Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Thanksgiving Turkey Recipes

For her recipe, you'll need a turkey, oil, cranberries, hot sauce, flour and cheese. “Put the turkey in the pan. Put the hot sauce on top of the turkey.A few years ago, my sister found a recipe for turkey that's steeped in brine and herbs for a day or so, then stuffed with apples, oranges and onions before roasting. It was, my whole extended family agreed, the best turkey ever.

Last year, my sister couldn't find the recipe. She found one that's similar, but without all the herbs. Then I found this one from Emeril Lagasse on foodnetwork.com. It may not be the very same, but it's gotten some great reviews. (Click on the link to see the recipe, photos and reviews.)

If you have a better one, please share! But for now, this is what I'm going with this year, unless by some miracle that other recipe shows up:

Ingredients:

Brine:

    * 1 cup salt
    * 1 cup brown sugar
    * 2 oranges, quartered
    * 2 lemons, quartered
    * 6 sprigs thyme
    * 4 sprigs rosemary

Turkey prep and stuffing:

    * 1 (10 to 12-pound) turkey
    * 1 large orange, cut into 1/8ths
    * 4 tablespoons unsalted butter at room temperature
    * Salt and pepper
    * 1 large yellow onion, cut into 1/8ths
    * 1 stalk celery, cut into 1-inch pieces
    * 1 large carrot, cut into 1-inch pieces
    * 2 bay leaves
    * 2 sprigs thyme
    * 2 sprigs rosemary
    * 1/2 bunch sage
    * 3 or 4 sprigs parsley
    * 1 1/2 to 2 cups chicken or turkey stock, for basting
    * One apple, cut into large chunks (my addition)

Turkey Broth:

    * 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
    * Reserved turkey neck and giblets
    * 1 large carrot, coarsely chopped
    * 1 onion, coarsely chopped
    * 1 large celery stalk, coarsely chopped
    * 1 small bay leaf
    * 3 cups turkey stock, chicken stock, or canned low-salt chicken broth
    * 3 cups water

Gravy:

    * 4 cups turkey broth
    * 1 cup dry white wine
    * 4 tablespoons unsalted butter
    * 1/4 cup all-purpose flour
    * Salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the Brine:
Directions

To make the brining solution, dissolve the salt and sugar in 2 gallons of cold water in a nonreactive container (such as a clean bucket or large stockpot, or a clean, heavy-duty, food grade plastic storage bag). Add the oranges, lemons, thyme, and rosemary. Note: if you have a big turkey and need more brine than this, use 1/2 cup salt and 1/2 cup brown sugar for every gallon of water.

Remove the neck, giblets, and liver from the cavity of the turkey and reserve for the gravy. Rinse the turkey inside and out under cold running water.

Soak the turkey in the brine, covered and refrigerated, for at least 4 hours and up to 24 hours.

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees F.

Remove the turkey from the brine and rinse well under cold running water. Pat dry with paper towels both inside and out. Place turkey, breast side up, in a large, heavy roasting pan. Rub breast side with orange segments and rub on all sides with the butter, stuffing some underneath the skin. Season lightly inside and out with salt and pepper. Stuff the turkey with the onion, remaining orange, celery, carrot, bay leaves, thyme, rosemary, sage and parsley. Loosely tie the drumsticks together with kitchen string. Roast the turkey, uncovered, breast side down for 1 hour.

Remove from the oven, turn, and baste with 1/2 cup stock. Continue roasting with the breast side up until an instant-read meat thermometer registers 165 degrees F when inserted into the largest section of thigh (avoiding the bone), about 2 3/4 to 3 hours total cooking time. Baste the turkey once every hour with 1/2 to 3/4 cup chicken or turkey stock.

Remove from the oven and place on a platter. Tent with aluminum foil and let rest for 20 minutes before carving.

    * For the turkey broth

Heat the oil in a large heavy saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the turkey neck, heart, andgizzard to the pan and saute until just beginning to brown, about 1 minute. Add the chopped vegetables and bay leaf to the pan and saute until soft, about 2 minutes. Pour the stock and 3 cups of water into the pan and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to medium-low and simmer until the stock is reduced to 4 cups, about 1 hour, adding the chopped liver to the pan during the last 15 minutes of cooking. Strain the stock into a clean pot or large measuring cup. Pull the meat off the neck, chopthe neck meat and giblets, and set aside.
For the pan gravy:

Pour the reserved turkey pan juices into a glass-measuring cup and skim off the fat.

