Green Eyes On: Five Tips for a Green Thanksgiving Dinner

Martin Hospach/Getty Images
Sugar-free Cranberry Sauce Recipe
Here's a quick recipe for chunky cranberry sauce using sucanat instead of sugar.
Boil together 1 cup of water and 1 cup of sucanat in a medium sized sauce pan until sucanat has dissolved completely. Lower the heat to a gentle boil and pour in 3 cups of rinsed, organic cranberries. Add 1 teaspoon of dried grated orange peel. Allow the cranberries to cook on a low boil for 10 minutes.
Refrigerate until cool and serve.
3. Limit Disposables
Even if you don't have enough matching dishes to serve all of your Thanksgiving guests, avoid the temptation to use disposables. Instead, shop a local thrift store for enough place settings to make up the difference or ask your guests to bring a few of their own.4. Eat Your Leftovers
The best part about a Thanksgiving feast is the leftovers. Turkey soup has always been a Thanksgiving leftover favorite in my home. Partially because it's easy to make (who wants to sweat over the stove the day after?).Simple, Healthy Turkey Soup RecipeReserve the bone and a bit of the meat from the Thanksgiving roast. Boil that in a pot of water (8-12 cups) for an hour. Remove the bone and the meat from it. Return that (and additional meat, cut into small cubes) to the pot. Add ¾ to 1 cup of long grain brown rice, along with the following chopped vegetables: one onion, three cloves of garlic, five carrots and three stalks of celery. Add 2 teaspoons of thyme and season to taste with salt and pepper. Let the soup simmer for 45 minutes to an hour. Then enjoy!
5. Donate Canned Food
Even if your home is filled to the brim with family and food, there are many people who won't enjoy these luxuries this year. Before you shop for your own Thanksgiving foods, call your local food bank to find out what they are in need of. Most prefer canned food items but every organization is different. If you want to donate your time, call ahead to find out when they need people. Most soup kitchens have too many volunteers on Thanksgiving and Christmas mornings, but not nearly enough the other 363 days of the year.You might consider giving your Thanksgiving guests the opportunity to reach out and give back. Think about setting out a bin for non-perishable foods. Perhaps set it on your front step so neighbors can get involved as well. Or hold a fund drive (something even the kids can get in on) for a local or other worthy charity. Second Harvest (providing food to the hungry) and Habitat for Humanity (proving homes to the needy) seem to make a lot of sense this time of year. Take a look at Charity Navigator for some good tips on giving.In all that you do -- on Thanksgiving and the other days of the year -- remember to be thankful and generous. 'Tis the season, after all.More From TreeHugger and Planet Green on ThanksgivingHow to Go Green: Thanksgiving Day
Buy Green: Thanksgiving Turkey
How To Cook a Sustainable Thanksgiving Dinner
On Moving Toward Vegetarianism: Thanksgiving
Sara Snow is a green living expert and regular contributor to TreeHugger via her Green Eyes On column. She can also be seen on CNN.com on Thursdays from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Her new DVD Growing Green Babies is now available through SaraSnow.com.















