By Robin from Washington, IA
Check out these recipes.
This salad is full of fresh vegetables and makes a healthy side dish or light lunch.
Here are the questions asked by community members. Read on to see the answers provided by the ThriftyFun community.
I have a family Christmas coming up at the beginning of December and have been asked to bring turnips. The thing is I hate turnips and have no idea on how to cook them or whatever you do with turnips.
Any help will be much appreciated. Thanks.It just dawned on me that I've never even tasted a turnip :-o What do they taste similar to?
Go to www.recipezaar.com and put, turnips, in the search bar.
There are several recipes. Look for where it says "sort by" and click on rating, it will sort the recipes to show you the most tried recipes
Turnips are a wonderful addition to your Thanksgiving feast.
We love them mashed, along with an equal number of potatoes. This will be our contribution to the Thanksgiving dinner we have been invited to. Peel the turnips and the potatoes, cut them into cubes, and boil them in salted water until they are soft enough to mash.
You can candy them like they do parsnips.
www.cooks.com/
has a basic one.
What you do seems to depend if your replacing mashed potatoes or sweet potatoes. Actually, I ask the person that requested what you bring what kind of recipe she wants you to use.
Why don't you see if you can trade dishes with another family member so you can make a dish you're more comfortable with? I don't think anyone in your family would expect you to make a dish you had never tried and don't even like.
This is a recipe from my childhood, from my dad's good friend, a former military chef. Wash, peel and cube your turnips, you can keep them in a bowl of cool water until ready for use. Cut up several slices of bacon (the amount can vary to suit the amount of turnips and of people who like bacon); put them in a hot pan until browned and crisp. Remove the bacon and set aside. Coarsely chop an onion (again, the amount can vary); drop it in the bacon grease, cook until translucent and soft.
I also hated turnip until tasting them pureed with butter. I do them the same now, adding lots of butter and a touch of fresh nutmeg and lemon to the mix. They should be light and fluffy for full effect.
Being a true Southerner I have to ask, which end of the turnip have you been asked to bring? From all advice I've read so far, yall are talking about the "root" end of the turnip and not the true green tops. Both are good to eat but I"m just wonderring which end is wanted?
I grew up on turnips and my mother always made a meat and potato pie
1 lb ground meat
1 med onion
carrots (you can use a can of them)
1 turnip
Dice the turnip and if u have raw carrots dice them
put them all together with salt and pepper and beef bullion let it all cook together till done. In another pan peel and boil 1lb potatoes when done mash them with butter and milk. Line a loaf pan with pastry then take the potatoes, and put a layer on the bottom, then a layer of drained meat mixture.
You can make this any size just by adding more. Use the leftover juice and pastry and make dumplings. Also you can cook just carrots and turnips together then mash them makes a good side dish change from peas and corn. Hope you like it we all do its an English dish.
Preparing and then cooking turnips takes alittle practice.
But if I were you, I would just go to the store and get 2-3 large cans of turnup greens, already prepared. After you put them in your pot, add about 5-6 tbls. of bacon grease, for seasoning, with alittle salt and pepper.
As a fellow Canadian, I am sure that what you are supposed to bring is the root end of the turnip (and for you Americans, we mean rutabagas, or older people call them Swedish turnips). The usual method of cooking a turnip is to peel it, cut in chunks, boil it like you would do potatoes, and mash. Nothing complicated about the dish. However, a lot of people don't like them as they have a pretty strong flavor. Obviously, your family does, as do many in my family. We can hardly have a Christmas or Thanksgiving meal without turnips, but I'll bet only half of the people eat them. A good way to do them is half and half with potatoes, as one of the other posters suggested, as they will not be as strong that way.
If you can trade with another family member, as someone else suggested, that is the way to go.
If not, and you are an adventuresome cook, try some ot these recipes that others have posted. If you are an inexperienced cook, go with the basic mashed recipe. I would bet money that is what everyone is expecting.
Turnips are similar to carrots, and they taste like a cross between potatoes and carrots. I usually make them with a few carrots. Peel as you would a carrot, and use equal amounts of each.....carrots and turnips. Toss diced veggies Rosemary and olive oil. Saute' or bake until veggies are tender.
I would like to thank each & everyone of you for your help..they all sound delicious & I didn't realize there was many ways to cook them that maybe I'll even be adventurous & try them again :0)
Thanks again and God bless, Ruth
They have an earthy root taste, lightly sweet, and a bit starchy.
You can't make Cornish Pasties without them! Also, there are recipes out there for Turnip fried...even a "Loaded Turnip Fries" one.
They have an earthy root taste, lightly sweet, and a bit starchy.
You can't make Cornish Pasties without them! Also, there are recipes out there for Turnip fried...even a "Loaded Turnip Fries" one.