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What time should you gobble? 🦃 The great Thanksgiving dinner debate!

Happy Thanksgiving (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston - All rights reserved.)

Ah, Thanksgiving. A day for gratitude, family bonding, and stuffing ourselves silly with turkey, mashed potatoes, and approximately 17 types of pie. But the real debate isn’t about pumpkin vs. pecan—it’s about timing. When is the perfect time to enjoy your Thanksgiving feast? Let’s break it down.

Noon to 2 PM: The “Early Bird Special”

This slot is for those who treat Thanksgiving like a brunch buffet at a Vegas casino. Sure, it’s ambitious, but it comes with perks. You get to eat, nap, and wake up in time to start the whole process over with leftovers.

Pros: You’re eating before the “hanger” sets in, as in the dreaded combination of hunger and anger, and you have all day to justify the extra pie slices.

Cons: Turkey coma hits mid-football game, and no one needs that much cranberry sauce on an empty stomach.

2 to 4 PM: The “Goldilocks Zone”

The most popular choice—and for good reason. It’s late enough to avoid turning breakfast into an afterthought but early enough to still call it “dinner” without raising eyebrows.

Pros: Post-meal cleanup finishes before dark, and you still get a solid evening to contemplate why your Aunt insists on bringing Jell-O salad every year.

Cons: Good luck dodging the dreaded 3 PM food coma just as you’re tasked with handwashing grandma’s heirloom china.

4 to 6 PM: The “Prime Time Feast”

This slot screams sophistication. It’s dinner at a reasonable hour, just late enough to work up a real appetite after all those “taste tests” in the kitchen.

Pros: The lighting is perfect for food pics (hello, golden hour!), and everyone’s finally arrived—even that cousin who’s always “running late.”

Cons: The wait. The snacks are gone. The kids are climbing the walls, and Grandpa’s threatening to eat a raw drumstick if you don’t carve the turkey already.

After 6 PM: The “Night Owl Nosh”

Who even eats this late on turkey day? Apparently, people who don’t take Thanksgiving seriously. This is less of a “dinner” and more of a “why are we doing this a few hours before at bedtime?” situation.

Pros: More time for appetizers, and it’s socially acceptable to pour a second (or third) glass of wine during the meal.

Cons: Eating this late might mean skipping dessert—or worse, rationing it. Nobody wants a pie shortage because the turkey took too long.

So, What’s the Verdict?

The best time to enjoy your Thanksgiving dinner is entirely subjective, much like how you pronounce “pecan” or whether stuffing belongs inside the turkey. It all depends on your family dynamics, stomach capacity, and tolerance for your Great Aunt’s unsolicited life advice.

But if I had to choose? Go for 2 to 4 PM. It’s the sweet spot where you’re not starving, too full, or sneaking leftovers in the dark. And really, isn’t Thanksgiving all about balance? (Just kidding—it’s about pie. So much pie.) Let me know in the poll below which time you enjoy your meal and have a Happy Thanksgiving.

-Brian


About the Author
Brian Perry headshot

Brian is a longtime member of the KPRC team, committed to supporting meaningful stories and initiatives that resonate with the Houston community. He spends most of his time working on the digital and streaming side of click2houston.com and KPRC 2+. Beyond the newsroom, he is deeply involved in pediatric cancer advocacy.