All Flavor, No Food Coma: 8 Thanksgiving Recipes (Plus How to Find Your Own)

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Meg Crosby

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Hi, I'm meg

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You’re scrolling through Thanksgiving recipes. Page after page of beautiful photos. Promising headlines. Then you click—and find ingredient lists so long they make you want to close the tab. How do you find recipes that deliver serious flavor without the food coma?

At its core, Thanksgiving is about spending time with people you love. And having an extra day or two to cook. To try new recipes. To experiment with ingredients that provide the fuel your body thrives on—repairing, rebuilding, keeping your immune system strong.

Here’s what you need: a simple way to separate recipes that truly support your health from those that just look good in photos. And a curated list you can trust—recipes that deliver on both taste and how you’ll feel afterward.

After years of reading recipes, I’ve developed a simple 3-criteria system that saves you the trial and error. These aren’t arbitrary rules—they’re based on what actually supports sustained energy and performance.

Bowl of creamy pumpkin soup garnished with pepitas showcasing healthy Thanksgiving recipes
Nutrient-dense soups like pumpkin or butternut squash provide fiber, antioxidants, and immune-supporting vitamins A and C—perfect for Thanksgiving.

My 3-Criteria System for Choosing Recipes

When I evaluate any recipe, especially for occasions like Thanksgiving, I ask three questions:

1. Does it avoid heavily processed ingredients? I skip vegan butter and excessive oils, and limit nut cheeses (preferring whole nuts when possible). If a packaged ingredient has a label that reads like a chemistry lab, it’s out. Real food, minimally processed.

If I want something decadent, I’ll buy it. When I cook, I focus on whole foods.

2. Is it lower in added sugar and oil? Added sugar raises your risk for cardiovascular disease and can increase chronic inflammation. Oil? It’s calorie-dense (119 calories in just one tablespoon) but nutritionally light compared to whole foods like avocados and nuts.

3. Does it star a vegetable I love or don’t cook often? This is where it gets fun. Brussels sprouts, butternut squash, pumpkin, fresh cranberries—vegetables packed with fiber, antioxidants, and the nutrients that power your next 50 years.

But here’s my #1 criteria that overrides everything else: These are recipes and ingredients I can feel great about eating.

Hands sharing a bowl of colorful roasted vegetables including Brussels sprouts and carrots for healthy Thanksgiving
Roasted vegetables deliver serious flavor and nutritional value—brussels sprouts provide vitamin K and fiber while roasted carrots offer beta-carotene and antioxidants.

The Recipes That Made My List This Year

I’ve done the work for you. These recipes meet all three criteria and don’t require advanced cooking skills. Pick one (or more) to add to your Thanksgiving table:

Soups (perfect starters or sides):

Salads & Sides:

Mains & Hearty Dishes:

Each recipe stars nutrient-dense vegetables, uses whole food ingredients, and delivers serious flavor.

More recipes using this system: Two of my favorites that deliver on both nutrition and flavor: Chocolate Mug Cake, Future Self Salad.

Your Move

Start with one dish that tastes amazing and fuels your body—one that aligns with the version of yourself you’re building for the next 50 years. When you have that on the table, you’ve already won.

Choose one from the list above, or use my 3-criteria system to find your own.

Thanks for reading!

Ready to redefine your next 50 years? Subscribe to You Are What You Read for actionable roadmaps and proven results—tested by a real human. Delivered every Monday.


References & Additional Reading

Image credits: Valeria Boltneva, Karola G

This post does not constitute medical advice. Please consult with your healthcare provider regarding your specific health needs.

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