The Sun Basket Holiday Survival Guide
The holidays are here in full force, and it’s time to make a plan before the plans make you. Let this be the year you stay on track, eat healthily, and enjoy the festivities without the stress. Be sure to check out our test kitchen team’s tips for holiday entertaining. Here’s how we’re managing the holidays this year:
It’s OK to say no. You don’t have to say yes to every invitation that comes your way. Set your priorities and know your limits. Make time for the people and events that are most important to you, and offer a polite “no, thank you” to everything else.
There’s more to a party than food. Dance, play board games, get a good conversation started. Stay focused on the people you enjoy most and step away from the buffet.
Water it down. It’s easy to get caught up in the festivities and drink more than you should. Make your first drink a big glass of water. After that, go one for one, following each alcoholic drink with more water.
Make exercise a holiday tradition. Go for a hike before (or after) a big meal. Organize a game of dodgeball, or hold your party at the local climbing gym.
Go easy on yourself. Don’t beat yourself up if you overindulge or eat a second piece of pie. It’s the holidays, after all, and you’re allowed a break from your routine.
Photo by Colin Price Photography
Reinventing Thanksgiving Leftovers for the Best Ever Day-After Feast
Buh-bye turkey sandwiches. It’s time to turn your Thanksgiving leftovers into something exciting. Executive Chef Justine Kelly loves nothing better than to transform a turkey carcass into a delicious soup to serve at her annual Friendsgiving poker party.
While it may seem like a lot of work to cook another meal after preparing a Thanksgiving feast, Chef Justine recommends breaking down the work by planning ahead.
For her soup, she says, “I usually make the soup base with chiles and tomatoes a few days ahead and refrigerate it. I chop the vegetables for the stock when I make the Thanksgiving stuffing, since they include many of the same ingredients. Once the turkey is carved, I throw the carcass in the stockpot with the vegetables and set it to simmer while we eat dessert and clean up. If you happen to end up without any turkey meat left over, you can add shredded rotisserie chicken instead.”
Leftover Thanksgiving Turkey Tortilla Soup Recipe
Serves 6 to 8
Part one: make the tortilla soup base
Makes about 3 cups, enough for 1 batch Turkey tortilla soup (recipe below)
Ingredients
2 dried ancho chiles
3 dried New Mexican chiles
1 or 2 jalapeños, optional
4 to 6 unpeeled garlic cloves
1 pound Roma tomatoes
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Neutral oil
Tools
Medium heatproof bowl, blender, large frying pan, sheet pan
1 Roast the garlic and tomatoes
Heat the oven to 400°F.
Lightly oil a sheet pan. On one end of the pan, spread the garlic in a single layer; on the other end, arrange the tomatoes. Roast until the garlic is tender when pierced with a sharp knife and the tomatoes are blistered and starting to collapse, 12 to 15 minutes for the garlic, and 15 to 20 minutes for the tomatoes. Using tongs or a slotted spoon, transfer the garlic to a plate while the tomatoes finish roasting. Peel the garlic.
While the garlic and tomatoes roast, prepare the chiles.
2 Toast the dried chiles
- Remove the stems and seeds from the ancho and New Mexican chiles.
Warm a dry large frying pan over medium heat until hot but not smoking. Add the chiles and toast, turning a few times, until soft and pliable, 2 to 3 minutes. Transfer to a medium heatproof bowl, cover with 3 cups hot water and let soak for 15 minutes.
If using, add the jalapeños to the dry pan used for the dried chiles and cook over medium heat, turning a few times, until lightly charred, 5 to 7 minutes. Transfer to a plate to cool; remove the stems.
3 Assemble the soup base
In a blender, working in batches if necessary, blend together the tomatoes, garlic, dried soaked chiles, chile soaking liquid, and as many of the jalapeños as you like. Season to taste with salt. Use at once, or transfer to an airtight container with a lid, let cool, cover, and refrigerate for up to 3 days.
Part two: make the turkey stock
Makes about 2 quarts, enough for 1 batch Turkey tortilla soup (see recipe below)
Ingredients
1 white onion
1 or 2 carrots
2 or 3 celery ribs
6 or 7 sprigs fresh flat-leaf parsley
1 leftover carcass of one 10- to 20-pound roasted turkey
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Neutral oil
Tools
Peeler, optional, fine-mesh strainer, large stock pot
1 Prep the stock ingredients
- Peel and coarsely chop the onion.
- Scrub or peel the carrots and trim off the ends; coarsely chop the carrots.
