It’s the Monday before Thanksgiving and you have a houseful coming. Let the games begin.
The first time I hosted Thanksgiving dinner for the family I was in my 20s. I’m not sure why I thought it was a good idea, but my mom graciously stepped down from her role as culinary matriarch and went along with my request.
Needless to say, it was a learning experience. When mom and dad arrived, thank goodness early, I didn’t even have the turkey in the oven yet and it was a big one. I informed my mom that I wasn’t going to stuff the bird because it wasn’t safe. She rolled her eyes a little I think, but patiently showed me how to rub butter under the skin and get the roasting pan ready with onions and celery and carrots. Then she asked me if I’d started the stock with the giblets and neck. Of course I had forgotten to even take them out of the bird! Mom didn’t say a word, she just retrieved them and started the broth that would be use throughout the day. Thank goodness for her!
After that, we usually went to mom’s or my sister’s for the event, but eventually, with expanding families and the need to share the holiday with other families of spouses, at some point our house became one of the hot spots. Over the years, I’ve learned a lot through trial and error about how to make a beautiful feast for family and friends, and still keep it stress-free and fun by doing as much ahead of time as possible.
There’s fun to be had all week, but beginning today we also have lots to do, and those tasks are all about preparation. I’ve catered many events and gatherings, and learned along the way that anything that can be done beforehand needs to be done beforehand. Give yourself a break on the actual holiday.
First, try to have the menu planned well before today. With Thanksgiving, this means the core dishes everyone expects, plus a few surprises here and there. Here, there is always a turkey, a vegetarian option, mashed potatoes, gravy, squash, cauliflower with cheese sauce or there would be a revolt, Mom’s creamed onions, and stuffing (cooked outside the bird, so I guess it is a dressing). There are the side dishes and garnishes – pickles, olives, cranberry sauces, breads, and one obligatory salad no one really eats. Each year, I experiment with at least one or more new or forgotten side dish, and there are always unexpected offerings brought to the feast.
And, of course, there are pies. Lots of pies because everyone needs to have their favorite! That means next to the pumpkin and apple pie are strawberry-rhubarb and Key lime! Any left over will be packed up and sent home with them. This year, there is also a request for strawberry shortcake, and I’m glad my freezer is stocked. A lot of work, yes, but not a lot of stress if you don’t try to do everything in one day.

This might seem like a lot, but if you do a few tasks every day, you will save considerable chaos when the holiday arrives. Spreading the tasks out is a way to make these tasks more enjoyable too, and ultimately reduce stress on the big day.
Monday
If the menu isn’t set, now is the time to do so. I actually put a schedule on my computer and it is saved from year to year, and my first step is to copy last year’s menu and change the dates! By now, I’ve asked for special requests and needs. Is Charlie still a vegan? Did Susie find out if she was allergic to eggs?
My family has quite a few dietary needs: nut and some fruit and vegetable allergies, gluten and dairy intolerances, heart-healthy needs, and it seems like it is always a moving target. Don’t forget the vegetarians when planning! A special dish for them is a touch of love, and often becomes quite popular with the meat eaters as well.
Make a shopping list and a schedule. Making lists save lots of time and keeps us organized. I have a ritual for this: nice music playing in the background, fresh pot of coffee, menu at hand. I pull out the family recipe box, my treasure chest, with mom’s handwritten cards, and even a few from my high school home economics class. I check for special ingredients, and start my shopping list; in Vermont, that actually means multiple shopping lists since I usually end up going to a couple of farm stands, a co-op, a small grocery and a supermarket before I’m done! That’s part of the fun too, as long as you go early and avoid the crowds.

The schedule keeps me on track. Plus, I love checking things off the list as the days progress! Sometimes, I even put things on the list I’ve already done just to check them off. I know that is silly, so don’t tell anyone.
Find and clean special serving dishes and serving flatware. I make a copy of the menu, increase the font size, and create labels that I place in the serving dishes, and arrange the dishes on the table or sideboard where they will reside. This saves an immense amount of time on many fronts. I’m not scrambling to find serving dishes at the last minute, and when people are offering to help and you need a special plate or bowl, just ask them to get the dish marked “Onions.” If you don’t have a separate dining room and need the space, stack your serving dishes with labels inside.

