Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (2024)

Some of the links below are affiliate links, which means I will earn a commission at no additional cost to you, if you click through and make a purchase. Regardless, I only link to products we use on our homestead or believe in.

Traditional Thanksgiving foods, recipes and traditions starting back from 1621 that we can use in how we prepare our holiday foods from the bounty of our land. And it's pretty fun to see how things have changed and which foods have stood the test of centuries.

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (1)

Traditional Thanksgiving fare can differ quite a bit from what we now consider in modern times a traditional Thanksgiving meal. I think it's always important to look back at our past so we don't forget the things that are important or loose skill sets, so we take those and figure out how to use them in our modern world.

This is episode #121 of the Pioneering Today Podcast where we teach families how to grow, preserve and cook their own food using old-fashioned skill sets and wisdom to create a natural self-sufficient home.

Thanksgiving is coming up shortly and most of us have some favorites we usually serve, a roasted turkey, stuffing or dressing, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, green beans, winter squash, and pumpkin and apple pie are usually on the table, or a close variation.

I thought it would be fun to look at what would have been served during the first Thanksgivings, the progression we've made to what is now served, and the tips and tricks for using what you've grown to create your Thanksgiving meal.

The first American Thanksgiving was celebrated in the fall in 1621 in Plymouth. There was a letter written of the three day feast, with the colonist and the Native Americans. They had five deer and fowl where they celebrated their thankfulness for the food and the harvest.

It actually wasn't celebrated on the 4th Thursday of November like we do now. Historians have put it somewhere between September 21st and November 9th. That would have been the timeline and when the harvest would have been gathered in and ready. *sourceThe Book of Thanksgiving by Paul Dickson

Thanksgiving was officially made a national holiday in America in 1863 by Abraham Lincoln set as the 4th Thursdsay in November.

In the The Book of Thanksgiving, we have two surviving descriptions via letters of the first Thanksgiving and from that, can glean what was most likely served.

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (2)

Foods most likely served at the first Thanksgiving:

  • cod
  • sea bass
  • wild fowl
  • turkeys
  • venison (deer or elk)
  • corn
  • nuts, walnuts, hickory, chestnuts
  • grapes, gooseberries, and raspberries
  • wild cherries and strawberries
  • green beans and squash
  • American crab apple (not regular apples)
  • currants
  • blueberries
  • wild onions
  • purslane

Desserts as we so lovingly serve now, they didn't have back then due to lack of sugar and even molasses.

A lot of the foods we serve today at Thanksgiving aren't in season. We've put them up and saved them, not only for this meal but to sustain us year-round. That goal was the same as the early pilgrims, our ancestors, and now modern homesteaders.

Back in the day, the way they could have preserved their food was dehydration. Canning was not even invented yet in 1621. Your root vegetables would have still been good and root cellaring techniques would have been used.

The first Thanksgiving would not have had any foods that weren't native to the Americas. They hadn't been on the shores long enough to grow any of the crops and seeds they'd brought with them from England.

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (3)

List of food not served at the first Thanksgiving we include today as traditions:

  • apples
  • pears
  • potatoes (not even known yet)
  • sweet corn
  • celery

Homesteaders have more in common with the first Thanksgiving than we do the modern celebration. We know when you grow, harvest, hunt and forage your own food you have a larger sense of gratitude and thankfulness because you know you're not guaranteed that food.

You know when you go to the store, unless they run out, you can purchase your turkey, sugar, flour, cranberries. I'm not saying we're still thankful for the food we purchase, but there's a different level when you've grown and harvested it yourself.

In fact, the first time you sit down to a meal that's completely from the food you've raised or harvested yourself, it's an incredible feeling you can't put into words.

The cool thing is, it doesn't really ever go away. Anytime the meal is completely from our own hand, the thankfulness and satisfaction are unlike anything you get from buying it from the store.

It's something I hope everyone has the opportunity to experience one time in their life (and hopefully much more).