- Trim the ends from the celery; coarsely chop the celery.
- Using your hands, kitchen shears, or a cleaver, break or cut the turkey carcass bones into large pieces.
In a large stock pot over medium heat, warm 2 to 3 tablespoons oil until hot but not smoking. Add the onion, carrots, and celery and season generously with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables have started to soften, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the turkey carcass, parsley sprigs, and 2 quarts water. (Don’t worry if the carcass pieces stick up out of the water a bit; as the stock simmers, the bones will soften and you can gently press them under the water with a spatula or spoon). Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook until rich and flavorful, at least 2 hours and up to 4 hours. Remove from the heat; strain over a large sauce pot, and use at once or let cool, cover, and refrigerate for up to 2 days, then strain before using.
Part three: Make the tortilla soup
Ingredients
1 white onion
Tortilla soup base (see recipe)
Turkey stock (see recipe)
3 cups leftover turkey meat, preferably dark meat, shredded into bite-size pieces
4 corn tortillas
1 large avocado
6 to 7 sprigs cilantro
3 ounces queso fresco
2 or 3 radishes
2 limes
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Neutral oil
Tools
Large sauce pot, large frying pan
1 Start the soup
- Peel and finely chop the onion.
In a large sauce pot over medium-high heat, warm 2 tablespoons oil until hot but not smoking. Add the onion and cook until soft, 5 to 7 minutes. Add the soup base, turkey stock, and shredded turkey and season with salt and pepper. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook until the flavors have developed, 10 to 15 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper. While the soup simmers, prepare the tortilla strips.
2 Fry the tortilla strips
- Cut the tortillas into thin, ¼-inch-wide strips.
In a large frying pan over medium-high heat, warm ¼ cup oil until hot but not smoking, watching carefully to prevent scorching. Using tongs or a slotted spoon, carefully lower the tortilla strips, a few at a time, into the hot oil. Cook, turning frequently, until crisp and lightly browned, 4 to 6 minutes. Drain on paper towels and season lightly with salt.
While the tortillas crisp, prepare the remaining garnishes.
3 Prep the remaining garnishes
- Cut the avocado in half lengthwise. Remove the pit, scoop out the flesh, and cut the flesh into ½-inch cubes.
- Trim the ends from the radishes. Cut them in half, then cut the halves into thin half-moons.
- Cut the limes into wedges.
- Coarsely chop the cilantro.
4 Serve
Ladle the soup into individual bowls. Garnish with the tortilla strips, avocado, radishes, and cilantro. Crumble the queso fresco on top and serve with the lime wedges.
Tortilla soup nutrition per serving (8 servings: note this does not include garnishes): Calories: 230, Protein: 22 g, Total Fat: 10 g, Monounsaturated Fat: 5 g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 2 g, Saturated Fat: 2 g, Cholesterol: 45 mg, Carbohydrates: 15 g, Fiber: 3 g, Added Sugar: 0 g, Sodium: 480 mg
Bonus recipe—ingredients not included in box.
Our Guide to Winter Citrus
Ask Chef Justine what ingredient she relies on most often to sharpen the flavors in our recipes, and the entire kitchen staff will answer in unison: “citrus.” According to Justine, “the sweet-tart juice and oil-rich zest offer a terrific alternative to salt and fat when I want to bring a dish into focus.” This time of year, she’s got plenty of varieties to choose from. Here are a few of the fresh citrus flavors you’ll find in your Sun Basket this season.
Blood oranges
One of the more dramatic fruits around, the blood orange boasts a color that ranges from neon red to wine-dark purple and a flavor that’s slightly more tannic than other oranges. That deep red color also signals that these fruits are rich in anthocyanin, a powerful antioxidant.
Cara Cara oranges
A cross between two varieties of navel oranges, Cara Caras have a gorgeous sunset-pink flesh. Their flavor is slightly sweeter and less acidic than other oranges.
Lemons
The workhorse of the Sun Basket test kitchen, lemons are what we use to boost the acid and balance the flavors in our recipes all year ’round. Chef Justine even recommends adding a squeeze of lemon juice as a way to save a dish you may have accidentally over-salted, too.
Limes
Both tart and sweet, limes push any dish in a slightly more tropical direction. Chef Justine uses them in many of her Southeast-Asian and Latin American-inspired dishes.
Navel oranges
These sweet, seedless fruits are the result of a mutation discovered by a missionary in a garden in Brazil in the mid-1800s. Today they are one of the most popular fruits, prized for both their flesh and their juice. If you’ve only had them raw, you’ll be delighted by roasted orange slices. The peels soften as they cook and lose their bitterness.
