So what kind of goodies are ya'll looking forward to on the official "Stuff Yourself Silly" day?
Thanksgiving will be spent with der Brucer's family, his daughter and all of her
fixings menfolk. I've been asked to bring sweet potatoes and the Smithfield ham der B promised to share some time ago.
The sweet potatoes will be very traditional, as requested. (Also, as it becoming tradition, she asked her daddy to ask me, instead of doing the asking direct

.) Orange juice, brown sugar, chopped pecans, marshmallows browned on top. The advantage to this is that I can make it at home, and we can reheat it at their place. The disadvantage is that son-in-law cannot stand sweet potatoes.
By the way, the tradition of marshmallows on sweet potatoes apparently started in the 1930s. A lot of bad food ideas come from that decade.
I've never prepared a Smithfield ham before, so I've been looking up country hams and aged hams in my cookbooks to get the basic idea of what I'm supposed to do. Apparently, step one is to get out a good scrub brush and some plain soap and start scrubbing. Smithfield hams get a patina of mold on the outside while they're aging, and that needs to be washed off before anything else can happen. They're also coated with salt, which also has to be washed off first, then leached out by soaking, preferably for a couple of days. Then, the ham has to be skinned and a lot of the fat layer cut away...
This sounds like a lot of work!

Fortunately, I was able to talk about this with my favorite chef, Charles. His suggestion was to soak the ham in the sink, usually the most spacious area in any kitchen and the easiest to drain away the salty water. He also gave a few suggestions on roasting the pig leg when it's been fully soaked.
So, I'll be scrubbing that ham tonight.
Since I'm in a Holiday mood, here is another question. What was/is your favorite Holiday classic? Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, Santa Claus is Comin' To Town, Frosty The Snowman, The Little Drummer Boy, Year Without a Santa Claus, How The Grinch Stole Christmas, A Charlie Brown Christmas, etc?
Oh, how I remember
Rudolph. Der B has never seen it, but we were able to find it on DVD and he's got no excuse now!
I also fondly remember
Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol, with razzleberry everything.