Skip to content

TRISHA YEARWOOD: Talking Turkey…and Dressing!

audio

When it comes to Thanksgiving, Trisha Yearwood says that her must-have dish is always her grandmother’s awesome cornbread dressing, but beyond that, Thanksgiving with Trisha is a day filled with some very familiar traditions. (AUDIO INFO BELOW)

  • Trisha dishes on her grandma’s amazing cornbread dressing. (AUDIO INFO BELOW)
  • Something music lovers can be additionally grateful for this year is Trisha’s just-released album, PrizeFighter: Hit after Hit, a 16-song collection that includes 10 classic Trisha hits and six new songs, including the single “PrizeFighter” featuring Kelly Clarkson. The album is in stores now and available digitally on GhostTunes!

audio  Trisha Yearwood shares her traditional Thanksgiving Day. (:35)
“I grew up where we always had a big Thanksgiving kind of late lunch and then tried to stay awake to watch the football games, you know? (laughs) So, I kind of keep that tradition alive. I get up in the morning, and usually I put the turkey in the night before, and I love to watch the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. That’s a tradition that I did since I was a kid — and usually everybody else is still asleep. And then we have…and it just depends: living in Oklahoma, my family is in Georgia, so Thanksgiving is either, it could be just us as a family, sometimes it’s a bigger crowd. But it always involves food and my grandma’s cornbread dressing, which is my favorite, and football.”

audio  Trisha Yearwood talks turkey about her grandma’s dressing. (:31)
“I’d mentioned my grandma’s cornbread dressing – everybody’s dressing is very particular to their family, and mine doesn’t have sage in it; it doesn’t have that flavor. I’m not a big sage fan. So it’s like, just a basic, and it has a lot of bread in it. It has cornbread and bread crumbs and saltine crackers, and then you use the stock from the turkey, so it’s just…it’s my favorite thing. And because it’s really a traditional Thanksgiving dish, you don’t have it all the time. And so I really do miss that, and I’ve been known to make her dressing in the summer, just ’cause I’m like, ‘I need some dressing; I can’t wait ‘til November.’”