Satsuma mandarins
As sweet as candy, a breeze to peel, and seedless, satsumas are one of the joys of winter. We snack on them all day long. When dinner comes around, we toss them into salads.
Tangerines
Their season is short, so we try to eat as many tangerines as we can from November to January. They’re one of our favorite snacks.
Illustration by @boccaccinimeadows
An Elegant Code for Your Thanksgiving Gravy
Matt leads the team of engineers who write the code that makes Sun Basket run. He knows how to do things like reverse a string using a recursive algorithm, and he can write FizzBuzz in several languages. (We have no idea what that means, but we’re impressed.) And he regularly slays his opponents in daily bouts of Words With Friends. Now, with Chef Justine’s help, Matt can add agile gravy engineer to his resume.
The Perfect Gravy Recipe
Makes about 1 quart
Serves 10 to 20
Ingredients
2 tablespoons olive oil
Turkey neck and giblets (liver, gizzard, heart), reserved from 1 turkey
Kosher salt
Freshly ground black pepper
2 celery ribs
1 large carrot
2 shallots
4 cups turkey or chicken stock
3 or 4 sprigs fresh thyme
3 or 4 sprigs fresh flat-leaf parsley
½ ounce dried mushrooms, such as porcini
1 stick unsalted butter
½ cup all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons tamari
Tools
Whisk, large glass measuring cup or bowl, medium sauce pot
1 Brown the turkey neck and giblets
In a medium sauce pot over medium heat, warm the oil until hot but not smoking. Add the turkey neck and giblets, season with salt and pepper, and cook, turning a few times, until browned, 5 to 7 minutes. While the giblets cook, prepare the vegetables.
2 Prep and cook the vegetables; make the broth
- Trim the ends from the celery; coarsely chop the celery.
- Trim the top from the carrot; coarsely chop the carrot.
- Peel and coarsely chop the shallots.
Add the celery, carrot, and shallots to the pot with the turkey giblets, season with salt and pepper, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the shallots soften, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the thyme and parsley sprigs, the dried porcini, and the stock. Bring to boil, reduce to a simmer, cover, and cook until richly flavorful, at least 1 hour or as long as 2 hours. Remove from the heat and strain the broth into a bowl or 1-quart glass measuring cup. Do not clean the pot. Transfer the cooked giblets and the mushrooms to a cutting board and finely chop. Discard the vegetables and herbs. Skim any fat from the surface of the stock.
2 Make the roux
In the same pot used to make the broth, heat the butter over medium-low heat. Sprinkle in the flour and cook, whisking constantly, until the flour begins to darken, 2 to 3 minutes. Slowly add the broth, whisking constantly. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, and cook, whisking constantly, until thickened, 3 to 5 minutes. Stir in the giblets and tamari. Season generously with salt and pepper. If not serving right away, refrigerate until ready to use. Just before serving, warm gently over low heat, whisking in any pan juices from your turkey.
Nutrition per serving: 120 calories, Protein: 5g (10% DV), Fiber: 1g (4% DV), Total Fat: 9g (14% DV), Monounsaturated Fat: 3.5g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.5g, Saturated Fat: 4g (20% DV), Cholesterol: 60mg (20% DV), Sodium: 230mg (10% DV), Carbohydrates: 4g (1% DV), Total Sugars: 1g, Added Sugars: 0g (0% DV). Not a significant source of trans fat.
Bonus recipe—ingredients not included in box.
Thanksgiving, Done Easy
Shop Thanksgiving BoxesGiving Thanks and Giving Back
Everyone at Sun Basket knows how lucky we are to work with such delicious food (not to mention, such lovely people), and at this time of year in particular we’re reminded not to take our good fortune for granted. We’re incredibly grateful to the farmers and producers who work so hard and with so much heart to bring such wonderful food to our tables. We also know that not everyone in our communities has the same access to good food. It’s important to all of us here to share what we have with those who too often go without.
Each week Sun Basket donates any surplus produce to local food banks—Farmers Against Hunger on the East Coast, and Second Harvest Food Bank, in Santa Clara County, where our main distribution center is located in California, as well as neighboring San Mateo County.
Five Things You Don’t Need to Do to Your Holiday Turkey
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Don’t brine it. For the last decade or so, brining has been promoted as the miracle cure for dry turkey meat. But you know what? Brining turkey is a royal pain. Do you have a container big enough to submerge the bird in brine at a temperature of 38°F for several days? Neither do we. But even if we did, the truth is that brining just fills the bird up with water, dilutes its flavor, and makes any pan gravy taste salty. A salt-cured bird is the way to go.
