Wednesday, November 25, 2015

Happy Thanksgiving




There is one day a year when food and family take center stage and that day is Thanksgiving.  Families come together across many miles to spend the day eating food prepared from recipes passed down for generations.  It is a time for grateful appreciation of being together and having the comfort of being "home".   Thanksgiving is a time for traditions. The traditions vary from family to family, from city to city, from state to state, but one thing is certain food is always center stage!

A few fun facts about Thanksgiving:

  • President Abraham Lincoln declared the last Thursday in November as a national day of thanksgiving in 1863. In 1939, President Franklin Roosevelt decided that the holiday should be celebrated on the fourth Thursday of November in order to extend the holiday shopping by a week as requested by The National Retail Dry Goods Association. This caused controversy since in 1939 there happened to be five Thursdays in November. Two years later, the House of Representatives passed a resolution making the last Thursday in November a legal holiday.  The Senate amended the resolution, setting the date as the fourth Thursday and the House eventually agreed.
  • Macy's was not the first department store to sponsor a Thanksgiving Day parade. Gimbel's, a Philadelphia department store sponsored a parade in 1920. Macy's parade began four years later and has become a Thanksgiving tradition as well as the kick-off to the Christmas shopping season.
  • Domesticated turkeys, which are the ones we traditionally eat on Thanksgiving, cannot fly.  They are also slow with females being a bit faster than the males.  Wild turkeys can fly for short distances at a speed of almost 55 mph!  They also have better vision and hearing than the domestic turkeys.  Benjamin Franklin actually suggested that turkeys be our national bird instead of the bald eagle!
  • The White House has a long history of issuing pardons for turkeys. The practice may have begun when President Lincoln granted a pardon to his son Tad's pet turkey. President Obama pardoned a turkey named courage in 2009.
  • The Pilgrims adopted the Native Americans use of cranberries.  The Native Americans used cranberries in foods such as "pemmican" which was a nourishing, high protein combination of dried deer meat, crushed berries and melted fat.  They used cranberries also as a medicine to treat wounds and as a dye for fabric.  The Pilgrims named it "craneberry" because the drooping pink blooms in the spring reminded them of a crane.
  • The first Thanksgiving was a 3-day harvest feast held by the founders of the Plymouth colony in 1621.  Attending were 53 colonists and 90 Wampanoag.  They feasted mainly on venison, swan, goose, and duck. 

There are several recipes and dishes that are required eating on Thanksgiving.  It is interesting to see how the recipes and names of dishes change depending on the Mason Dixon Line! One the most popular is "dressing" or "stuffing". Southerners call it "dressing" and most Northerners call it "stuffing", although a few Pennsylvanians have "filling" with their turkey.  There is no way to know if the Pilgrims had stuffing at the original feast, but it is likely that combinations of wild game and rice were featured in some way.  Boston cookbooks include stuffing recipes that contain oysters. Mennonite women used left-over mashed potatoes, stale bread, and butter to make their "filling" to serve as a casserole with the main dish of poultry.  

In the south, the dressing is cornbread based.  Many homes serve dressing cooked by a recipe that has been in the family for years.  Some cooks know the recipe by observing their mothers and grandmothers prepare the dish.  It is often hard to find two recipes exactly the same and sometimes a recipe isn't written down.  A grandmother may tell you to use enough broth until it "looks right" or you add a "bit" of salt and "some" stalks of celery.  Perfecting the recipe make take a couple of Thanksgiving failures to get it right!  

Many cooks used what was available to make their dressing or stuffing.  The Pacific Northwest recipes have oysters, clams, and mussels.  The American West cooks developed their own recipes by blending what they liked from the North and the South. San Franciscans took advantage of left-over sourdough bread for their dish.  The recipe shared below is an updated version of a traditional stuffing recipe from San Francisco.

San Francisco Stuffing
Serves 16

1 large loaf sourdough bread cut into small cubes ( about 13 cups)
8 links chicken apple sausage
2 large white onions, chopped
5 stalks of celery, chopped
4 tablespoons of butter
6 cups peeled and diced Granny Smith apples
3 cups chicken broth
1 tablespoon dried sage
1 tablespoon salt
1 teaspoon of dried savory
1 teaspoon of dried thyme
1 teaspoon black pepper

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Spread bread cubes on a baking sheet and toast until golden brown, about 10 minutes. Transfer cooled cubes to large bowl.
Cut open sausage links remove casing and finely chop meat.  Add 1 tablespoon butter to heavy skillet, heat over medium heat and add sausage.  Saute until browned. Remove sausage with a slotted spoon and add to bread.  In the same pan, saute onions and celery until translucent.  Add to bread mixture.  Put remaining butter in the same skillet and saute the apples until soft.  Add apples to bread mixture along with the sage, savory, thyme, pepper, and salt. Gradually add liquid until the bread has absorbed it and the bread cubes have no crunch.  Butter a 15x10x2-inch baking dish, add the stuffing, cover with foil and bake until top is golden brown and crisp, 45 minutes to 1 hour.


