🦃
Classic American
Serves 8–12 · Intermediate
- Herb-Roasted Turkey
- Homemade Gravy
- Sage & Sausage Stuffing
- Mashed Potatoes
- Green Bean Casserole
- Cranberry Sauce
- Dinner Rolls
- Pumpkin & Pecan Pie
🍽️ Ultimate Guide · 2025
Everything you need for the most magical holiday feast: classic mains, crowd-pleasing sides, showstopping desserts, and a stress-free day-of timeline. Whether you are feeding four people in a small apartment or running a full family table for twenty, this guide is built to help you make the day feel generous instead of frantic.
Use this page as both inspiration and operating plan. Start with a menu, pick your centrepiece, decide which sides can be made ahead, then use the timeline and printable checklist to keep the whole day under control.
The main dish sets the whole tone of the meal. Turkey is traditional, but it is not compulsory. A ham can be easier, a prime rib can feel more luxurious, and salmon or mushroom Wellington can be a smarter fit for a smaller table. The key is choosing one centrepiece that matches your guest count, oven space, and tolerance for last-minute stress.
The classic holiday centrepiece. Herb butter under and over the skin helps protect the breast meat, build colour, and create flavour for an excellent gravy. Best when you want the full Christmas-table moment.
Rich, dramatic, and ideal for guests who care about beef more than tradition. Prime rib rewards a reliable thermometer, patient resting time, and clean carving, and it pairs beautifully with creamy potatoes.
A forgiving choice for bigger groups because most hams are already cooked and just need reheating plus glaze. Sweet, salty, and easier to slice and serve than a large turkey.
Perfect for a small Christmas dinner or a mixed table where not everyone wants a heavy roast. It cooks quickly, looks elegant, and leaves your oven available for more side dishes.
The smartest answer when four to six people still want roast-dinner energy without the commitment of a whole bird that dominates the day. Crisps beautifully and cooks in about an hour.
The best vegetarian centrepiece is one that feels deliberate, not apologetic. Mushroom Wellington gives you richness, layers, visual drama, and a proper sliceable moment on the table.
Christmas dinner becomes memorable because of the total plate, not just the roast. Great side dishes do three jobs at once: they fill visual space, create contrast in texture, and make the meal feel generous. Pick a few dependable favourites and avoid overcomplicating every single bowl.
Use Yukon Golds, hot cream, and plenty of butter. A ricer or food mill gives you a smoother finish, and the mash holds well in a slow cooker on warm.
Parboil first, rough up the edges, then roast in duck fat or goose fat. This is one of the most reliable crowd-pleasers on a British-style Christmas table.
Thin slices, real cream, and Gruyère give you a rich bake that feels luxurious but can be assembled two days ahead and chilled before baking.
A Southern holiday favourite with a smooth sweet potato base and a crunchy brown sugar pecan topping that borders on dessert in the best way.
Halve them, roast until deeply caramelised, then finish with crisp bacon and a little balsamic for sharpness and shine.
Fresh green beans with mushroom sauce and fried onions still deserve a place at the table, especially when the casserole is assembled the night before.
One of the simplest dishes to make, yet one of the first to vanish. Honey, butter, thyme, and just enough salt make them feel polished.
Done well, it brings richness without heaviness. Parmesan, cream, and a fast stovetop finish make it a strong last-minute side in about 20 minutes.
Day-old bread, Italian sausage, onions, celery, and sage give you the classic aroma most people associate with Christmas dinner.
Fresh cranberries, sugar, and orange zest come together in about ten minutes, and the flavour is far brighter than anything from a can.
Built from roasting drippings, flour, and stock, gravy is not a side note. It is the bridge that makes the whole plate work as one meal.
Soft, warm rolls with garlic butter are an easy insurance policy against an overcomplicated menu. Make the dough the night before if you can.
Dessert should feel like relief, not one more emergency. The smartest holiday sweets are either fully make-ahead or at least calm to assemble while the main meal rests. A pie, trifle, or bar dessert is often more practical than a last-minute plated showpiece, unless the showpiece itself is part of the fun.