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Don’t truss it. While trussing may make your bird look nice and neat, tying the legs together only slows the cooking time. It doesn’t make the bird moister or help it cook more steadily, as some experts insist. In fact, leaving the legs open allows heat to move throughout the bird so that it cooks more evenly and quickly.
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Don’t baste it. Seriously. Continually squeezing hot juices over the bird not only prevents the skin from crisping, it also causes the breast meat to cook more quickly, which dries out the meat.
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Don’t stuff it. Filling the bird with your favorite dressing is a bad idea for several reasons. First, there are the safety concerns: by the time the stuffing reaches a safe temperature, 145°F, the turkey will be overcooked. A stuffed bird also takes much longer to cook. Cooking the dressing separately in its own baking dish is the way to go. Not only will it help you get the meal on the table faster, the increased surface area offers more of the crisp crust to go around.
- Don’t carve it at the table. Sure, you worked hard and want to show off your beautiful, bronzed bird. But taking it apart at the table in front of an audience is too much pressure for even the most experienced turkey chef. Instead, invite your guests into the kitchen to show off the bird as it rests, then shoo them out, and get to work with your slicing knife and carving fork when no one is watching.
Artwork by ekströmdesign
Winter Spice Syrup Recipe
Sun Basket’s Content Project Manager, Christina Stork, is a living, breathing episode of Portlandia (minus the unbearable smugness). She knits ponchos (in fact she wrote a book about them) and crochets rag rugs. She raises ducks in her backyard and brews kombucha in her kitchen. Did we mention that she’s also a DJ and an amateur mixologist? (You want her at your party.)
This holiday season, she’s mixing up a batch of winter spice syrup. Christina uses it as a base for cocktails, a flavoring for cookies (in place of vanilla extract), and she drizzles it on cakes and over ice cream. It’s her secret weapon—from brunch to dessert to drinks. And when she’s a guest, guess what she brings as a gift?
Winter Spice Syrup
Shopping List
1¼ cups sugar
2 cardamom pods
1 vanilla bean
One ½-inch piece fresh ginger
2 cinnamon sticks
10 whole cloves
2 whole star anise
1 teaspoon allspice berries
1 teaspoon whole black peppercorns
2 tablespoons chopped dried orange peel
1 teaspoon orange blossom water
Tools
Funnel, optional, fine-toothed grater, optional, fine-mesh strainer, small sauce pot with lid, clean glass bottle with a cork stopper or jar with a tight-fitting lid
1 Make the simple syrup
In a small sauce pot, combine the sugar and 1¼ cups water. Bring to a boil, reduce to a simmer, stirring to dissolve the sugar, about 5 minutes.
While the simple syrup simmers, prepare the cardamom and vanilla.
2 Prep and steep the spices
- On a cutting board, using the bottom of a cup or mug, crack the cardamom pods to release the seeds.
- Cut the vanilla bean in half lengthwise and scrape out the seeds; set aside the bean and seeds.
- Grate or peel and thinly slice the ginger.
Add the cardamom pods and seeds, cinnamon sticks, cloves, star anise, allspice, peppercorns, orange peel, and ginger to the pot with the simple syrup. Cover and simmer, stirring occasionally, until richly fragrant, 10 minutes. Remove from the heat, stir in the vanilla bean and seeds, and let cool to room temperature, 15 to 20 minutes.

3 Strain the syrup
Using a fine-mesh strainer set over a pitcher or transparent measuring cup, strain the syrup, discarding the spices, and stir in the orange blossom water.
4 Store
Pour the spiced syrup into a clean bottle with cork stopper or tight-fitting lid. Refrigerate for up to 2 weeks.

One of the best parts of this recipe is its adaptability. The syrup can be added to anything to make it festive, and it doubles as a gift—add a sweet label and you’ve got an instant hostess gift (or parting gift for any of your own guests).
Here are some of Christina’s favorite ways to use her Winter Spice Syrup:

For a non-alcoholic cocktail, add 1 ounce to 6-to-8 ounces of juice, sparkling water, bottled orange soda, pomegranate juice, or ginger ale for a non-alcoholic cocktail.
Over 21? Add 1 ounce syrup to a 6-ounce glass of champagne, as we’ve done here, or make instant mulled wine by warming 375ml of red wine on the stove and stirring in a few tablespoons of the syrup.