Place the roasting pan on 2 stovetop burners over medium heat add the pan juice and 1 cup turkey broth and the white wine to the pan, and deglaze the pan, stirring to scrape any brown bits from the bottom of the pan. Add the remaining 3 cup of broth and bring to a simmer, then transfer to a measuring cup. In a large heavy saucepan, melt the butter over medium high heat. Stir in the flour and cook, stirring constantly, to make a light roux. Add the hot stock, whisking constantly, then simmer until thickened, about 10 minutes.

Add the reserved neck meat and giblets to the pan and adjust seasoning, to taste, with salt and black pepper. Pour into a gravy boat and serve.

Urban Meyer Ohio State

Despite numerous reports saying he's all but set to become Ohio State's next football coach, Urban Meyer said Wednesday that is not the case.If Urban Meyer becomes the next Ohio State coach, it might be very difficult for the Taxslayer.com Gator Bowl to pass up a chance to match Meyer's future team against his past team.

Gator Bowl Association president Rick Catlett said pitting the Gators against the Buckeyes — if Meyer accepts the job as the next Ohio State coach — wouldn't need the caveat of the Buckeyes (6-5) beating Michigan (9-2) Saturday.

The Gator Bowl can select any bowl-eligible Big Ten team without regard to its won-loss record compared to other available teams. The only restriction is that the Gator Bowl must invite the Big Ten Championship game loser (Michigan State will play Saturday's Wisconsin-Penn State winner), if that team has not yet been selected by the Capital One, Outback or Insight Bowls.

"From a local standpoint, with this year's Gator team and coach Meyer entering the picture for Ohio State ... that would be a very attractive and entertaining matchup," Catlett said Wednesday. "But we're some time from having to make that decision and we don't know yet whether Coach Meyer will take the Ohio State job."

Even if Meyer takes the job, interim coach Luke Fickell would likely remain the coach through the bowl game. But the anticipation of Meyer taking over at Ohio State would put the Gator Bowl in the national spotlight from bowl selection day Dec. 4 through the game, which will be 1 p.m. Jan. 2 at Everbank Field.

Regardless of the Gator Bowl's matchup, ticket sales are going well. The realistic choices are that the Gator Bowl will be able to invite Florida, South Carolina or Auburn against Ohio State, the Penn State-Wisconsin loser, Iowa or Nebraska.

“Ticket sales are already going very well,” said Stephen Tremel, the Gator Bowl Association chairman. “If we’re able to invite Florida, there are a lot of Gator fans in this area who don’t have a chance to buy Florida-Georgia tickets, or Florida season tickets, and I think they’d support a game with Florida in it.”

The Gator Bowl has sold out the past three years, averaging 73,228 in actual attendance.

The only nagging question for the selection committee is how many Florida fans would actually arrive in town, producing room-nights, restaurant meals and other business for the First Coast. Inviting a Big Ten with fans that historically travel well, such as Ohio State, Penn State, Nebraska or Iowa, might make up for a possible lack of early-arriving UF fans, who might have a tendency to arrive on the day of the game.

The Gators aren't a lock for the game. If UF (6-5) beats FSU Saturday, it could spark the interest of the Chick-Fil-A Bowl, which might not want a rematch of the regular-season game between Clemson vs. Auburn (if the Tigers lose in the ACC championship game).

If that happens, Auburn or even South Carolina could fall to the Gator Bowl. Catlett said the association would be happy with either one.

“We’re in very good shape with these last two weekends coming up,” Catlett said. “We know Florida will sell tickets locally. But we also are confident that Auburn and South Carolina fans will be very enthusiastic.”

Plus, the Big Ten appears to be deeper this season than the SEC. The Big Ten has nine bowl-eligible teams and the SEC only seven. Tennessee needs to beat Kentucky, Vanderbilt has to beat Wake Forest and Mississippi State has to beat Mississippi for those teams to become eligible for the post-season.

“The Big Ten will have more available teams in the seven-to-nine victory area for us,” Tremel said. “That’s because we pick higher in the Big Ten [the fourth selection after the BCS] than the SEC [the fifth], Nebraska entered the Big Ten this year to strengthen that league and there’s the possibility that the Big Ten won’t get two teams in the BCS. All of that combines to give us some very good options.”