A proper holiday centrepiece dessert with sponge, filling, and bark-like frosting. It takes care, but you can make it up to two days ahead.
Still one of the easiest wins in holiday baking. Bake it two days ahead, chill it well, and let whipped cream do the rest.
A useful large-format dessert when you need something festive, soft, and simple to scoop. The flavours improve after a night in the fridge.
An excellent party-table dessert because they cut neatly, travel well, and hold for several days without losing their texture.
The most useful Christmas dinner schedule is one that is generous about resting time, oven traffic, and reheating. The example below assumes a 3 PM meal and a 14-pound turkey, but the order matters more than the exact clock time. Work backwards from your own serving time and keep this pinned where you can see it.
Let the bird lose some of its chill for 1 to 2 hours, mix the herb butter, and prep the cavity with aromatics.
Preheat to 325°F, butter the skin, tie the legs if needed, set the turkey in the roasting pan, and begin the long roast.
Parboil potatoes, assemble green bean casserole, trim Brussels sprouts, and make cranberry sauce if it is not already done.
Baste the bird with pan drippings, open red wine to breathe, finish the table, and put out any appetiser board or snack tray.
Roast potatoes and carrots go in now, stuffing bakes in its own dish, and dinner rolls begin their final rise if you made the dough ahead.
Look for 155–160°F in the thickest part. If the skin is darkening too fast, tent loosely with foil and bake the dinner rolls.
Once it reaches 165°F, remove it from the oven and rest it for 30 to 45 minutes. This is where juiciness is won or lost.
Use the drippings for gravy, crank the oven to 425°F to crisp potatoes, reheat the mash, and sauté or finish any green vegetables.
Slice the turkey, arrange the platters, bring all sauces and sides to the table, pour the wine, and let the meal finally become someone else’s job.
Overbuying slightly is safer than running short, but you also do not need enough food for two separate holidays. This table gives you sensible starting points for the dishes people worry about most.
| Dish | Per Person | 8 People | 12 People | 20 People |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turkey (whole bird) | 1–1.5 lb | 12–14 lb | 16–18 lb | Two 14 lb birds |
| Glazed Ham (bone-in) | 0.75 lb | 7–8 lb | 10–12 lb | 16–18 lb |
| Prime Rib | 1 rib | 3-rib roast | 4-rib roast | 7-rib roast |
| Mashed Potatoes | ¾ cup | 5 lb potatoes | 7 lb potatoes | 12 lb potatoes |
| Stuffing | ½ cup | 9×13 pan | 2 × 9×13 pans | 3 × 9×13 pans |
| Green Beans | 4 oz | 2 lb | 3 lb | 5 lb |
| Gravy | ¼ cup | 2 cups | 3 cups | 5 cups |
| Cranberry Sauce | 2 tbsp | 1 cup | 1.5 cups | 2.5 cups |
| Pie (9-inch) | 1 slice | 1 pie | 1–2 pies | 2–3 pies |
Use this checklist as your master shopping pass. Click items as you buy them, reset the whole list if you change your menu, or print a clean copy for the store.
Great holiday hosting is not about doing everything yourself. It is about making enough deliberate choices early that Christmas Day feels like the reward, not the exam.
Write the full menu, note dietary restrictions, and order the turkey or prime rib before the best options disappear.
A frozen turkey needs roughly one day in the fridge for every 4 to 5 pounds. A 14-pound bird needs 3 to 4 full days.
Backward-plan every dish from serving time and keep the schedule somewhere visible. Guesswork is what creates bottlenecks.
Extra roasting pans, slow cookers, folding chairs, or serving platters are far easier to borrow in advance than improvise on the day.
Cranberry sauce, stuffing, desserts, and gravy base all improve the dinner when they stop competing for attention on Christmas morning.
Do not trust timing alone. Thermometers remove most of the anxiety from turkey, ham, prime rib, salmon, and stuffing.
Under-seasoning is one of the most common holiday mistakes. Taste the sauces, season the vegetables, and salt each layer on purpose.
Ask guests to bring a dessert, appetizer, or bottle. Christmas dinner is a team project, and the host deserves to be in the room too.