Picture this: it’s Thanksgiving Day and your 15 guests are
              due to arrive in several hours. You’re hunched over your gourmet
              cookbook and your turkey. The day speeds effortlessly along, and
              then, boom! 
Disaster strikes.
              Your recipe reads, “Put one plastic brining bag inside the
              other to create double thickness. Fold back the top one-third of
              the bag to form a collar.” 
You panic. What bags? A collar?
              It is then that you realize that making the perfect Thanksgiving
              turkey requires more preparation than simply buying the 14-pound
              bird, but now, all the stores are closed.
              This year, don’t get stuck in a turkey rut without your metaphorical
              brining bags. With suggestions and hints from several local merchants,
              this holiday guide is all you’ll need to prevent your next
              turkey tragedy. These Brooklyn entrepreneurs have given us tips
              on where to save and where to splurge and suggestions for setting
              an elegant table.
              Jennifer Baron, owner of A Cook’s Companion in Brooklyn Heights,
              and Joanne Tarzian, owner of Tarzian West in Park Slope, both agree
              that the number one essential splurge item for Thanksgiving is a
              high quality roasting pan.
              Baron and Tarzian both suggest the All-Clad heavy gauge roasting
              pan for $199. 
              “[The All-Clad roasting pan] is an investment,” says Meghan
              Dunn, a Tarzian West employee. “It will last forever.”
              Evelyn Luciano, a sales associate at A Cook’s Companion, explains
              this pricey pan’s charms: “The heavier the gauge [of the
              roasting pan], the browner and more even the cooking.”
              And, Dunn suggests, as a substitute, the less expensive Chicago
              Metallic roasting pan for $28 will get you through the lean years. 
              “It’s a good pan. You’ll just need to replace it
              every few years,” she says.
              Also high on the splurge list is a first-rate carving knife. Baron
              says that as long as you invest in a top-notch carving knife, you
              can use any old carving fork because, she opines, “A fork really
              is just a fork.”
              Baron highly recommends a hollow ground Wusthof carving knife, specifically
              the 9-inch slicer for $90. 
              Of the knife’s quality, Luciano says, “The blade is ridged
              with grantons [scalloped edges], which create air pockets as you
              slice, and the food falls right off the knife.” 
              Tarzian also recommends the Mercer carving set for $65.99 for those
              who desire the aesthetic value of a knife-and-fork set. 
              “An electric knife can work really well, too,” says Tarzian,
              and suggests the Cuisinart electric knife for $49.99. 
              Baron’s next pick for the splurge list is a grooved cutting
              board; she sells a large array of them in her store, but personally
              recommends the Epicurean 18-by-13 grooved cutting board for $60
              and Totally Bamboo’s Kona Groove Board for $45, as it is “lovely,
              handcrafted, and made of sustainable grass.” 
              Tarzian agrees with Baron about the Epicurean board and loves it
              because “It’s easy to clean and doesn’t absorb food
              odors.”
              And on the splurge list for serious bakers, Tarzian loves the KitchenAid
              stand mixer, which starts at $269 and comes in a dozen colors.
              “It’s great for baking, because you don’t have to
              hold the mixer the whole time like you do with a handheld,”
              she says. 
              And for a pie crust that keeps your guests satisfied, Baron recommends
              a simple Pyrex pie dish for $5.50, which she says, “makes a
              wonderful crust.”
              Baron and her staff also have a couple fun items they love. One
              of them is The Food Loop, a silicone trussing tool that is reusable,
              dishwasher safe, and only $14.95 for six loops. 
              “It’s better than string or twine, because it’s reusable,
              easier to use, and better for the environment,” says Luciano. 
              While the roasting pan and high-end knife are certainly Thanksgiving
              tools you can’t do without, there are some smaller items that
              can be easily forgotten. A Cook’s Companion and Tarzian West
              both publish Thanksgiving checklists, which they are happy to share
              with customers. Among the smaller items on the checklists are a
              gravy separator, turkey lacers, potato ricer, meat thermometer,
              turkey baster, and last, but not least, brining bags. 
              Baron and Tarzian both carry inexpensive models of these must-haves.
              A popular money-saving brand is OXO Good Grips, which Baron advises
              for many of the smaller fundamentals. For the turkey baster, Baron
              mentions a $2 model as well as a more high-end model by Harold’s
              Kitchen for $20. 
              Of the difference, Baron says, “You can certainly reinvent
              the mousetrap, but this $2 baster does the job.”
              
              
Setting the table
              As for the decorative side of Thanksgiving, we take you to A Brooklyn
              Table, in Cobble Hill. The store features several sample table settings
              in gorgeous patterns and motifs for fall, and co-owner Carolyn Humphrey
              tells us which ones are best. 
              Humphrey, who co-owns the store with Nathalie Roy, loves the Gien
              cookware from France, which transfers from freezer to oven to table
              for the most hassle-free meal. The cookware features animal motifs;
              a Gien oval baking dish is $60. 
              For the purist, there is the Juliskah cookware, which also multi-tasks,
              and is in the same price range as Gien. Humphrey loves the Juliskah,
              because “it comes in a thousand shapes and sizes and it’s
              white, so it mixes with anything.”
              As for her own decorative preferences, Humphrey recommends inexpensive
              garlands, which she says look great interspersed with votives for
              an understated, elegant table. She also sells more high-end real
              dry flower arrangements, which start at $24. 
              Humphrey gushes over the Vagabond acorn sauceboat in pewter, and
              also from Vagabond, a set of bird-shaped salt and pepper shakers
              for their design and function. 
              Linens from A Brooklyn Table range from inexpensive ($24 for tablecloth
              and $4 per napkin) to opulent ($300 for a tablecloth and $32 per
              napkin). 
              
              
Wine and dine
              If you have no idea which wine to pair with your meal, stop by Red,
              White & Bubbly in Park Slope, where the unpretentious wine
              experts will gladly send you home with the perfect grape for your
              feast. 
              Wine sommelier and Red, White & Bubbly owner Darrin Siegfried
              cites his personal favorite for Thanksgiving as a Pinot Noir, and
              recommends Gruet, NV Brut as his “favorite bubbly.” And
              for those who “just have to have red,” Siegfried loves
              Prejean winery’s Marechal Foch.
              
              
| Five 1.                     2. Extra-virgin olive oil in decorative bottles ($10-$20 from                     3. Tea Forte porcelain teacup ($20) and Hannah’s Delights 4. Apron with Brooklyn Bridge design ($20 from Classic Impressions) 5. Silicone oven mitts ($19.99 from Tarzian West) | 



 
			












 