Read more at Jacksonville.com: http://jacksonville.com/sports/college/florida-gators/2011-11-23/story/gator-bowl-ponders-ohio-state-florida-matchup#ixzz1edLYqTMG

Unique Sweet Potato Recipes

From enchiladas to pasta to pie, there are many ways to serve sweet potatoes. Not only is this autumn powerfood versatile, but each dish delivers an. As Thanksgiving draws near, almost everybody is looking for a sweet potato recipe - whether that be pie, cornbread stuffing or even some delicious biscuits.

That being said, you may be surprised to learn that there is a sweet potato commission that loves to share all things sweet potato. I'm personally going to make myself some cornbread stuffing this holiday season, but we thought we'd include a few extra recipes for those with other tastes.

The following recipes are compliments of the North Carolina Sweet Potato Commission. Enjoy!

Sweet Potato Cornbread Stuffing

    * 2 1/2 cups sweet potatoes, peeled and cut into small cubes
    * 1 cup chopped onion
    * 1 cup sliced celery
    * 2 tablespoons butter or margarine
    * 1/4 cup fresh chopped parsley
    * 1 teaspoon ground ginger
    * 1 (16-ounce) package cornbread stuffing (about 5 cups)
    * 1/2 cup chopped pecans
    * 1 (124.5) ounce can) chicken broth

Heat oven to 375 degrees. In a skillet, sauté sweet potatoes, onions and celery in butter for 7 to 10 minutes, or until onions and celery are tender. Spoon mixture into large mixing bowl; stir in parsley and ginger. Add cornbread and pecans and toss to mix. Slowly add chicken broth and toss to moisten. Place stuffing in a lightly oiled casserole dish. Bake for 30 minutes, covered. Remove cover and bake for 15 more minutes to thoroughly heat through and brown top of stuffing. Makes 8 servings or 6 cups.

Sweet Potato Biscuits

    * 1 1/4 cups unsifted all-purpose flour
    * 1 tablespoon baking powder
    * 1/2 teaspoon salt
    * 3 tablespoons shortening
    * 1 cup mashed cooked sweet potatoes
    * 1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
    * 1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
    * 1/4 cup milk

Into large mixing bowl, sift together flour, baking powder and salt. Using pastry blender or two knives, cut shortening into flour mixture until it resembles coarse meal. Blend in sweet potatoes and spices. Add milk all at once and stir with fork until mixture comes together. On lightly floured board, knead 10 times.

Roll out on lightly floured surface to 1/2-inch thickness. Cut with biscuit cutter dipped in flour. Arrange on ungreased baking sheet. Bake at 450 degrees for 12 minutes or until golden and puffed. Makes 18 biscuits.

Curried Sweet Potato Apple Soup

    * 2 large (1 pound) North Carolina sweet potatoes
    * 1 large (8 ounces) tart apple (such as Fuji, honey crisp or gala)
    * 1 tablespoon olive oil
    * 1 large onion, coarsely chopped (2 cups)
    * 2 to 3 teaspoons curry powder
    * 1 can (14 to 14-1/2 ounces) vegetable broth (about 1-3/4 cups)
    * 1-3/4 cups unsweetened apple juice
    * 3/4 teaspoon salt
    * 1 container (6 ounces) plain low-fat yogurt
    * 3/4 cup croutons, optional

Pierce sweet potatoes and apples with fork tines. Microwave sweet potatoes and apple on high until apple is very tender, about 6 to 7 minutes. Remove apple; set aside until cool enough to handle. Continue microwaving sweet potatoes on high until tender, about 4 to 5 minutes longer; set aside until cool enough to handle. Meanwhile, in large saucepan over medium heat, heat oil; add onion and curry powder; cook and stir until onion begins to brown, about 5 minutes. Add broth; bring to a boil, reduce heat to low; simmer 5 minutes. Transfer broth mixture to bowl of food processor; reserve saucepan. Halve sweet potatoes and apple; remove apple core; scoop potato and apple pulp from skin; add to processor. Add salt; whirl until very smooth, gradually adding apple juice through processor feed tube. Transfer mixture to reserved saucepan; bring to boil over medium heat. Whisk in yogurt; reheat just until hot; do not boil. Serve topped with croutons, if desired. Makes 4 servings (about 5-1/4 cups).

