Looking for Thanksgiving ingredients
-
- Posts: 43
- Joined: Wed Oct 03, 2007 12:10 am
- Location: Tampere
Looking for Thanksgiving ingredients
American Thanksgiving is coming up next week and I am scrambling to find the following ingredients:
-Pumpkin pie filling (or just canned pumpkin)
-Frozen pie crusts
-Hershey's Kisses (or something like it)
-Creamed corn
-Fresh/frozen whole cranberries
Any ideas? I am in Tampere. Please. Help.
Thank you!
Megan
-Pumpkin pie filling (or just canned pumpkin)
-Frozen pie crusts
-Hershey's Kisses (or something like it)
-Creamed corn
-Fresh/frozen whole cranberries
Any ideas? I am in Tampere. Please. Help.
Thank you!
Megan
- Karhunkoski
- Posts: 7034
- Joined: Mon Sep 25, 2006 1:44 pm
- Location: Keski-Suomi
Re: Looking for Thanksgiving ingredients
As you might guess, no Thanksgiving tradition exists here. (I'm a Finn so by default I don't even know what 'thanks' meansfauxfinndotcom wrote:-Pumpkin pie filling (or just canned pumpkin)
-Frozen pie crusts
-Hershey's Kisses (or something like it)
-Creamed corn
-Fresh/frozen whole cranberries


You might find frozen cranberries in the marsh areas - if there isn't too much snow. The cranberries are at their best when enjoyed 'in the wild' - once they've been slightly frost-bitten. But an easier and less barbaric way could be to check the Kauppahalli in Tampere (?) and/or in the freezers at supermarkets...
I'm not sure however whether merely the cranberries would make your day.
Well there might exist at least somewhat similar products, dunno. For example, would the Baci Perugina be anywhere close to the Hrutsch... whatever kisses? Those might be more readily on the shelves at Stockmann's. Pumpkin... I don't like pumpkin at all myself so I wouldn't know... pie crusts, certainly, but I have a hunch they 'wouldn't be the same'

Good luck all the same...!
Creamed corn is easy to make on your own with ingredients you can find in Finland (I do it every year). Just use google for the recipe of your choice.
As for the other stuff, I suppose there isn't an American food shop in Tampere? If you happen to make it out to Helsinki before next thursday you can always purchase most of these items from a ridiculously overpriced shop in the world trade center called Behnfords. Or you can pay even more by shopping directly from their website:
http://www.behnfords.fi/
Thankfully I've got a guest coming in from the states on Monday, so I ordered all my thanksgiving food from him
Happy Thanksgiving (gobble gobble!)
As for the other stuff, I suppose there isn't an American food shop in Tampere? If you happen to make it out to Helsinki before next thursday you can always purchase most of these items from a ridiculously overpriced shop in the world trade center called Behnfords. Or you can pay even more by shopping directly from their website:
http://www.behnfords.fi/
Thankfully I've got a guest coming in from the states on Monday, so I ordered all my thanksgiving food from him

Happy Thanksgiving (gobble gobble!)