Menu from Thanksgivings past

*according to The Book of Thanksgiving by Paul Dickson would have likely included:

  • Boiled codfish, grilled sea bass
  • fowl, (tradition of turkey came in) but geese and ducks
  • corn
  • venison
  • nuts (chestnuts roasting on an open fire)
  • boiled onions (this fried apple and onion dish is a great one to try)
  • crab apples with currants
  • minced meat pie

They were near the coast, so seafood was part of the menu, the food they had available to them was what they used and served.

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (4)

Transition into foods we consider traditional Thanksgiving fare today

As more foods became available you have the dishes we now serve with the addition of fruits, sugar, and molasses including:

  • Apple pie (this is THE best flaky easy to roll from-scratch pie crust recipe you'll ever use)
  • Pumpkin pie
  • Cranberry sauce/jelly (or fermented cranberry sauce)
  • Relishes
  • Potatoes
  • Green beans (this from-scratch whole foods version of green bean casserole is a must)
  • Sweet potatoes
  • corn pudding
  • puddings

Modern homesteaders look at using what they've been able to grow and put up as to what they put on the table.

In Hand Made: the Modern Guide to Made-from-Scratch Living I share some of our traditional holiday foods and recipes. If you haven't gotten your copy, you'll want to get your copy here and see all of the bonuses included with over 100 recipes from grandma, great-grandma, and wisdom from the Great Depression Era and the pioneers to use in our modern lives and kitchen.

This time of year, a lot of our root vegetables are getting a showcase.

  • parsnips
  • carrots
  • beets
  • potatoes
  • winter squash
Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (6)

Our favorite traditional Thanksgiving dishes and recipes (shared from Chapter 6 in Hand Made)

Acorn squash with molasses, butter, honey, cinnamon, and nutmeg

Carrots- roasted with butter or coconut oil, sea salt, a little dash of brown sugar, and cinnamon

Pumpkin- pie, pumpkin sugar cookies, and Grandma's Pumpkin Roll

Traditional steamed molasses pudding– steamed puddings were often served and this one doesn't use any processed sugar and has Instant Pot instructions!

Cornbread- cornbread stuffing with sage and sausage is our favorite.

I hope you've enjoyed this look back at a traditional Thanksgiving and ways to incorporate some of them into our meals.

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621 (2024)

FAQs

Traditional Thanksgiving Foods & Recipes starting from 1621? ›

There are only two surviving documents that reference the original Thanksgiving harvest meal. They describe a feast of freshly killed deer, assorted wildfowl, a bounty of cod and bass, and flint, a native variety of corn harvested by the Native Americans, which was eaten as corn bread and porridge.

What did they eat for Thanksgiving in 1621? ›

There are only two surviving documents that reference the original Thanksgiving harvest meal. They describe a feast of freshly killed deer, assorted wildfowl, a bounty of cod and bass, and flint, a native variety of corn harvested by the Native Americans, which was eaten as corn bread and porridge.

Was turkey the main meat dish at the first Thanksgiving in 1621? ›

So while our Thanksgiving dinner table has a big ol' turkey plated in the center, the first Thanksgiving table was likely filled with ducks, geese, eels, lobster, and venison. Maybe there was a turkey, but it was either missing or too dry for anyone to literally write home about it.

How has Thanksgiving dinner changed since the first one in 1621? ›

The first Thanksgiving meal was prepared 100% by women (only four of them, to be exact). Today, the duties are split a little more evenly with 84% of men helping with the meal in some way, and 42% of men cooking the actual turkey.

What types of food did the Pilgrims and natives eat on Thanksgiving? ›

Although turkeys were indigenous, there's no record of a big, roasted bird at the feast. The Wampanoag brought deer and there would have been lots of local seafood (mussels, lobster, bass) plus the fruits of the first pilgrim harvest, including pumpkin. No mashed potatoes, though.

What was the actual first Thanksgiving meal? ›

But according to the two only remaining historical records of the first Thanksgiving menu, that meal consisted of freshly killed deer, assorted wildfowl, cod, bass, and flint, and a native variety of corn harvested by the Native Americans, which was eaten as corn bread and porridge.

What was not on the menu for Thanksgiving in 1621? ›

Cranberry Sauce

By fall 1621, the Pilgrims were essentially out of sugar. Translation—no cranberry sauce. Even with sugar, the Pilgrims still wouldn't have used it to sauce cranberries. That's because the tart little berry was new to them.