Inventory your dishes. Glasses and flatware just to make sure you have enough, napkins ironed if using cloth. Are you short on anything?
Clean out the refrigerator. This is a good time for a purge of all those jars of stuff tucked away in the back that probably should have been tossed. Refrigerator space this week will be valuable real estate.
Make whatever you can ahead of time. This means pie dough and cranberry sauce. The pie dough is easy, but if you are making five pies, it can be a little more time consuming. It is also messy. So get the dough all prepped on Monday, make your flour messes, and tuck the little discs of dough in the refrigerator. Done.


Thaw the turkey! If you are using a frozen bird and haven’t thawed it already, you need to work on this immediately. Never place it on the counter to thaw at room temperature. Safe thawing of turkey instructions here from the CDC. https://www.cdc.gov/features/turkeytime/index.html
Tuesday
Tuesday morning is for shopping. This is why you purged the refrigerator yesterday. Usually it is good to do your shopping for staples (canned pumpkin, cranberries, herbs, etc.) the week before and finish with the perishables today. After the busy weekend, stores and shops will be all stocked up, and Tuesday morning is a quiet time – the earlier the better! By shopping this early, you’ll know if you have to go to a specialty or out-of-town store. I try my hardest not to go near the stores later in the day or the day before Thanksgiving or Christmas.
Clean. Any special cleaning that is going to happen, happens on Monday or Tuesday, or it’s probably not going to happen, and guess what? Your family and friends don’t care if theres a dust bunny under you bed.
Special touches. This is a good time to make room in the coat closet, dust off your boot caddy if you haven’t already, sweep the front porch or walk, check your lamps where you usually don’t sit for burned out light bulbs, and survey your takeaway container collection for packing up leftovers. Don’t forget this last one, and in a pinch canning jars work great, and you’re not stuffing your food into plastic.
Buy and arrange your flowers. If you are having fresh flowers, get something long lasting such as Oriental lilies or carnations. These will keep for over a week, so you can get them arranged and set out ahead of time. To make them last even longer, store them in an unheated room or cool area until the morning of.
If you are brining your turkey for 24 hours, and then letting it dry for 24 hours, start the process this afternoon.
Wednesday
This is a busy day and every family will have different tasks, so plan your schedule accordingly! It’s also where a lot of fun resides, especially if there are little kids in the mix.
Make pies and other baked goods. I make my pies when the kids will be around because they love to help, so that might be any time of the day. Let them work with all their creativity, and clean up just once after they are done. Nothing is better than a kid-made pie. The holiday is not about perfection, it’s about being with each other and making memories.


Make your stuffing. I make the stuffing the night before the event and let it rest in the refrigerator overnight. If you are using a stuffing with milk and eggs and dried bread or croutons, the overnight actually makes it better! After you take your turkey out of the oven, there will be plenty of time to cook it. Save the onion and celery trimmings for the stock the next day.
Cook anything else that can be reheated! I make the cheese sauce for the cauliflower, the mushroom gravy for the vegetarians, the filling for the June Cleaver toasts, dips, cocktail sauce for the shrimp, etc. This is why refrigerator space is so dear! Done a little at a time over the course of the day is pretty much stress-free, while doing it all the day of can be quite frustrating.
Prep anything you can’t cook. If I’m having a crudité platter, I cut all the veggies up the day before so creating the platter the next day takes only a few moments, or can be delegated to someone else; kids love this task, encourage them to be creative. Label everything so you can enlist help in a rush!
I don’t prep my potatoes, but some folks precook them, then reheat and mash them just before eating. I do prep such vegetables as butternut squash and Brussels sprouts especially because they are tedious and don’t want to deal with them in the middle of everything else.
Calculate how long you need to cook your turkey. If you have 22 people coming for dinner at 2 and you have a 30-lb bird to cook, you don’t want to realize at 11 a.m. (sorry mom) the turkey should be half-cooked by now. I’ve learned this one from experience. Check a turkey-cooking guide, and remember you will need to let it rest for at least 30 minutes and up to an hour before you carve it, so calculate that in as well! Not only necessary for easy carving, this gives you wiggle room. I always plan on the full hour’s rest so that gives me plenty of time to pop things in the oven to cook and reheat, and to make the gravy from the pan drippings.