Island Spice Upside-Down Sweet Potato Cake

    * 1(20 oz.) can sliced pineapple (packed in natural juice)
    * 1 tablespoon butter
    * 1/4 cup packed light brown sugar
    * 1 teaspoon ground ginger
    * 1/4 cup dried cranberries
    * 1(18.25 oz.) package spice cake mix
    * 3 eggs
    * 1/3 cup apple sauce
    * 1 1/2 cups peeled and grated sweet potatoes
    * Whipped cream (optional)

Drain pineapple, reserving 3 tablespoons and 1/2 cup juice. Set aside one whole pineapple slice; cut 6 slices in half. (Save remainder of pineapple and juice for another use.)

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Put butter in a 9 x 2-inch springform cake pan and place in the oven until butter has melted; set aside. In a small bowl, combine brown sugar, ginger and 3 tablespoons pineapple juice. Pour mixture into pan with melted butter and tilt to evenly distribute. Place whole pineapple ring in the center of the pan; arrange half slices in crescents around the center. Fill in spaces with dried cranberries.

In a bowl, combine cake mix (dry), eggs, applesauce, sweet potato and 1/2 cup pineapple juice. Using a fork, stir vigorously about 2 minutes, scraping sides until well mixed. Spread over pineapple in pan. Bake 45 to 50 minutes or until a wooden pick inserted in center comes out clean. Cook 5 minutes. Invert onto platter, replacing any fruit that remains in the pan. Serve warm or at room temperature topped with a dollop of whipped cream. Makes 12 servings.

Green Bean Casserole

Food Network invites you to try this Green Bean Casserole recipe from Paula Deen.
Every Thanksgiving I brace myself for the inevitable: green bean casserole.Green bean casserole, invented by Campbell’s Soup in 1955, is adored by literally millions of Americans. I am not in this group. Our family, led by mother’s disdain for opening a can of creamed mushroom soup and dumping it on vegetables, ate peas and pearl onions instead.

Usually I allow myself an air of historic superiority as I dismiss green bean casserole when it is offered – surely the original Thanksgiving did not include a dish from a can.

But this year I may soften my stance a bit. I’ve been reading an informative and insightful cookbook, “Giving Thanks: Thanksgiving Recipes and History, from Pilgrims to Pumpkin Pie” by Kathleen Curtin, Sandra L. Oliver, and Plimoth Plantation.

You are probably well aware that no one knows for certain what was exactly shared and consumed at that first day of thanksgiving in 1621 sometime between Sept. 21 and Nov. 9 among the native Wampanoag People of Cape Cod and the settling English. The only eye-witness account of that day, written by colonist Edward Wilson to a friend back home refers to “fowl” and “deer.” And it wasn’t even really Thanksgiving. It was an annual harvest party.

The authors of “Giving Thanks” go on to explain how this harvest party evolved into the full-blown American tradition it is today. It is a fascinating read and will arm you with plenty of trivia to impress your friends and relatives around the dinner table, too stuffed to escape your self-indulgent soliloquy of facts they could care less about.

For instance, Abraham Lincoln may have declared the last Thursday of November as the annual date for our national holiday, but did you know this was largely because of the hard campaigning of the “Godey’s Lady’s Book” editor, Sarah Josepha Buell Hale? Ms. Hale was relentless in her pursuit to establish Thanksgiving as a national holiday and annually wrote letters for 16 years to the White House, all state governors, and each member of Congress extolling the virtues of a meal that brought people together to express gratitude. When Lincoln finally relented with his proclamation in 1863, Southerners refused to acknowledge the “Yankee” holiday.

But the Southerners eventually changed and perhaps I will, too, about green bean casserole. Here’s why: At the back of “Giving Thanks” is an incredibly eclectic array of “traditional” Thanksgiving dishes. There is everything from “Oyster Stuffing” to “Chinese American Rice Dressing” to “Finnish Turnip Casserole” to “Puerto Rican Roast Pork Shoulder.” And there is even a recipe for “Green Bean Casserole.”

Thanksgiving dishes have evolved and mixed and borrowed just like the unique peoples who have come together and adapted in their efforts to build a free democracy.

So, if a glob of canned soup in a Thanksgiving dish is really a nod to the convenient foods that temporarily freed mid-20th century American women everywhere so they could devote their thoughts and energies beyond the kitchen – for better or worse – then I concede. Green bean casserole has its proper place in the history of American Thanksgiving.

But I’ll need to change the recipe’s name – just to satisfy my preference for historical context. Please pass me the peas and pearl onions.

