Is Coleslaw a Part of Your Thanksgiving Tradition?

For me, coleslaw is a part of the traditional Thanksgiving dinner… I can’t remember a single Thanksgiving without it. My mother is “famous” for her coleslaw, and the aunts, uncles, and cousins always request it. She still makes the coleslaw for the extended family gathering, making it the way she always has, even still chopping the cabbage by hand.

My family thinks Thanksgiving means coleslaw too, but we’ve extended the thought to include two varieties of coleslaw. I make my mother’s coleslaw, which is a blend of cabbage, crushed pineapples, apples, and raisins, but I also add walnuts (which she does not), and mayonnaise instead of her combination of salad dressing and evaporated milk. My mother likes sweets more than I do, so her coleslaw is sweeter than mine. The texture of my coleslaw is also different because I shred the cabbage instead of chopping it. Occasionally I have added grapes to this coleslaw, which is a good idea… and once I added bananas, which for some reason was not. This year I’m wondering if some small dices of celery might be good.

The second coleslaw I always make is simply a blend of shredded cabbage and carrots (more cabbage than carrots) mixed with mayonnaise and flavored with horseradish and garlic. The garlic can be powdered or fresh, but when I use fresh garlic, I blend it in the food processor with a small amount of mayonnaise so the garlic taste is there, but no one is eating pieces of raw garlic. There really isn’t a recipe for this coleslaw… I just add the horseradish a bit at a time and keep tasting until it seems right. I think it’s important for the cabbage and carrots to be very finely shredded for this coleslaw… somehow when the cabbage especially is chopped or shredded coarsely, this coleslaw just does not taste the same.

So here are my questions…

Does anyone else think coleslaw when they think Thanksgiving? What ingredients go into the coleslaw you make?

What other special dish or foods mean Thanksgiving to you and your family?

And I’d love to know what foods make up your Thanksgiving menu…

Comments

Comment by Arnold:

The entire family gathers at my wife’s parents house. We have turkey, mashed potatoes, corn, peas, stuffing, cranberry sauce, rolls and gravy. Usually at least 4 kinds of pie for dessert. My favorites are apple, pumpkin, chocolate cream and mince.

Comment by Maggie O.:

I make cole slaw with green and red peppers, scallions, cabbage of course, and mayo and bottled french dressing. Your cole slaws sound good. I will try them.

Comment by Bev:

We have the usual turkey, gravy, stuffing, and cranberry sauce, but the rest of the meal is comfort food like macaroni & cheese and sweet potato casserole with marshmallows on top. My favorite: the jello salad with vegetables and cream cheese.

Comment by molly:

In Aussie coleslaw is traditionally made similar to the way you do, shredded cabbage, carrot and finely diced capsicum with a creamy dressing. One of our fav salads here and nearly always on every functions table in the summer.

Blessings:)

Comment by Maureen:

This is the first year that we are having Thanksgiving at our house. My mom always had coleslaw when she had Thanksgiving and I love her recipe which I don’t have. Instead of coleslaw this year, I am making tabouli instead which is a parsley salad with tomato and bulgur wheat. For our Thanksgiving we are making the turkey, stuffing, gravy, tabouli, and rolls, and everyone else is bringing a dish. My mom is making the pumpkin pies and cookies. I requested her nuthorns and pizzelles because they are my favorites.

Comment by Di Hickman:

If you add celery it’d be what we call Warsaw salad, it works quite well.

Comment by Mimi:

I love coleslaw made with finely sliced cabbage, grated carrots, half a bell pepper, a small onion grated, Hellmann’s, a little sour cream, lemon juice and horseradish. Maybe next time I will add a little celery.

Comment by Alex:

I had never heard of anyone eating coleslaw for Thanksgiving until this morning, when my coworker said he had to stop by KFC on the way home to get a tub of coleslaw for tomorrow’s dinner. And now I see he’s not alone! Too funny! My family eats cabbage products for New Year’s. It’s supposed to be for good luck.

Comment by Anne:

I’ve actually never heard of coleslaw as a Thanksgiving tradition! We have turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes, sweet potato souffle, green bean casserole, my mom’s rainbow jello mold, our family grape salad (grapes, pineapple, mini marshmallows, whipped cream, eggs, lemon juice and sugar), rolls, pies and whatever else sounds good. This year I made “pilgrim pies” which are pumpkin cookies with cream cheese frosting sandwiched between the cookies.

Comment by Denise:

We always have coleslaw—with mayo, hard boiled egg, green onions and shrimp (in addition to turkey, “funeral potatoes”, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole, homemade croissants and marmalade, cider and Mom’s pumpkin/mince/apple pies). We’re about 35 people all together and I get to cook the turkey this year! We’re happy just to be together and have a great meal, pass the babies around and celebrate with our 101 year old and 90 year old great grammas

Comment by ciara:

never heard of coleslaw for thanksgiving; we have something similar though- Waldorf salad (apples, walnuts, raisins, mayo)

Comment by Amanda:

I don’t really care for coleslaw and neither does anyone else in my family, so our Thanksgiving never includes it. What we do have, though, is turkey (or ham or, this year, brisket), stuffing, cranberry sauce, candied yams, cornbread casserole (everyone’s aunt makes this, right?), and baked ziti.
Coming from a very Italian family, we mix our family dishes with the American specialties — always a huge win!

Comment by lolo:

We have always had coleslaw at Thanksgiving. My mothers coleslaw was very finely chopped and very creamy. My husband thought it was unusual at first, but now he can’t imagine not having it. Its great the next day as part of a sandwich, we put Turkey, stuffing, cranberry sauce and coleslaw on a nice hearty bread.

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