What president refused to declare Thanksgiving a holiday? ›

Thomas Jefferson was famously the only Founding Father and early president who refused to declare days of thanksgiving and fasting in the United States.

Did the first Thanksgiving feature traditional desserts? ›

Experts agree that the majority of dishes would have been from native plants, with a few ingredients showing up from the pilgrims' gardens. First off, the absence of wheat flour, sweetener and flour would mean the lack of the classic dessert, pumpkin pie.

What types of food were served at the first Thanksgiving besides turkey? ›

The first Thanksgiving banquet consisted of foods like venison, bean stew and hard biscuits. And while corn and pumpkin had their place on the table, they hardly resembled the cornbread stuffing and pumpkin pie we feast on today.

Was there apple pie at the first Thanksgiving? ›

Apple pie, for example, wouldn't have been there because apples' botanical origin is in central Asia. They had barely been brought to the Americas by the time of the 1621 feast.

How was the 1621 feast different from Thanksgiving today? ›

Massasoit sent some of his own men to hunt deer for the feast and for three days, the English and native men, women, and children ate together. The meal consisted of deer, corn, shellfish, and roasted meat, different from today's traditional Thanksgiving feast. They played ball games, sang, and danced.

What is the true history of Thanksgiving? ›

In 1621, the Plymouth colonists from England and the Native American Wampanoag people shared an autumn harvest feast that is acknowledged as one of the first Thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies. For more than two centuries, days of thanksgiving were celebrated by individual colonies and states.

Which food was not part of the First Thanksgiving? ›

Cranberry Sauce

The Wampanoag people were known to harvest the berries from local cranberries bogs and dry them to use in dishes all winter. There weren't any cranberry bogs in the immediate area of the Plymouth Plantation, however, so the first Thanksgiving may have lacked the fruit—in sauce form or otherwise.

What are the 3 traditional foods Americans eat during Thanksgiving? ›

Millions of people across the United States will sit down to a traditional Thanksgiving meal, including turkey, potatoes, squash, corn, and cranberries. These foods have become synonymous with Thanksgiving, but how did they end up on tables from Maine to California?

What food did Native Americans have for Thanksgiving? ›

Ironically, many Native American dishes have quietly been absorbed into what we see today as 'American' cuisine, many of which you'll likely enjoy this Thanksgiving: cranberry sauce, succotash, pumpkin and squash soups, corn and corn bread (and popcorn!), even mashed potatoes.

What did the Pilgrims eat every day? ›

Cooking and Food

During the Mayflower's voyage, the Pilgrims' main diet would have consisted primarily of a cracker-like biscuit ("hard tack"), salt pork, dried meats including cow tongue, various pickled foods, oatmeal and other cereal grains, and fish. The primary beverage for everyone, including children, was beer.

What type of food did the Wampanoag tribe eat? ›

Farmed foods such as corn and beans made up about 70% of the Wampanoag diet. Although the Wampanoag favored meat, meat made up less than 20% of their diet. Roots, berries and other gathered plant materials, as well as eggs, fish, and shellfish (both fresh and dried) made up the rest.

Did the Pilgrims and natives actually eat together? ›

There's no evidence that native people were invited.

Possibly the most common misconception is that the Pilgrims extended an invitation to the Native Americans for helping them reap the harvest. The truth of how they all ended up feasting together is unknown.

What did Pilgrims drink? ›

Suggesting that the Pilgrims might have had a tipple at their first Thanksgiving, Mancall says that the Pilgrims came from more urban places in England, where beer or cider was always preferred over water because it was more sanitary.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Prof. An Powlowski

Last Updated:

Views: 6006

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (64 voted)

Reviews: 95% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Prof. An Powlowski

Birthday: 1992-09-29

Address: Apt. 994 8891 Orval Hill, Brittnyburgh, AZ 41023-0398

Phone: +26417467956738

Job: District Marketing Strategist

Hobby: Embroidery, Bodybuilding, Motor sports, Amateur radio, Wood carving, Whittling, Air sports

Introduction: My name is Prof. An Powlowski, I am a charming, helpful, attractive, good, graceful, thoughtful, vast person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.