Guilty Displeasures: Holiday Foods We Hate


Holiday Foods We Hate

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    DRY TURKEY
    When we polled our friends and co-workers about the holiday foods they dread, dry, tasteless turkey topped the list -- and with good reason. It's soooooo easy to make a moist bird, using brine, herbed butter, and even festive bacon tents. Why in the world would you subject your guests to drywall-like poultry -- unless you secretly don't wanna have to host next year.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    FRUITCAKE
    Shockingly enough, we're not gonna slam fruitcake. That would be too easy. Sure, the ubiquitous bricks that litter the shelves of stores that have no business purveying festive baked goods are what's given it a bum rap, but so long as you steer clear of picking 'em up at the same place you buy your shaving cream and drywall screws, you should be fine. Give the homemade version a chance and if you still don't like it, tell ya what -- you can re-gift it to us next Christmas.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    CANDY CANES THAT AREN'T PEPPERMINT
    They're fun. They're festive. Heck, they're a holiday icon. Red & white peppermint candy canes are a once-a-year treat we live for -- so why go messing 'em up with wintergreen, spearmint, and heck, cinnamon tutti-frutti? That's something we "cane" all live without.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    GELATIN SALADS
    We're glad for gelatin and wacky for whipped stuff, but when the twain meet, it often ain't pretty. And, when mayo or fish get in the mix, we admit to cringing. Any combo of those, and we're shaking like the stuff in the mold.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    GIBLET GRAVY
    We admit that we're split on the giblet issue. Some of us love nothing better than navigating a sea of earthy giblet gravy, and others, well, one colleague says, "Throw that junk away A.S.A.P. What -- do you think we are in Seattle Grace with those organs lying about?" and another says, succinctly, "Giblets are gross." Okay, more for the rest of us! That is, just as long as there's no skin floating on top. Eeewwww!!!

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    SCALLOPED POTATOES
    There are some who are offended by the mere presence of scalloped potatoes on a holiday table not so much for what they are, but rather for what they fail to be. Decrees one of our poll subjects, "Potatoes should be mashed and only mashed on Thanksgiving." We're in agreement and, in fact propose a all-year ban on potato scalloping. Perhaps there's some dairy-skilled chef out there managing never to scald their tater milk, but they're clearly being held prisoner somewhere. Send up a flare and we'll rescue you -- and your potatoes, too.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    FANCIED-UP CRANBERRY SAUCE
    Magazine recipe suggestions to the contrary, it sure would seem that people are purists when it comes to cranberries. Our boss decrees, "Give it to me from acan or with simple ingredients but no, I do not want to try your Chai Spiced Chutney Cranberry sauce," and another colleague admits, "I like mine with can lines in it, not the fancy stuff with little stems." So don't get all clever with the cran, when the can's just dandy.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    OVER-THOUGHT STUFFING
    On a similar tip, there's no call for schmancy stuffing. One of the most frequent complaints in our poll was people's irk with unnecessary add-ins like nuts, water chestnuts and other assorted "crunchies" as they were termed, along with "squishies" like oysters and sausage. You've got 364 other dinners with which to get all haute, so just leave the goshdarned seasoned bread alone today.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    MINCEMEAT PIE
    Suet is for the birds, so please don't go sticking it in our holiday pies. Mincemeat, traditionally, is a finely-chopped mix of fresh, dried and candied fruits, spirits such as rum or brandy, spices, beef or venison, and suet, which is raw beef or mutton fat. As we'd mentioned before with the gelatin salads, combos of this stuff ought not be found hanging out together in a single dish, and especially not in the sweet and innocent guise of a pie. It's been a lovely day, so please don't make us have to feign sudden vegetarianism during dessert.

  • Holiday Foods We Hate

    We're Grateful for Many Things -- Just Not...

    EGGNOG
    The holidays hit, and suddenly everyone's making like Rocky Balboa and glugging down giant glasses of eggs. Yeah, there's cream, booze and spices involved, but does that honestly make it any less gross?

Casserole with the Punches

by Kat Kinsman

I've never really understood why the holidays hold an embargo on particular dishes. Thanks to modern methods of Frankenfarming, it's possible to obtain the ingredients for green bean casserole, pumpkin pie and cranberry sauce at any point in Earth's annual orbit. It's not as if some celestial window opens up and renders these dishes intrinsically more delicious in the final 1/12th of the year or that the body cannot physically process mincemeat prior to November. Likely, it's that "tradition" thing that folks and advertisers are so nutty about at this time of year, but I'm sticking by my pet theory that one of our culture's forefathers had a Great Aunt Mildred who insisted on bringing her Tuna-Jell-O Nut Fluff Surprise to each and every family gathering throughout the year and he figured out a clever way to if not end, then at least curtail the frequency.


One must toe a fine line with a Great Aunt Mildred. Of course, she must be made to feel as wholly engulfed in the embrace of her family's love as one of those chunks of tuna she mysteriously convinced to levitate in the cherry gelatin. Good gosh a mighty was it thoughtful of her to go to the trouble of shopping for the cashews and marshmallows, dig out the copper fish mold, haul the whole mess over and clear out a fridge shelf to house it. And yes, we live in the most truly abundant nation in all the land, and should be truly grateful for any foodstuffs with which we are blessed. But the truth of the matter is that at some point back in the early 90's, you somehow missed your cousin's elaborate "Avoid. AVOID!!!" semaphore gestures from across the room and took a big ol' rippling spoonful because Mildred was standing right there and you wanted to be polite. Unfortunately, this politesse left you doubled over in the little elves' room for the remainder of the holiday, and to this day, you can't see a Starkist commercial without lightly whimpering.



Solution: a "casserole allergy." My dear friend Pete the Mayo Hater long-ago developed this technique to shield himself from foodstuffs of dubiously creamy origins and has employed it ever since. It knocks people enough off guard that they just accept it at face value, but is suitably ambiguous to allow him helpings of dishes he actually enjoys ("Oh, uh, that's technically a frittata/soufflé/stew, so my doctor says it's okay.") Yup -- it’s technically fibbing, but weigh that against bruising Mil's tender, well-meaning feelings or, heaven forfend, having to gag your way through a whole bowlful of fish jelly while making Rachael Ray-style yum-o sounds. And just be thankful that it's only once a year.



Sound off on the foods that hit your yuck button at our Guilty Pleasures blog.

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