Beyond sandwiches and soup: 5 meal tips for Thanksgiving leftovers - Action News
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Beyond sandwiches and soup: 5 meal tips for Thanksgiving leftovers

In the days after Thanksgiving every year, many fridges are filled to the brim with leftover turkey. Beyond sandwiches and soup, food columnist Mike Green has a list of tips to help you make the best of the rest of the big bird, cranberry sauce, potatoes and more.

Tryptophan coma got you stumped for leftover ideas? Food columnist Mike Green has some suggestions

Food columnist Mike Green has some tips for what do with all that cranberry sauce, turkey and other leftovers from Thanksgiving. (iStock)

In the days after Thanksgiving every year, many fridges are filled to the brim with leftover turkey. Beyond sandwiches and soup, food columnist Mike Green has a list of tips to help you make the best of the rest of the big bird, cranberry sauce, potatoes and more.

1) Re-cook white meat in gravy

Dark meat stays moist longer andis probably going to taste better in the days after Thanksgiving, Green says.

But let's say you happen to have mountains of white meat left.Green suggests re-cooking it in a sauce pan with gravy or turkey stock.

"You can almost re-braise it. Avoid the microwave, too."

Whatever is left can be frozen and used down the road in a stock.

2) What about non-turkey leftovers?

Mounds of mashed potatoes in the fridge? Turn it into a small roll or croquette.

"If you want to be really fancy, when you're putting away your leftovers you can press some mashed potatoes into pucks and freeze them over night," Green says.

When you take the pucks out the next day, dip them in an egg wash, dust them with pankoand repeat. Then, deep fry or toss them in the oven.

"It will be golden on the outside and mashed potato gooey in the centre," Green says. "On top of that, maybe just sautsome kale and crack anegg and put it on top and you can totally Instagram it."

3) Lighten it up

Green suggests giving your body a breakand chasing all those heavy Thanksgivingitems with a wintry salad.

"Look for something like kale, some Swiss chard, maybe even roast some cauliflower," Green says.

Combine all those together with a "very Thanksgiving-y"dressing that includes cider vinegar,olive oil andmustard. Addpomegranate seeds for colour.

"And then you can just strip the turkey off and throw it right in there. Serve it cold."

Cranberry sauce can be used to makea Thanksgiving-themed salad dressing. (Julie Van Rosendaal)

Cranberry sauce can also be re-purposed and used in thedressing. Add about one table spoon of cranberry sauce, half a table spoon of mustard, a little olive oil and a bit of cider vinegar for a single serving, Green says.

4) Ham it up

If you're ham rich in the days after Thanksgiving, Green recommends re-cooking and using it in breakfast sandwiches.

"Or just freeze that ham because you might be a little hammed out. It's not as forgiving as turkey for the leftovers or as versatile."

Another option: chopup and usethe ham on pizza.

5) Shelf life

In terms of the shelflife of the leftovers, Green says turkey and other Thanksgiving meats generally onlylasttwo to three days after they were originally cooked. So eat up!

Cabbage rolls, on the other hand, may keep for about five days, he adds.