Feminist Green Bean Casserole
Adapted from “Giving Thanks”

Serves 8

1 10-3/4-ounce can condensed cream of mushroom soup
1/2 cup milk
1 teaspoon soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce
1/8 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
2 16-ounce cans French-cut green beans, drained or 2 16-ounce packages frozen French-cut green beans, cooked and drained
1 2.8-ounce can French’s Fried Onions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

In a medium bowl, whisk the condensed soup, milk, soy sauce, and pepper until smooth. Stir in the beans and half of the onions.

Pour mixture into a 1-1/2 quart casserole dish. Bake for 25 minutes, uncovered until the mixture is hot and bubbling.

Stir well, top with the remaining onions, and bake for 5 minutes more, or until the onion topping is nicely browned.

Related posts on Kitchen Report: Peas and Pearl Onions, Cape Cod Cranberry Orange Relish, Pumpkin Curry Soup, Wild Rice and Fruit Salad, Thanksgiving Oatmeal Cookies

Pecan Pie Recipe For Thanksgiving

Pecan pie is the perfect complement to pumpkin pie on the Thanksgiving table There's no question that pie is a staple in American homes during the holidays. Pecan pie is the perfect complement to pumpkin pie on the Thanksgiving table.

There’s no question that pie is a staple in American homes during the holidays. Pie has that inevitable quality to bring together a family after a hard-earned holiday meal to enjoy some good old family tradition. An intimate family conversation that brings all family members closer every holiday is the cornerstone for every bite of pie.

The whole story, according to Wholly Wholesome, is few Americans realize the history that goes into the pies they enjoy today. Originally called a “coffin” (meaning “basket” or “box”), the pie was the beginning of every holiday meal. For hundreds of years, tracing back to our great ancestors, every meal was baked into a crusty shell and served warm with meat filling the interior. Then, pies were considered a necessity. Today, however, pies are considered a culinary delight. Our beloved pie is so special that it is now saved for family gatherings and a sweet treat after meals.

“Pies have been a central part of our family celebrations for generations,” explains Doon Wintz. “My sister, Bonnie, and I have a friendly competition at holiday meals. She makes her famous pecan pies and I make pumpkin or ice cream pies. It’s a real treat to pass along our family’s tradition through wholesome, natural and organic baked-goods. We understand the importance of family and how food brings them together in a really special way.”

Pies have a serendipitous appeal for every taste bud, from apple and pumpkin pies to blueberry and cherry and serendipitous tastes call for serendipitous recipes, including the one here for Bonnie’s Pecan Pie. Everyone can enjoy this Wholly Wholesome recipe this holiday season, including special dieters.

Aunt Bonnie’s Pecan Pie

Ingredients:

    * ½ cup sugar
    * 1 cup Corn Syrup
    * 4 Tablespoons Butter
    * 3 eggs (beaten lightly)
    * 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
    * 1 pinch salt
    * 1 Nine Inch Wholly Wholesome Pie Shell (White, Whole Wheat or Spelt)
    * 2 Cups broken pecans (broken into small pieces)
    * 60 Whole Pecan halves (for top of pie)

Directions:

1. Combine sugar and syrup in a fry pan over a medium heat for 5 minutesMelt Butter into mixture

2. Set aside to cool (if you’re in a rush, put the pan on a bed of ice in the sink)

3. Preheat oven to 400 deg F.

4. Once cooled, add eggs, salt and vanilla

5. Fill pie shell w/broken pecans

6. Pour Syrup mixture over pecans until it’s just below the rim

7. Arrange Pecan Halves on top starting with the largest pecans around the outside in a circle and using progressively smaller pecan halves as you circles move towards the center. Be sure to save some nice small ones for the center.

8. Place on a piece of foil on top of a cookie sheet and place in the oven

9. Reduce oven to 350 deg F. and bake for 50 minutes or until pecans are nicely toasted, but not burnt.

The company's passion to create a natural baked goods product line that could deliver great tasting treats for ingredient-conscious consumers led to the savory pies, cookies, cakes, rolls, breads and pie crusts that Wholly Wholesome offers today, including organic, vegan and kosher. Evaporated cane sugar (ECS), also known as evaporated cane juice, is an important ingredient in Wholly Wholesome products as it leaves no carbon footprint. It is often listed as Organic Cane Sugar on the ingredients panel. In Wholly Wholesome mission statement, in referencing Our Planet, it says that the company follows “a path towards a sustainable future with a clear focus on the environment, social equity and economic growth.”

