Use
your Thanksgiving dinner to sample fine bottled waters with a variety of flavors, textures and
tastes.
One
of the prime joys of matching water and food in a multiple course meal is being
able to switch waters for each course and developing a progression of waters to
guide you through the meal. This is a true experience and worth the effort.
Drinking different water for each course highlights the subtle difference in
waters and the progression adds enormously to the dining experience.
The
Thanksgiving dinner is a great opportunity to select three waters from the
FineWaters Balance and enjoy the experience with friends and family. It also
allows designated drivers and people that do not drink alcohol the full
participation of the celebration, being able to enjoy and switch between
multiple waters.
Here is a
classic progression based on a three-course
dinner:
Welcome
Cocktail/Appetizers:
FineWaters Balance | Bold
Water Brands: Perrier, Saratoga
Springs, Ty Nant,
Tipperary, … Bold
waters are perfect at the beginning of a meal preferably with crispy appetizers,
nuts or chips. It also provides a “Champagne”. A perfect cocktail would be a mix drink
with elderberry flower syrup and a water with the Bold designation
.
Dinner:
FineWaters Balance | Light
Bottled Water Brands: Galvanina, Ramlosa, Sole,
Daggio, ... Light designated waters have smaller bubble than those of the
Bold sparkling waters. Heritage turkeys have a more subtle, cleaner flavor than
commercial turkeys. So in order not to overpower the flavor and to match the
mouthfeel of the side dishes a Light sparkling water is perfect. Many people who
claim they don't like sparkling water (“too many bubbles”) love this
designation.
Dessert:
FineWaters Balance | Effervescent
Bottled Water Brands: Badoit, Hildon,
Sanfoustino, Voss, … Effervescent waters are an epicurean surprise to many.
These sophisticated waters straddle the delightful line between Still and Light
sparkling waters. Almost flat but a hint of mouthfeel is a sensation that is new
to many who have not experienced it and a perfect match for a pumpkin pie with
whipped cream as the super small bubble provide some contrasting mouthfeel to
the classic Thanksgiving dessert.
Like fine
water turkey is not the commodity many large scale breeders want you to belive
but a species with a long history of domestication and variation.
Heritage
Turkey
In 1776,
Benjamin Franklin proposed making the turkey the official symbol of his new
nation. It lost out to the bald eagle. In a letter to his daughter,
Franklin lamented the choice, owing to the eagle's
"bad moral character." He argued that "the turkey is a much more respectable
bird, and withal a true original native of
America."
Turkeys are native to North America, and the Spanish brought them from
Mexico to
Spain in 1498. In the early 17th
century when the English settlers came to New England, they were already well acquainted with
turkeys and brought European varieties, sometimes referred to as "tame turkeys"
with them. The settlers also found wild turkey in the forests and started cross
breading them with the European varieties early in the 19th century. This is the time
when the American turkey breeding began in earnest.
The breeding
of American turkeys has dramatically changed the turkey from the one that the
early American settles knew. The early turkeys could fly and had colorful
plumage..
Large corporations have dominated turkey production and
breeding since the 1960's, choosing the Broad Breasted Whites because they grow
quickly in confinement pens, where they are fed grains, fillers (including
turkey fat and feathers), and a daily dose of antibiotics (necessary in such
unhealthy environments). The resulting meat is often dry and bland requiring an
injection of a saline mix before packaging. The American cook then salts,
brines, stuffs, and bastes the turkey to add flavor. Nearly all the 267 million
turkeys Americans eat each year are Broad Breasted Whites. Before
supermarkets and distributors made the Broad Breasted White turkey the dominant
bird on the market, there were other
diverse breeds such as Bourbon Reds, Jersey Buffs, Slates, Black Spanish, Royal
Palms, Narragansetts and White Hollands.
Heritage
Breeds tend to be richer and more moist and flavorful than mass-produced
turkeys. Their taste is due to diverse diets and extended life-span.
A movement is underway to
bring back the heritage turkeys and make them commercially viable. The effort
is being guided by the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy, the Rare Heritage
Turkey Association and Slow Food USA, which promote the enjoyment of cooking
and eating and the conservation of family farms and endangered foods. Because
their numbers are still few, heritage turkeys are sold at a premium: roughly $4
per pound, in contrast with about 38 cents per pound for the average
store-bought Thanksgiving bird.
Complement Your Fine Waters with a Fine
Turkey Consider ordering a Heritage turkey for Thanksgiving.
Ask your local butcher to request
heritage turkeys from turkey vendors or see one of the online sources below.
National food chains offering Heritage turkeys include Bristol Farms (www.bristolfarms.com).
Recipe for Heritage
Turkey Heritage turkeys have a proportionally
smaller breast size and the distribution between white and dark meat is more
even, they are also leaner and usually smaller. Make sure you check out the recipes
below as Heritage Turkeys require a different approach to cooking. Also don’t
forget to order your Heritage Turkey in time for
Thanksgiving.
How to Roast
a Heritage Turkey | William Rubel
Recipe
for Roasted Heritage Turkey
|By Sandra Kay Miller
Where to
Buy Heritage Turkeys Regional list
from Slow Food http://www.geocities.com/donkeylady.geo/turkeybreeders.html Http://heritagefoodsusa.com/ http://www.marysturkeys.com/ http://www.historicalturkeys.com/index.html Walters Hatchery http://www.mcmurrayhatchery.com/category/turkeys.html http://www.cacklehatchery.com/turkeypage.html http://www.strombergschickens.com/stock/turkeys.htm http://www.slowfoodsantacruz.org/turkeys/ http://www.diestelturkey.com/heritage.htm
Turkey Heritage
Links http://www.albc-usa.org/ http://www.slowfoodusa.org/ http://www.slowfoodsantacruz.org/turkeys/
Elderberry Flower
Syrup
|