Our Thanksgiving Feast
We love to spend the holidays together, but this year we’ll be a little scattered. On Thanksgiving Day I’ll be curled up in a quiet house with a draft of my upcoming book and a steaming bowl of organic jambalaya. Cheryl will drive in from her families’ home that evening, and we’ll give our thanks for our healthy families and all our blessings by toasting with our favorite $10 bottle of organic wine.
But most of our Thanksgivings look a lot like yours. Our traditional family dishes, many from recipes passed down from generation to generation, probably taste and smell and entice like the holiday meal you’re preparing for your family, with perhaps one major difference – our goal to eat only organic food.
Over three years ago, I made a pledge to myself, my family and my world – a promise to choose organic foods, in order to avoid foods produced with toxic synthetic pesticides, antibiotics, synthetic hormones, genetic engineering, or cloning. As I wrote for my Organic Journey, "By choosing organic foods for our families, we teach quietly and profoundly. We teach our kids about healthy nutrition, at a time when obesity is overtaking many American children. We teach our kids about justice, as we choose to pay fair prices to the farmers who grow our foods without the use of persistent synthetic chemicals. We teach our kids about respect for our planet, as we take steps to save the wildlife our children love. We teach them to one day be fathers and mothers themselves, creating an inheritance for their children."
I was surprised by the recent article at SmartMoney.com. Reporter Stacey Bradford estimated that an organic holiday meal can cost 75 percent more than a comparable non-organic menu. For holiday meals you can expect to pay a little more for organic foods, but I think she missed the mark about staying on budget and buying organic foods. I just did an interview with Tara Parker-Pope of the New York Times that discusses how to get all the values of great organic food without paying more than you would to eat conventional food. When that article is out, I’ll link it here. But back to Thanksgiving …
When my mother hosts the holiday meal this coming Saturday, she caters to an extended family of mildly strange eaters: some eat everything; some are vegetarians; and some (one crazy guy in particular) eat organic. She and my father will be roasting an organic turkey for us to share. We’ll all bring something to their table. Cheryl makes her organic Cornbread Casserole from a family recipe as well as an organic stuffing that everybody loves, plus organic whole wheat French bread. Other members of the family add their favorites and together we celebrate with thankful hearts.
We here at DrGreene.com hope that you can enjoy your holiday favorites while buying organic food that helps keep your family and our planet healthy.
From our house to yours, Happy Thanksgiving!
PS – Several of your holiday essentials, such as mashed potatoes and apple pie, are on my list of essential organic choices that families should consider. Read Dr. Greene’s Organic Prescription….




| December 2nd, 2008 at 12:52 am
Just read the NY Times article. Good on ya!!! Can you be certified as the first certified organic human
? I’ve organized a CSA for the past 11 years and I can’t tell you how tedious I find it that the media tells the public, and people tell me, how much more expensive it is to eat organic. Where there’s a will there’s a way. Most of the people who tell me this live in bigger, nicer houses, have newer, bigger cars, and make more money than our family does (not envious…just a fact). And at home we eat mostly all organic. Here’s a good website piece “17 tips for buying organic on the cheap”…
http://www.bankrate.com/brm/news/cheap/20040901a1.asp
| December 2nd, 2008 at 12:01 pm
Thanks, Suzanne!
I’m a big fan of CSAs. Ours is where we get most of our produce during a lot of the year. Fabulous food.
And thanks for the 17 tips article. It pays to shop around. I’ve seen the same organic item at wildly different prices in different settings. I disagree with that article, though, in always leaving conventional supermarkets behind. Safeway, for instance, often does a nice job of democratizing organic — providing some delicious, great values for cost-conscious shoppers. And Walmart has a few outstanding organic bargains.
| December 2nd, 2008 at 12:23 pm
Just read your article in the NYT’s and popped over to your site.
Good for you going the distance on 3 years organic! My husband and I have slowly changed our fridge and cupboard over the past year-getting organic bit by bit; taking baby steps, but making def. changes in our diet.
I have begun to eliminate meat from our family table-but mainly due to costs. We still eat it, just not as often. I have also added produce from our local farmer’s market-sticking to seasonal items and only getting what we could eat over the course of one week.
I’m not looking forward to the market taking a break for the winter in a few weeks, but we are lucky to have a Whole Foods and a Wegmans’ nearby that both carry organic produce.
For this Thanksgiving-we had 10 people, eight adults and two little ones. We had a Whoel Foods catered turkey dinner-with some extra sides and desserts brought in by different guests.
The orgainc bird was the best we had ever had! I was happy to have spent a little bit extra-and plan to do it again.