This stuffing is very different from most served in this area, but maybe your family would welcome a "new" tradition!

Sunbelt Turf  wishes you and your family a Happy Thanksgiving!!!





Sunbelt Turf Farm began in St. Clair County. Over 30 years have perfected the art of growing, selling and the delivery of quality turf grass. Customer satisfaction is paramount and we stand behind our turf grass. Expansions into Shelby and Talladega Counties successfully turned cotton fields and pasture land into beautiful green turf. Commercial and retail opportunities, pick-up or delivery, free estimates, fast turnaround and remaining environmentally friendly separate us from the rest.

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Harpersville, Alabama Celebrates Bicentennial

Harpersville, Alabama is hosting a 200th Bicentennial Celebration on Saturday, November 14, 2015.  The festivities will begin at 8:00 am  at Town Hall Lane with fun events for the whole family to enjoy.  Festivities include arts and crafts vendors, an antique car show, a parade, musical acts and hay bale art contest.  At noon, there will be a special salute to the local veterans.  There will be lots of good food and entertainment for all to enjoy. 

Harpersville is a great place to live and work.  The close proximity to one of the area's busiest thoroughfares, Highway 280, allows businesses to prosper and grow while it remains a small town.  It is located approximately 30 miles from downtown Birmingham and several colleges are located nearby, making it convenient for people to commute for work or school.

Visit Harpersville and be surprised with all we have to offer.  Popular places to visit include Old Baker Farm, Morgan Creek Vineyards, Stone Hollow Farmstead and new corporate citizen Bama Budweiser.

Sunbelt Turf Farm is proud to be located in Harpersville.  We have been in business for 30 years and have been supplying home grown sod to Harpersville and surrounding areas. Please give us a call for all your turf grass needs.  Located on Highway 25, we grow our beautiful grasses in old cotton fields and pasture land.



Sunbelt Turf Farm began in St. Clair County. Over 30 years have perfected the art of growing, selling and the delivery of quality turf grass. Customer satisfaction is paramount and we stand behind our turf grass. Expansions into Shelby and Talladega Counties successfully turned cotton fields and pasture land into beautiful green turf. Commercial and retail opportunities, pick-up or delivery, free estimates, fast turnaround and remaining environmentally friendly separate us from the rest.

Monday, November 2, 2015

Sod...then and now


As we all know sod is used for lawns, golf courses, and athletic fields around the world. It is a favorite of landscapers and home builders because it helps to establish a lawn quickly and it also helps with soil erosion. It is the choice of many homeowners because of its appearance and the environmental benefits. Sod reduces greenhouse gases and absorbs carbon dioxide.  It is much cooler than concrete, asphalt, rock and artificial turf. It releases oxygen and cools the air.  Sod can also be used to repair a small area of your lawn that has died.  Professional landscapers may use it to repair a golf course or an athletic field as well.

There are a few things you may not know about the history of sod.  Great Plains settlers in 1862, used sod bricks to build entire sod houses.  The prairie didn't have standard building supplies like wood or stone.  It may be hard for us to imagine today that sod was used for constructing houses.  But, the prairie sod of the Great Plains was dense, tough, thick and difficult to cut. The plentiful sod was also nicknamed Nebraska Marble due to this denseness.  These characteristics made it an excellent building material. The Great Plains settlers weren't the only ones to use sod when building structures. Scandinavia also has a long history of employing sod roofing and the Icelandic turf house is a traditional house type.

An invention by a man with a very familiar name to us today helped aid migration into the Great Plains in the 19th and early 20th century.  A blacksmith, by the name John Deere, made a fortune when he became the first to make a plow that could cut the dense prairie sod.  
Call Sunbelt Turf Farm for all your turf grass needs!





Sunbelt Turf Farm began in St. Clair County. Over 30 years have perfected the art of growing, selling and the delivery of quality turf grass. Customer satisfaction is paramount and we stand behind our turf grass. Expansions into Shelby and Talladega Counties successfully turned cotton fields and pasture land into beautiful green turf. Commercial and retail opportunities, pick-up or delivery, free estimates, fast turnaround and remaining environmentally friendly separate us from the rest.