Saturday, November 15, 2025

Microwave stuffing!

Picture this: it's 1985. You got your first microwave, and you also are so behind-the-times that you don't realize that owning a microwave does not have nearly the same coolness factor as it did five or six years ago. What's the best way to celebrate and show off your good fortune? That's right: microwave Thanksgiving! Let Kenmore Microwave Cooking walk you through it. 

First up: You need a turkey, of course, complete with a sausage-studded cornbread stuffing.


You can make it all in the microwave, from cooking the sausage and veggies for the stuffing to cooking the oiled-up turkey itself. Okay, if you don't like pale, rubbery turkey skin, it will have to spend the last 10-15 minutes in the conventional oven, but that will just leave you time to make the side: jellied carrots.


Before I read the recipe, I wondered whether we really needed to use the microwave to boil water for Jell-O, but this isn't the shredded-carrots-and-pineapple-in-fruity-Jell-O recipe I was imagining. These carrots are "jellied" by being cooked in equal parts butter and cranberry sauce, so much more Thanksgiving-appropriate. (Maybe double the recipe, though!)

Your microwave will be pretty busy with the other dishes, but luckily, you can make the dessert ahead of time. Ginger bars aren't quite the traditional pumpkin pie, but they do have pumpkin pie spice in them. 


I'm not entirely sure how you can stretch a recipe in which the main ingredient is 6 tablespoons of flour into 16 servings, but hopefully everybody will fill up on microwaved turkey and the brown-and-serve rolls you had in the oven when the turkey was crisping up.

If you're family is nice, you will be able to figure out on your own that microwave ownership is not nearly as impressive as you thought it was. And if they're not nice, well, at least the fight this year won't be entirely dominated by politics.

9 comments:

  1. I was just visiting a friend who has an old, built-in microwave that she guesses is from the 80s. It's definitely not big enough to fit a turkey, but it is modern enough to have a turntable. If that microwave ever stops she's going to have to use it as storage and get a countertop microwave because they don't build anything that tiny anymore. Now I'm wondering how well a turkey would fit in my microwave. I don't plan on finding out, but it would have to be on the small side.

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    1. I think turkeys used to be significantly smaller. Selective breeding just keeps making them bigger and bigger. https://www.popsci.com/science/why-are-turkeys-so-big/

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    2. We used to have an 1970s Radarange in the wall. Chrome front and everything. It didn't have a turntable and always burned popcorn, but no other microwave has ever had the same panache.

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    3. I haven't seen the chrome ones. My friend has a tiny black radarange that's new enough to have a turntable. Those old radarange microwaves are prized possessions in certain communities around here.

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  2. Have you seen this one family's attempt to make a full microwave dinner? It took a really long time because, of course, they only had one microwave. And the roast chicken with paprika for color ended up looking "like fake tan after you've sweated it off on the dance floor."
    https://youtu.be/SEsiPMcxbdw?t=11m24s

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    1. I just went to YouTube and looked up microwaved Thanksgiving dinner and found several videos. One had a stack of 4 microwaves and they tripped the circuit breaker. They also described the Brussels sprouts as tasting like swamp water.

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    2. Man-- sad to hear about a waste of Brussels sprouts.

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