Set the table the night before. As soon as you are done with the table for the night, set your table for your holiday dinner! Make it beautiful. If you only have one table in your house, set it anyway and eat breakfast the next morning wherever you find space! If you are using new candles (unscented please), light them and let them burn for a few minutes; they will light easier the next day.
Set up your beverage station. This will save you lots of time tomorrow. If possible, set this up anywhere but the kitchen. On a mild day, I’ve been known to set mine up outside on the porch.
Thursday
First things first, get the turkey cooking. Since you’ve already calculated how long the turkey will need to cook and rest, pop it in the oven at the appropriate time, with whatever prep you use to get the bird in the oven. Everyone has their own way of cooking the turkey, probably how your mother cooked it, and I won’t mess with that routine!
Turn on the parade! Let’s not forget what’s important!
Simmer some stock. If you are not using prepared stock or broth, and there really isn’t any reason to, start a pot going. Your kitchen will now start smelling like Thanksgiving. Use the neck and giblets, plus any vegetable trimmings you have on hand from your prep. Add some Bell’s Poultry Seasoning and a couple of bay leaves and start simmering. Use the stock in your gravy along with turkey roasting pan drippings, and to moisten the stuffing. Any leftover can be added to a soup base.
Set out appetizers. An hour before people are due to arrive, get any appetizers ready and set them out. Pour yourself a glass of wine, nibble an appetizer, turn up the parade background, and take a break, you deserve it. Find some good music once the parade is over, by then you will want something that is a little more soothing than a marching band. Mellow jazz, perhaps, or something classical.
Bread and salad. The bread can be cut a good hour before eating, just lightly dampen a paper or tea towel and place over the top. This keeps bread (or sandwiches) remarkably fresh for a long time.
The salad can be set out, just don’t dress it, and don’t add sloppy ingredients such as tomatoes.
Once the turkey is out of the oven place it on a cutting board to rest. Set up a guard if necessary so the crispy skin is not ravaged. Now the oven territory can be used for cooking the stuffing, roasting vegetables, and warming anything you cooked the day before.
Reheat your prepped items. Reheat any sauces or gravies you made yesterday and keep them warm. Crockpots are great at keeping mashed potatoes and gravy warm!

The gravy. Occasionally, if I have a really large crowd coming, I’ll make a second turkey or turkey breast the day before and use the pan drippings to make the gravy ahead of time. However, if you didn’t make gravy the day before, make it at the last so it is nice and hot. If you let the turkey rest long enough, there will be plenty of time, no hassle, and a full hour’s rest and your turkey will still be hot. I have someone else carve the turkey, while I make the gravy, usually my son and son-in-law.
Designate two helpers and kick everyone else out of the kitchen while you are filling your serving dishes. This is important. They all will be hovering around the turkey, and they will want to help, but a crowd in the kitchen at this point doesn’t work so well. Send them all to the beverage station to fill their glasses for the meal, and to find their places at the table.
Check your menu and list! I can’t tell you how many times something was left in the refrigerator and not placed out!
Leave the stress behind. If you screw something up, so what? It’s really only a meal, and one with lots of components. Just think about is as a good story later on, like my leaving the giblets in the turkey. A few years ago, I was cooking in my daughter’s kitchen for Thanksgiving and left the roasting pan on the burner for a bit too long and the smoke detectors went off, complete with an obnoxious voice telling us all to Evacuate! Evacuate! My granddaughter wrote one of her first stories, a little book, about “The Thanksgiving when Meme burned the turkey.” No matter how many times I’ve told her the turkey wasn’t burned, her memory is different than mine, and she will bring it up again this year. Actually, she brings it up frequently with a very broad grin on her face.