- Megstertex
- Posts: 438
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- Location: Helsinki
I've gotten some snarky remarks about Thanksgiving here, but all I have to say is that it is a nice time of the year to reflect on the blessings in your life. It is difficult to explain to many, and as a child I really hated the holiday, but now, I really wish I could be with my family, it really makes me appreciate the things that I do have in life.
I have a lot of Libby's pumpkin filling, if you are lucky, you might find a real pumpkin at Stockmann to make from scratch. For the pie crust, I have improvised with crushed graham type cookies, and crushed roasted pecans and butter molded into a pie pan. If you don't get your crust perfect, you can compensate elsewhere, like making a maple whipped cream topping or something, it will turn out great.
The lingonberries can be more sour than cranberries, but if you make a garnish with orange zest, it tastes pretty similar.
I don't usually make creamed corn, but cornbread, sweet potatoes, stuffing, green bean casserole, sometimes garlic mashed potatoes, and for a frozen turkey in these crap electric ovens like mine, I turn it upside down to keep it moist, and marinate and stuff before hand. The Asian stores often have dried onions for green bean casserole.
To make stuffing from scratch, you'll have to use mostly dried herbs, unless you buy a few sprigs of fresh from a special grocer, and I like a rustic bread from the Stokka bakery that I let dry out before I use it. The mushrooms here are excellent to use, and I use a modified Fanny Farmer recipe for this.
If you have Finnish guests, best to explain it all before hand, and make expectations clear. I was kind of upset and a little offended last year when some guests started pulling out their wallets at the table and offering money for their share of the meal. Not what Thanksgiving is about at all, but they hadn't experienced this kind of uncomfortable generosity before.
Good luck,
from one of the apparently three "Megans" in Finland, though I am Meghan
I have a lot of Libby's pumpkin filling, if you are lucky, you might find a real pumpkin at Stockmann to make from scratch. For the pie crust, I have improvised with crushed graham type cookies, and crushed roasted pecans and butter molded into a pie pan. If you don't get your crust perfect, you can compensate elsewhere, like making a maple whipped cream topping or something, it will turn out great.
The lingonberries can be more sour than cranberries, but if you make a garnish with orange zest, it tastes pretty similar.
I don't usually make creamed corn, but cornbread, sweet potatoes, stuffing, green bean casserole, sometimes garlic mashed potatoes, and for a frozen turkey in these crap electric ovens like mine, I turn it upside down to keep it moist, and marinate and stuff before hand. The Asian stores often have dried onions for green bean casserole.
To make stuffing from scratch, you'll have to use mostly dried herbs, unless you buy a few sprigs of fresh from a special grocer, and I like a rustic bread from the Stokka bakery that I let dry out before I use it. The mushrooms here are excellent to use, and I use a modified Fanny Farmer recipe for this.
If you have Finnish guests, best to explain it all before hand, and make expectations clear. I was kind of upset and a little offended last year when some guests started pulling out their wallets at the table and offering money for their share of the meal. Not what Thanksgiving is about at all, but they hadn't experienced this kind of uncomfortable generosity before.
Good luck,
from one of the apparently three "Megans" in Finland, though I am Meghan
Megs
- Hank W.
- The Motorhead
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They just wanted to settle the "debt" right then and there before you packed up and left and had them owing. You *know* its a sin for even an atheist in Finland to *owe* a favorMegstertex wrote: they hadn't experienced this kind of uncomfortable generosity before.

Cheers, Hank W.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
We're having a Tofurkey http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tofurkeyraamv wrote:I am waiting for the desperation to come to finding that elusive Turkey!! and its filling!!![]()
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Where did you find the Tofurkey?ScubaGirl wrote: We're having a Tofurkey http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tofurkeyand I make the stuffing from scratch, mmm, mmm, good!
To be honest, I ve not had a thanksgiving turkey since 2000 ( when we had a Boyz' game and i had one in Humperdinks in Richardson).
and the idea os buying a whole bird N sticking it in an oven overnight here to see only a teeny weeny butt being eaten is not really appealing..
OTOH, the veggie option seems inviting..but then the work involved is still the same..
and the idea os buying a whole bird N sticking it in an oven overnight here to see only a teeny weeny butt being eaten is not really appealing..

OTOH, the veggie option seems inviting..but then the work involved is still the same..


My guest who is coming from the states tomorrow is bringing it. You can also do a homemade one. Google for recipesincster wrote:Where did you find the Tofurkey?ScubaGirl wrote: We're having a Tofurkey http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tofurkeyand I make the stuffing from scratch, mmm, mmm, good!


- Hank W.
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Well, it is *goose* season in Novemberraamv wrote:I am waiting for the desperation to come to finding that elusive Turkey!!

Cheers, Hank W.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
sitting here like a lemon looking for a gin.
You can probably order a fresh turkey from Stockmann. They are not as big as the US / UK ones
but IIRC you can specify S, M, L...
http://tavaratalot.stockmann.fi/portal/ ... n_palvelut
but IIRC you can specify S, M, L...
http://tavaratalot.stockmann.fi/portal/ ... n_palvelut
Last edited by Rosamunda on Sun Nov 18, 2007 4:22 pm, edited 1 time in total.