Anne McCaffrey Has Died

By Christopher John Farley Anne McCaffrey, author of the “Dragonriders of Pern” series, has died. She was 85 years old.Anne McCaffrey, author of the “Dragonriders of Pern” series, has died.
Her publisher Random House reportedly announced that the author passed away after suffering a stroke.

McCaffrey’s books about a distant planet in which some inhabitants rode telepathic dragons to combat deadly falling alien Threads are considered seminal works of fantasy fiction. The books combined mythic inspiration, sci-fi and adventure.

McCaffrey was born in Cambridge, Mass., and published “Dragonflight,” the first volume in her “Dragonriders of Pern” series, in 1968. “When is a legend a legend? Why is a myth a myth? How old and disused must a fact be for it to be relegated to the category ‘Fairy-tale’?” she wrote in the introduction to “Dragonflight.” McCaffrey’s 1978 book “The White Dragon” was a breakthrough in the series, and made the New York Times bestseller lists.

While much of fantasy fiction focused on male protagonists, McCaffrey’s works featured both men and women as risk-taking heroes and heroines. Her blend of the sci-fi and fantasy genres was also unique and groundbreaking. McCaffrey was the first woman to win a Hugo Award and the first female to win a Nebula Award; she won both sci-fi/fantasy writing prizes in the late 1960s.

Her books reimagined the ancient mythology of dragons, transforming them from enemies of men into friends, creating a psychological and emotional bond between humans and the fire-breathing creatures, and successfully tapping into a deep-seated fantasy most readers didn’t even know they had–the desire to ride on the back of  a dragon and fly across the sky.

In one of her last notes to fans on Oct. 27, 2010, she expressed her hope that she would be able to attend a convention celebrating her works,  writing “health permitting, I’ll be at Dragon*con 2011. I apologize that I won’t be able to do nearly as many appearances as I’d like (oh, to be even 20 years younger!) but I can’t think of a convention I’d rather attend in my 85th year!”

On Aug. 18 2011, her son Todd posted a note reading “Mum wants me to relay to you how terribly sorry she is to have to cancel this year’s appearance at Dragon*con. What seemed to be indigestion last week has now turned out to be something more serious – some incident with her heart, the full details of which are still to be determined by tests. Mum very specifically asked me to apologize to those who had hoped to see her there, saying: ‘Sorry that old age came up and bit me on the a**.’”

Urban Meyer To Ohio State

Tebow on Urban Meyer-Ohio State rumors : First-and-Orange is the authority on the latest breaking news and analysis about the Denver Broncos, written by Mike Klis, Lindsay Jones and Jeff Legwold. As everyone gets ready for the holiday tomorrow, it’s been all FSU and a lot of Urban Meyer mixed in. Looking ahead to the game this weekend, it will be important for both quarterbacks looking for a signature win this season.

Florida State’s EJ Manuel has two to his name in his career, being named the MVP of the 2010 Gator Bowl and leading the Seminoles to a win over Clemson last season. But John Brantley has 22 starts under his belt with no signature wins to his name.

Of the 14 games the Gators have won with Brantley as the starter, its difficult to find any where he was the difference between winning and losing vs. a good team. The best win of his career as a starter is arguably vs. Georgia last season, and injuries have limited his impact this season. So, this week’s game vs. FSU is his last real chance. The Gators (6-5) will go to a bowl, but beating a mediocre team out of conference wouldn’t be as impressive as beating a rival.

Urban Meyer to OSU: Former Florida coach Urban Meyer released a statement this morning refuting reports that he’s headed to Ohio State, but The Columbus Dispatch cites two OSU officials who say an announcement is coming next week. The New York Times also reports that Meyer’s hiring is closer to completion.

Charlie Weis dealing with hip pain: Although Florida offensive coordinator Charlie Weis has been dealing with hip pain for a while, he said he intends to keep coaching. Weis will get the hip checked out after the season, but for now is using a cane.

Defending Tebow: With Denver QB Tim Tebow improving to 4-1 this season as a starter, the critics haven’t stop. Of course, they probably haven’t since he was at Florida. But The New Yorker defends the former Gator.

Breaking down Florida-FSU: With the big game this weekend, FSU writer Coley Harvey and I broke down the matchup with CineSports’ Noah Coslov. Spoiler alert – we both thought the Seminoles would win.

Coming up: Florida’s availability is done for the week, so it’ll be a little quiet here until game day. Morning reads is taking a holiday break, so enjoy some turkey and we’ll be back on Saturday.