Of course, last year, somehow a potholder got left in the oven at basting time, started smoldering, and filled the house with smoke! I’ve yet to live that one down too…
Light those candles, pour the wine, put on some good music, and enjoy the feast with your tribe! We’ll all worry about dessert later, if there’s room, and remarkably, there will be if we wait long enough, after about the second showing of A Christmas Story…

Happy Thanksgiving to All!!!!

Copyright 2024– or current year, The New Vintage Kitchen. Dorothy Grover-Read. Unattributed use of this material and photographs is strictly prohibited. Reposting and links may be used, provided that credit is given to The New Vintage Kitchen, with active link and direction to this original post.
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You have your Thanksgiving planning down. Thanks for sharing.
Wishing your family a Happy Thanksgiving holiday.
You too! Have a wonderful day!
You are the Queen of Thanksgiving Organization Dorothy! Lots of great tips and ways to accomplish hosting a big Thanksgiving! I hope your smoke detectors don’t go off this year 🙂
Jenna
I am so never going to live that one down, especially with the little miss in our family reminding everyone! But it is now a good story.
haha!
Wow! Definitely a lot of work to be done but when you are so well organized is also fun 🤩 Wishing you all a Happy Thanksgiving 🍁
Thank you! I love to enjoy all the components, and a little planning goes a long way for any holiday.
Well considered plan and it will be helpful for many!
Thanks! It always helps to spread everything out and try to not squeeze everything in one day.
You have this Thanksgiving Dinner organized and well prepped! I too remember when I left the giblets and such inside the Turkey. I was also in my twenties!
Your pies look delicious.
Enjoy the prep and all the fun this week. Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!
Thank you Nancy, and I think we all learn about the turkey packet at least once! Have a wonderful day Nancy!
These are fabulous tips! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you! Anything to keep things positive!
Excellent advice! You are a wonder, that’s what you are. A very happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!
Happy Thanksgiving to you too Laurie! Thankful for you!
Have a wonderful time
Thank you Sheree!
Great tips! I especially loved the most important one – “Thaw the turkey!” 😀
Yep, that’s the #1 most important!
Ah, a wonderful week!! I remember doctoring up Stove Top stuffing with apples, raisins and walnuts for my first adventure. Be blessed!!
Hope you have a marvelous day!
Have a wonderful Thanksgiving with your family. I know it will be a delicious one.
Thank you Karen, and you as well! Do you have a big gathering planned, or something more intimate?
We spend a few days at our son’s house and have Thamksgiving with about 20 people.
That’s quite a feast!!! Enjoy your day!
Neither of us has family so in a way we are fortunate that the holidays are our own. Football and pasta is on the menu currently, but that may change according to what I feel like making that day. LOL
Sounds very relaxing, what a holiday is meant to be!
Hi, Dorothy – Even though our Thanksgiving is now over for the year, Christmas Turkey Dinner is just arround the corner and I have bookmarked this post. Thank you for your excellent tips!
You’re very welcome! A life of mistakes that I try never to repeat, although there’s always something new to learn from, like the potholder incident,..
I also plan everything, as you do, Dorothy. My refrigerator is papered with lists. Happy Thanksgiving. I truly appreciate you!
It’s the best way to make the tasks more enjoyable, little bite-sized pieces of work with all the fun still there!
Happy Thanksgiving Dorothy! I hope you have a very enjoyable day with family.
You too Jan! Have a wonderful day!
I couldn’t love this post more, except it gave me heartburn and my armpits started sweating. I thought I was the only one who did this, “Sometimes, I even put things on the list I’ve already done just to check them off. I know that is silly, so don’t tell anyone.” Bahaha. This could be a small book all its own, It All Begins With The Refrigerator! In our preparations for celebrating gratitude I love this the most, “If you screw something up, so What?” Damn right, gobble on…Happy Thanksgiving my friend, I’ll be thinking of you when I spray my wrist with Chanel #5 and pat it about my neck. Hugs, C
I think of you too Cheryl, when I take the cap off that little bottle and indulge in a whiff. I think of you doing the same thing, at the same time, on the opposite coast. A great stress reliever! I think I’ll put that on my list – just so we can check it off!
Have a delightful Thanksgiving. I love your idea of labels on the serving dishes. People always ask what they can do. I always try to think of something beforehand, but often can’t. It is good to have something easy for people to do.
