The day after Thanksgiving we are happy campers: we camp in our house. We have leftover rolls. We have leftover pie. We have leftover roast turkey, cranberry sauce and a few extra baked yams. Sometimes we have mashed potatoes and brown turkey gravy. When we get hungry, we grab a roll, heat up a slice of pie, filch some sliced turkey off the platter. But when we get tired of grazing, sometime in the next day or two I make turkey-apple stew, employing leftover turkey, gravy and stock, with the additions of carrots, apple cider and fresh apples. I have to keep an eye on the gravy supply and make sure I make the stew before my brother feeds the gravy to Ozzy, the border collie. We make a rich, dark brown gravy from the drippings in the roasting pan, flour and water, and Ozzy loves to come for Thanksgiving.
What I use to make the stew is mostly dark meat. I strip it from the thighs and drumsticks, throwing the bones and sinews into the stock we started Thanksgiving day with the giblets, odd pieces of celery, any unwanted skin. Eventually, we will strip the entire carcass and throw it in our biggest pot for stock. We will probably make turkey and noodles with that, but stew comes first in the post-Thanksgiving rotation.
I begin by slicing apples and cutting carrots into batons. I use four apples and three carrots, usually, but you can adapt this to your own tastes. I don’t peel the apples. Because my Mom does not like eating pieces of onion, I will cook a small, peeled onion whole in the stew and remove it before serving. If you like pieces of onion, go ahead and add a cut -up onion or two to your stew.
Saute 3 carrots, cut into batons and
4 sliced apples (and optional onions) in a few Tbsp of olive oil and butter.
Sprinkle vegetables with dried thyme (stripped from five or six stalks)
When vegetables begin to brown,
Add some turkey stock and 1 cup or so of apple cider (I saute the vegetables in a standard skillet and add stock and cider until it is full). If you want it more savory, use more stock and less cider. For a sweeter stew, reverse the ratio.
While vegetables simmer, strip your turkey and cut it into pieces you can put in your mouth.
Put turkey pieces in your pot of leftover gravy (If you don’t have leftover gravy, you’re screwed as far as this recipe goes unless you can scrounge up some brown drippings and make some more. In a pinch, you can thicken stock with flour, but it will be a pale imitation of the real thing).
Heat the turkey in the gravy, as you would for hot turkey sandwiches. When vegetables are tender, add vegetables to turkey and gravy. Taste and season. I like to add Tabasco at this point — just a little. You might prefer salt and pepper. Nutmeg is a nice addition, too, and I can imagine that ginger might be good. The original recipe (published years ago in the San Francisco Chronicle’s magazine) calls for adding cream. Sometimes I throw in just a splash of half and half to round it out, but it is not strictly necessary.
I have served this plain in a bowl to eat with leftover rolls. I have served it over rice. I have served it over soft polenta. You could even eat it over mashed potatoes.
Food notes: You can, of course, make this stew with white meat if that floats your boat. For goodness’ sake, please don’t make it with cream gravy — even gravy mix is better than that. In our house when the gravy supply is low, we extend it with brown fluids: coffee has been used, or Kitchen Bouquet, or meat drippings from some other meal.
You can gussy this up by adding cream or half and half to your taste. If I have brandy, cognac, applejack or hard cider I’ll toss a jigger in with the apple cider and stock. If your sauce is thinner than you like, you can make a quick roux of flour and butter to thicken it — we usually reduce our gravy to save it so mine doesn’t need any additional thickening. If you have parsley on hand, chop some finely for a beautiful and flavorful garnish. If you want to be the next Martha Stewart, carve some crab apples into fancy faces, roast them and garnish with that. Don’t tell Martha I said that.
Happy Thanksgiving, everybody! See you next week.
Your turkey stew sounds delicious, Sharyn. I’m more a turkey sammich kinda guy. To be honest, that’s the only reason I cook the bird is for the sammiches the next day. Them and the tirkey stock. It makes the best risotto.I hope you and your family have a wonderful Thanksgiving — and a heaping batch of stew afterward! 🙂
I had a brother (now deceased) who would only eat turkey on the day it was roasted and only when it was warm from the oven. That left the rest of us with a lot of leftovers. I like this stew so much that sometimes I buy a couple of turkey legs, roast them, and make it again.
