Frazz by Jef Mallett for November 25, 2024

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    Concretionist  4 days ago

    I druther eat goose than turkey… IF the price was right. And that includes the social and interpersonal price.

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    Rhetorical_Question   4 days ago

    They are different holidays with separate origins.

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    evsxrk  4 days ago

    Interestingly, A Christmas Carol supposedly inspired the switch from goose to turkey as the chief meat of the Christmas meal, as Scrooge sends a turkey to the Cratchit home for Christmas.

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    Gizmo Cat  4 days ago

    We never had turkey or goose at Christmas here, we usually had something like roulade or beef or porc tenderloin. Later years we would do a meat fondue or gourmet.

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    RussHeim  4 days ago

    In my house, Christmas would have to be known as Prime Rib Day.

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    gammaguy  4 days ago

    In various years I’ve had turkey (what I was brought up on), goose, duck, chicken… and one Thanksgiving I shared a pheasant.

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    cabalonrye  4 days ago

    Goose is delicious, if well cooked.

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    HarryLime  4 days ago

    Does goose taste different than turkey?

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    Mbwebwe  4 days ago

    In point of fact (I love pulling that phrase out on occasion) the bird delivered to the Cratchits’ home for Christmas was a turkey, so Caulfield is off on this one. As is Jef.

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    Stephen Gilberg  4 days ago

    In any case, goose isn’t as thoroughly associated with Christmas as turkey is with Thanksgiving. And if we did call it Goose Day, I would expect more pinching than on St. Patrick’s Day.

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    rshive  4 days ago

    I’m told that wild turkey, as probably existed at the time of the Pilgrims, was pretty stringy.

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    sandpiper  4 days ago

    At our ages, tried and true work best. We follow tradition with turkey and oyster stuffing. Only time of year we have oysters so it is a very special treat for us. Never had a taste of goose, but don’t care to make the switch at this holiday.

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    cervelo  4 days ago

    Christmas fare in French Canada includes allspice flavoured meat pies and pig knuckle stew with meatballs. In my wife’s family they also cooked a turkey but it was used to make turkey meat sandwiches and turkey pot pies.

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    Otis Rufus Driftwood  3 days ago

    Mrs. Olsen will give thanks for the extended holiday I’m sure.

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    DaBump Premium Member 3 days ago

    Turkey is very prevalent on Thanksgiving, but goose is not very common as a Christmas meal, at least not now and in the US of A.

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    mfrasca  3 days ago

    In Victorian England, they served dead birds on their Christmas greeting cards.

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    Cactus-Pete  3 days ago

    “We do this today on this occasion, but hundreds of years ago in a fictional story about a single event on another occasion something else happened.” Kid’s not very bright.

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    billdaviswords  3 days ago

    I’ve never called it “Turkey Day.” Thats seems (to me) to trivialize it and to ignore the real meaning of Thanksgiving.

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    Bilan  3 days ago

    Thanksgiving is called Turkey Day because it doesn’t have anything better, like presents.

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    tammyspeakslife Premium Member 3 days ago

    Being thankful for the opportunity to escape the tyranny that we would still be stuck in if we hadn’t struck out to find a new home and ended up here quite by accident is a better reason than ‘presents’. The lives of the pilgrims that came here to escape abuse of authority were horrific.

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    Smeagol  3 days ago

    There’s 27 days between Thanksgiving and Christmas, no turkey on Christmas, ham on Christmas and if possible Pineapple Glazed ham Filipino style:)

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    Commediacrit  3 days ago

    Calling it “Turkey Day” sidesteps potential disagreement over the indians-and-pilgrims narrative. Happy T-day!

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    Nick Danger  3 days ago

    Turkey was also on the menu – goose isn’t as locked in to British Christmas as turkey is to Thanksgiving.

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    B.D.  3 days ago

    On a FOX interview in October about Springfield, Ohio, “Well what about the goose, the geese? What about the geese? What happened there? They’re all missing,” Trump said.

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    Teto85 Premium Member 3 days ago

    We had goose on Canadian Thanksgiving. Turkey for USAian Thanksgiving and ham for Xmas.

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    FrostbiteFalls  2 days ago

    Some would interpret “Goose Day” in an unmannerly manner. Watch your back (side)!

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