Make like a mixologist with 1.5 ounces each syrup and bourbon plus 6 ounces juice:
. . . shaken . . .
. . . or stirred.
Super easy punch or mimosas—just add 2 teaspoons to either.
Winter cordial, so easy! 1 cup Winter Spice Syrup + 1 cup bourbon or rye whiskey
Some of our favorite garnishes:
Orange peel twist – Frozen cranberries – Orange wheel – Cinnamon stick (mulled or punch) – Persimmon wedge – Brandied cherry

And there you have it—one syrup to rule them all.
Nutrition per serving: Calories: 50 Protein: 0g (0% DV), Fiber: 0g (0% DV), Total Fat: 0g (0% DV), Monounsaturated Fat: 0g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0g, Saturated Fat: 0g (0% DV), Cholesterol: 0mg (0% DV), Sodium: 0mg (0% DV), Carbohydrates: 13g (4% DV), Total Sugars: 13g, Added Sugars: 13g (26% DV). Not a significant source of trans fat.
Bonus recipe—ingredients not included in box.
The Very Best Way to Cook a Turkey
Our turkey recipe veers from tradition in several ways. First, we remove the backbone and spatchcock, or open, the turkey so that it lies flat. If you’re feeling ambitious you can do this yourself, but an easier option is to get the butcher to do it instead. Spatchcocking has several advantages: the flattened bird will cook faster and more evenly, it will be easier to carve, and, because all the skin is on top, the meat beneath is juicier and there’s more crisp skin in every bite.
But before grilling, treat the bird to a salt cure. This dries the skin, which helps it crisp, keeps the meat moist, and seasons the bird more deeply.
Serves 8 to 12 people
Ingredients
One 12-to 16-pound organic turkey, giblets and backbone removed
Kosher salt
Tools
Small bowl, roasting rack at least 15 3/4 x 12 x 3 inches, sheet pan, foil
1 Spatchcock the turkey
Remove the giblets and neckbone from the turkey cavity. Using sharp kitchen shears, cut out the backbone from the turkey. Set the turkey on a sheet pan, breast side up, and press down on the breastbone to flatten. Or have a butcher spatchcock the turkey for you.
2 Season the turkey
- In a small bowl, measure out 1 teaspoon kosher salt for every pound of turkey.
Place the turkey skin side up on rack set on a sheet pan. Using your hands, gently separate the skin from the breast and leg meat, careful not to tear the skin. Season the turkey all over with the kosher salt, including under the skin. Refrigerate, uncovered, for 48 hours.
3 Cook the turkey
Heat a gas or charcoal fire to medium-high and clean and oil the grill rack. Set the turkey on the grill rack breast side up, cover the grill, and cook over medium-high heat until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the breast registers 150°F and the thighs register at least 165°F, 60 to 90 minutes.
4 Serve the turkey
Use 2 large spatulas to transfer the turkey from the grill to a clean sheet pan or serving platter. Cover loosely with foil and let rest at room temperature for at least 20 minutes before serving. Taste any juices that accumulate and if they’re not too salty, whisk them into your gravy.
Nutrition per serving: Calories: 160, Protein: 32g (64% DV), Fiber: 0g (0% DV), Total Fat: 2.5g (4% DV), Monounsaturated Fat: 0.5g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.5g, Saturated Fat: 0.5g (3% DV), Cholesterol: 95mg (32% DV), Sodium: 920mg (38% DV), Carbohydrates: 0g (0% DV), Total Sugars: 0g, Added Sugars: 0g (0% DV). Not a significant source of trans fat.
Bonus recipe—ingredients not included in box.
Sun Basket vs. the Grocery Store
At Sun Basket, when we tell you that our meals save time in the kitchen, money in your wallet, and even fight food waste, we really mean it. Here two cooks take the same recipe, one heads to the grocery store, the other unpacks a Sun Basket. Watch what happens next.
Sun Basket’s Pastry Chef Finds the Rhythm to a Balanced Life
Whether he’s banging on a drum or rolling out a pie crust, Paul Conte tries to find a way to be creative every hour of the day. Around our San Francisco offices, he’s the guy who makes our brainstorming sessions come to life and develops recipes for our new Family Plan.
At the end of the day, Paul hangs up his apron, picks up his drumsticks, and heads out to play with his his gypsy jazz band, The Sam Bassadors. Weekends, you’ll find him strumming his guitar, writing and recording fresh tunes, playing with his country blues band, The Crow Eaters, and making multi-course Mexican meals with his family and friends.
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