Happy Thanksgiving! I’ll look for that risotto recipe down the line.
Now that’s a creative stew! I just might try it…if we end up with any leftovers. Our Thanksgiving Feat lasts two days, too, but involves quite a crowd. I love the picture of Ozzy! Enjoy your holiday feast and family time, Sharyn! Debra
Thank you, Debra. You do the same.
Well, this is the first time I’ve heard of a recipe like this one.. it sounds perfect for after Christmas:) (Thanksgiving is done for us up here in Canada:)
Yes, we make it after Christmas, too. We eat the same menu for Christmas Day, except that we change the pies.
What’s a carrot baton look like? I need to know if I am to cut my carrots into batons. I usually just slice them into thin coins.
The stew sounds really good. I’ll have to try it.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.
You know what a baton looks like? Those things they hit you with at riots — ahem — protests? Cut your carrot in half crosswise. Then cut each half in half lengthwise. Then slice each piece into sticks: carrot batons. I like them better than coins in this recipe.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Sharyn this is fabulous! I love the ending with brandy or applejack! The flavor sounds so rich and delicious! So glad you timely posted this!! Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family!
Thank you, Linda. And to you. I know you will eat well!
I LOVE leftovers! I have a weird Boxing Day leftover tradition of turkey mashed potatoe, mashed carrots and turnip and baked beans… It sounds awful but it’s so good!!
I’ve just recommended your blog on Stumbleupon too as I’m enjoying it so much and wanted to spread the joy further. Happy Thanksgiving to you.
Thank you, Lauren. And thanks for the Stumbleupon Thanksgiving gift — I appreciate it!
Happy Thanksgiving!
Even as a vegetarian, I think your stew sounds really good. I wouldn’t have thought to put something as sweet an apple in a savory meal, but I bet it balances out the dish really well. 🙂
Thank you, Christine. High praise when omnivore food sounds good to vegetarians. I think of the flavors as French: cider, apples, thyme, perhaps a little cream and brandy.
Happy Thanksgiving! The stew sounds wonderful.
Thanks, Nancy. I hope you have a good day today at your family feast and that the wishbone breaks on your side.
sounds utterly delicious…
lovely space you have with yumm recipe collection..
excellent presentation..
happy following you..;)
do stop by mine sometime..
Tasty Appetite
Thanks, Jay. I had just checked Tasty Appetite via a link in Daisy’s World.
The turkey stew sounds great. I’m going to pass this recipe along to the friends who have us to Thanksgiving each year.
Thank you, Karen. I hope they enjoy it. I made it yesterday and we ate some for dinner last night on a bed of the last mashed potatoes. Today it’s on to turkey and noodles.
We didn’t cook Thanksgiving this year so don’t have any leftovers (boo hoo), but are planning to do turkey for Christmas instead. I’d like to try this recipe, either with leftovers or just get the turkey legs as you suggested. It sounds like a winner!
It’s so good. Leftover Christmas turkey works just as well — you need to roast something so that you get the drippings for pan gravy.
This sounds awesome! It makes me want to get out the turkey and see what we can do! Thanks for sharing!
Do it, Pam! Thanks for stopping by.
This inspires me to cook another turkey for myself… or a duck. I found out I can get duck at Whole Foods, but don’t know when. Perhaps the Duck Project is for the next time you visit.
Ooh — a duck! I have a good recipe for duck breast from the blogosphere that I saved.
Love the water color, adore Ozzy.
Thanks, Lorna. He’s pretty cute.
I’m tired of turkey after 4 days of leftovers… but this sounds wonderful with the apples and I have some dark meat left. Thanks.
It’s all in what you do with it, Jane, as you know: all painters work with color, line, texture. I find that not eating too many miniature versions of the meal we have already had helps, so I start converting leftovers to other things immediately. Alternatively, you can freeze the turkey and gravy and make the stew sometime when you are not tired of it. Thanks for stopping by.