Local chefs serve up tips for a smaller Thanksgiving feast
Try different dishes this year: hearty pot pie or vegetable lasagna, chefs suggest

A smaller Thanksgiving gathering is in the cards this year.
Public health officials have said we need to scale down celebrations to help curb the spread of COVID-19, so that means a 10-kg turkey and 15 people feasting at the dinner table isn't the norm.
You can still have turkey and the trimmings — just scale back, says Janet Duncan of Jake & Humphreys' Bistro in New Hamburg.
"You can just buy a breast or leg, so you don't have to get a whole bird," she says.
A boneless turkey breast can be stuffed with a variety of ingredients, rolled and cooked in the oven along with seasonings in about an hour to 80 minutes.
Turkey's from here
A bird native to North and Central America, turkeys were domesticated by Aztec peoples long before Spanish conquistadores arrived.
Arturo Freire at Village Biergarten in St. Jacobs says Mexicans don't celebrate Thanksgiving, of course, but turkey meat goes nicely in a soup.
"We don't make traditional Thanksgiving meals with turkey, 'quajolote,' but it makes a perfect dish for fall weather, pozole," says Freire. "There are many variations on this soup or stew. It's a main course. You don't need an appetizer because it's so hearty."
Try something different
While "turkey day" is a time for tradition, this might be the year to break away and try cooking something different.
Kevin Stemmler of Stemmler Meats in Heidelberg suggests looking for a large chicken to roast as an alternative: the flavour is different, but it can still be seasoned like your traditional turkey.
"Turkeys are generally difficult to find below 10 lbs, but large fresh roasting chickens at eight pounds are good for a small group," Stemmler says. "They are locally raised and look impressive."