I am a strong believer in creating a plan of action. It makes everything go so much smoother. “You make it seem so easy.”
Yes, it does, but there’s always room for that little mistake, usually a laughing point!
So true! I did enjoy the story of the Brunt Turkey and the Smoke Filled house.
We laugh like crazy about it now! And the granddaughter won’t let it rest.
I’ve done a big Thanksgiving twice since leaving the US, once in Germany for friends and once for my Romanian in-laws. Both times it was a success but it’s just us 2 now so we often do culinary themes and it’s pretty stress free. Happy Thanksgiving!
That sounds wonderful! Happy Thanksgiving to you too, with whatever you create!
Happy are those who gather around your table, Dorothy. Enjoy the day, and thank you for this informative post and the stories that go with it. My grandkids always remember the times I have messed up and remind me quite frequently. 🙂
They love those little missteps! And I love showing them life is full of little mistakes, not much perfection around here.
This is a Bible for anyone just starting out or looking for some helpful holiday tips!
Happy Thanksgiving, D, to you and your family. May it be a blessed one. 🫶🏼
Happy Day to you too my friend! Will you have a big father this year?
The best guide to Thanksgiving meal prep I’ve read yet! And referring to your recipe card box as a treasure chest—spot on!
Thank you Amie! I can’t think of any possession I treasure more than that box! All the memories and food splashed cards are dear to me, and to my own daughter Amie!
Wonderful tips, I hope you have a splendid Thanksgiving with very little stress and lots of fun and love!
Already have lots done, and tomorrow will be pie day! Since I’ve already made the crust, all that’s left is the fun!
You have this down to a fine art. Wishing you and yours a very happy Thanksgiving!
Mary :))
Happy Thanksgiving to you too! Wouldn’t it be wonderful if the whole world paused for a day of thanks!
Simply loving those pies!
Thanks! Everyone looks forward to their favorite!
Reminds me of the first time Anita and I bought a fully cooked ready-to-eat Thanxgiving meal which we scheduled to pick up at 11:30 with an hour to spare to put it all in nice dishes … ready-to-eat as soon as you thaw the 12 pounder, gravy, potatoes, green bean casserole, etc‼️
The only thing “ready-to-eat” were the dinner rolls‼️😂
Oh man! That must have been a shock, and one very late dinner!
You have compiled a really helpful guide to follow. We don’t if course celebrate Thanksgiving here but this regime could easily be applied to Xmas prep.
The hint about checking everything is crucial. I often leave something in the microwave, accidentally and find it at dessert!!!
Oh boy, we’ve all done it! That’s why a take just a moment to look at my printed menu, just to make sure!
I love reading your planning steps, Dorothy. I am certain your dinner tomorrow will go off without a hitch. I am ready for my nap now, just reading all that you do. While the big family dinners were always fun and delicious, I enjoy the smaller, simpler festivities now that family is not as many folks. The only turkey I will see are the wild ones in the woods, if I am lucky.
I hope you had a lovely day!
Your guide is spot on to keeping anyone sane. I especially like the idea of surveying your serving dishes a few days before. I learned the hard way to do that, always.
We all too often learn these lessons the hard way! Even with all the prep in the world, the last 15 minutes are hectic because so much has to be done to get everything on the table hot, and scurrying around for serving dishes only adds to the chaos!
Great tips! And those pies sure look good! 🙂
Thank you! There were plenty to go around and everyone had their favorite.
Belated Happy Thanksgiving wishes. Great suggestions – I should have read this post earlier in the week. Over the years I’ve gotten much better at relaxing and going with the flow when I entertain. And, as you noted, the little disasters turn into great stories (or not so great stories) with the passing of time.
That they do! Thanks!
We follow a similar plan, and everyone pitches in. Makes things so much easier. Happy Thanksgiving!
I hope you had a lovely day!
Spot on Dorothy, your plan makes life so much easier that way. I remember when I left something in the refrigerator too. One other thing I like to do is to put the serving spoons, forks etc. in the bowls with the labels. For some reason I can’t find enough of them at the last minute.
Good point! Get all those ducks lined up!