my wife's department -- but I love learning from friends about wines they love. Those wines stand out to me when I'm roaming a liquor store and take me back to the dinner when I first tasted them. 

The same goes for whatever dish you contribute to the feast. Presumably there is some history or family tradition behind the side you offered to bring. Sharing that with us can only elevate the dish because of your thoughtful and loving disclosure.  

If you brought weed, the safe bet is to keep that to yourself. Not everyone is cool with the mule.  

Up your 'Thankful For' Game

It's unbearably cute when it's my son's turn to share what he's thankful for and he says that he is most thankful for his family. When a grownup says the same and passes the gavel it's a little unbearable. You've been around how long now and that's the best you can come up with? Ok, it's fine if your family is on the list of what you're thankful for, but it can't be the only thing. Give this one some serious thought and feel free to break the mold with any sort of heartfelt tangent. Odds are you've been engaged in little more than idle chitchat at the party up to this point. Greater odds are you hardly speak to your grandmother during the year in any way that leaves an impression of who you really are. This is your chance to move people, to give them a look behind the curtain. There are only a few times a year when you will be at the table with family and friends who matter to you the way these do, and you're running out of years. Tattoo the occasion with something that will make your grandmother well with tears, your mother blush, your kids giggle and your wife love you even more. Go out on a limb with this moment. You have it in you.

Surprise People

Throw a curveball this year. If you're the guy who perennially disappears to the television right after dinner and with age have developed a shred of self awareness, volunteer for the dish corps. You'll raise a few eyebrows and score some credibility. Maybe you typically ignore the kids bouncing off the walls at these gatherings. Chat one up this time around. It will endear you to the parents and you'll catch a spark of that buzz that kids can radiate.  

On the topic of dishes, my wife chimes in from the peanut gallery to say that the new black is guest helpers who can package and store leftovers. Apparently dish help was so 2015, and this year it's all about the mad Tetris skills in the kitchen.  

I'm setting the over/under for my own achievement of these suggestions at 2. My ambitions only go so far these days. In the meantime, I wish everyone a safe and warm Thanksgiving. 

 

Editor's Note: Most of below is a post from Will's (dormant) personal blog, written last year and recycled for this year with a few upgrades. Wisdom like this tends to age well, so we're uncorking it and letting it breathe again here on P+K. Bon appetit!

Ten Ways To Kill Time Waiting For A Lampo Table

10. Tell your kids to go play in the parking lot while you & your husband sit at the bar and drink Negronis. Essentially, be that 1950s parent. Throwing rocks is fun, right?

9. People watch. Specifically, watch the look on people's face as their wait time for a table hits them like a bucket of cold water to the face. 

8. Read a book. Seriously. Your phone can only be so interesting. (Patt, pictured right, didn't get the memo.)  

7. If you're Patt and it's 90 degrees out, start seriously regretting your boot/wool sock choice. 

6. Check out the latest Snapchat filters. Take a couple selfies with the mural wall (to the right of the entrance).

5. Throw shade on other people waiting for a table. Decide social pecking order, and just exactly what you'd be willing to do for your dinner. 

4. Dream about making Spudnut Coffee into a collaboration waiting area for Lampo in order to eat #allthedonuts.

3. Get your peeping Tom on and check out the resident Airstream trailer. 

2. Eavesdrop on conversations at nearby tables and try not to be too judgy. 

1. Check out Pen + Knife's latest posts on your phone. :) 

What are we missing?