The mighty fridge of leftovers sent me into a decidedly privileged stupor. Each time I opened the door, I stared blankly at the sheer abundance, struck dumb by the multitude of choices facing me. On the (late) morning after Thanksgiving, the thought of playing refrigerator-jenga and removing more than one precarious tupperware proved too much for me to handle. I took out a decent-sized, and more importantly freestanding, container of brussels sprouts with pecans, some parmesan off the door, and the milk carton. My first meal post-Thanksgiving would be one of penitence: rewarmed cruciferous bulbs and a glass of milk.
In the days after hosting a traditionally overindulgent meal for six, Jeff and I certainly had our fair share of simply reheated leftovers. Honestly, I wasn't sure what to do with stuffing or baked mac & cheese besides warm them up. We also had pie for breakfast and snacks. If we hadn't snarfed down all the pie in sight, this pumpkin pie parfait from Serious Eats contributor Kerry Saretsky would have been amazing. Although, as a big fan of pie crust, I probably would opt to toast it separately, crumble and include as a layer in the parfait.
We were been blessed (or cursed, depending on your view) with an incredible amount of simple leftovers from the big binge. Our friend Alec left us a huge tupperware of extra raw prepped sweet potatoes. As evidenced by the photo above, we did a mediocre job of tackling the mashed potato mountain, and the six of us essentially ate one turkey breast. The abundance of pre-prepared staples enabled us to be creative in transfiguring our food.
Sweet Potatoes
For the sweet potatoes, we baked the rounds as we reheated a nutritious meal of stuffing and cream gravy. I replicated the blue cheese sweet potatoes with half of the batch because they were frankly amazing as designed. I tossed the other half, maybe 2-3 potatoes worth, into the food processor with big glop of sour cream, a chipotle chile pepper*, and a big squeeze of lime juice. For a real recipe that includes measurements, see this one that I loosely followed. This was made even more incredible by a large amount of gravy.
* [Note: We buy little cans of chiles chipotles en adobado, but usually only need one or two of the roughly seven in there for any given recipe. After the initial use, I freeze the extra individual chiles with a bit of sauce in an ice cube tray dedicated to freezing food and not ice. Remove the stems before freezing to avoid wondering later if there are inedible bits in your meal. After the chiles and sauce freeze, transfer them to a labeled baggie.]
Turkey
Jeff and I got through about half of the remaining turkey meat before I started mixing things up. I made this tasty turkey curry from Mark Bittman with kale instead of spinach. If you go this route, add the kale earlier than he calls for the spinach as it's a much tougher plant. Also, definitely make the suggested little pot of rice to go with it. I whipped it up after dinner for us to take for our lunches. With everything pre-prepared, it only took me 20 minutes to cook and pack up. I highly suggest it.
After eating enough of the leftovers to make room for a big batch of turkey stock, I made jook--a staple of my childhood--using my best friend's recipe, except not exactly because three grocery stores had no green onions.
Mashed Potatoes
The mashed potatoes gave us the blankest slate to work with. I made a few fried potato cakes by molding some taters into patties and throwing a little fry down in a medium-hot buttered pan. The combination of crisp crust and creamy potato interior gets me every time. However, the potato cake is a pretty mainstream mashed potato variation. My stroke of genius came as I thought about another starch-love of mine and wondered what type of bread I should make next. It hit me: make potato bread, and so I did.
Mashed Potato Bread
Our mashed potatoes are "rustic" or maybe lazy... We leave the peels on and are of the mind that a few lumps scattered throughout are better than gluey potatoes. It makes for a more interesting bread. Don't be worried about having other stuff in your potatoes. These had all sorts of dairy products, and the bread was great.
- roughly 2 c leftover mashed potatoes
- 1/4 c warm water
- 3/4 t yeast (I have a large container of SAF-instant yeast in the freezer)
- 1 T olive oil
- 1/4 t coarse salt, omit if you have salty mashed potatoes
- 1 1/2 c all purpose flour
- Mix a little bit of less-lumpy potatoes into the water. Sprinkle the yeast over the water.
- Stir the olive oil and salt into the potatoes, then add the yeasty water and combine thoroughly. With a sturdy fork, work the flour into the potato mixture.
- Once combined, knead on a clean surface for 10 minutes. The dough will become smooth, supple and elastic and less like a lumpy potato.
- Form into a ball, cover and let rest 30 minutes.
- Pat the dough ball into an oblong shape: rectangle or oval, you choose. Starting with a short end, roll the dough up.
- Let rest 40 minutes as you now preheat your oven to 400ºF.
- Bake for about 30 minutes, spritzing the oven with water in the first few minutes. The bread should be golden and have a nice crust.
- As with all things, eat while warm and slathered with butter.

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