Skip the turkey and serve a shareable main like ham, pot roast, salmon, stuffed squash, or a rich vegetarian bake.
If you’re over turkey, you’re not alone. Sometimes you want a new centerpiece. Sometimes you’re feeding a smaller crew. Sometimes you’ve got guests who don’t eat poultry. Good news: a turkey-free Thanksgiving can still feel cozy, generous, and “holiday” in all the ways that count.
The trick is simple: pick one main dish that carries the plate, then build the rest of the meal around it. When the centerpiece is solid, everything else falls into place—mashed potatoes, gravy, salad, rolls, a sweet side, and that pie you’ve been thinking about since October.
This article gives you practical main-dish options, how to match them to your group, and a plan that keeps your kitchen calm. You’ll end up with a table that feels full, even with no turkey in sight.
Choose a centerpiece that fits your crew
Start with three questions. Answer them fast. Then move on.
- How many people are eating? A roast or ham handles a crowd. A fish or vegetarian bake suits a smaller table.
- Do you need leftovers? If “leftovers” is half the fun, choose something that reheats well like pot roast, pork shoulder, or a baked pasta.
- How much oven space do you have? A braise can go in a Dutch oven while sides rotate in. A sheet-pan salmon leaves room for everything else.
Then decide what kind of vibe you want:
- Classic and meaty: ham, prime rib, pot roast
- Coastal and lighter: salmon, baked cod, seafood stew
- Plant-forward: stuffed squash, mushroom wellington, lentil loaf
- Comfort-first: baked ziti, lasagna, chicken-and-biscuit casserole
Thanksgiving mains besides turkey that feel classic
If you want the meal to feel traditional, pick a roast, a ham, or a slow braise. These are the “carving board” mains that give people the same satisfaction as turkey, with less fuss in some cases.
Glazed ham that stays juicy
Ham is a holiday cheat code. It’s already cooked in many cases, so you’re warming it and adding flavor, not wrestling raw poultry. For a good result, warm it gently, then glaze near the end so the sugar doesn’t scorch.
- Score the fat in a diamond pattern.
- Warm low and slow, covered for most of the time.
- Brush on glaze during the final stretch so it turns sticky, not burnt.
Ham pairs well with tangy sides like mustard greens, roasted Brussels sprouts, or a sharp apple salad. It also loves sweet sides—sweet potatoes, squash, cranberry sauce.
Pot roast with gravy built in
Pot roast is friendly to new cooks and busy hosts. It tastes better after a long simmer, it forgives timing slips, and it makes its own gravy. Use chuck roast, sear it well, then braise with onions, carrots, and a little stock.
Want a “holiday” note without making it fussy? Add a splash of balsamic vinegar, a spoon of tomato paste, and a few sprigs of thyme or rosemary. Then let time do the work.
Prime rib for a wow moment
Prime rib feels special the second it hits the table. If you’ve got the budget and want a big payoff, this is your move. Keep seasoning simple: salt, pepper, garlic, and herbs. Let it rest after roasting so juices stay in the meat when you slice.
Food safety is part of hosting, even on a holiday. If you’re serving any meat, use a thermometer and follow a trusted temperature chart like the FSIS safe temperature chart so you’re not guessing.
Pork shoulder that feeds everyone
Pork shoulder is made for crowds. Roast it covered for tenderness, then uncover near the end to brown. Slice it thick or pull it into chunks. Serve with pan juices and a bright sauce on the side—chimichurri, apple cider onions, or a simple vinegar slaw.
What Can I Make For Thanksgiving Besides Turkey?
Here are main dishes that work on a Thanksgiving table, even when turkey is off the menu. Think of these as “pick one, then build around it.” If you want, you can pair a smaller meat main with a vegetarian main so everyone feels taken care of.
Seafood mains that still feel festive
Seafood makes the meal feel lighter without feeling skimpy. It also frees you from turkey timing. Pick one of these depending on how many people you’re feeding.
Whole side of salmon with citrus and herbs
This one looks dramatic and takes less effort than it seems. Roast a large salmon filet on a sheet pan with lemon slices, olive oil, and fresh herbs. Serve with a yogurt-dill sauce or a quick mustard vinaigrette. It’s fast, it slices clean, and it leaves oven time for sides.
Seafood stew or chowder as the centerpiece
A big pot on the stove is a stress reducer. Make a tomato-based seafood stew with shrimp, fish, and clams, or a creamy chowder with potatoes and corn. Put bread on the table and let people build their bowls. It feels generous and warm.
Vegetarian mains that hold their own
A good vegetarian centerpiece shouldn’t feel like “just a side.” It needs structure, deep flavor, and a sliceable or scoopable serving style. These deliver.
Stuffed squash with wild rice and mushrooms
Roast halved squash until tender, then fill with a mix of wild rice, sautéed mushrooms, toasted nuts, and herbs. Finish with a drizzle of browned butter or a tahini-lemon sauce. It’s sweet, savory, and looks great on a platter.
Mushroom wellington with a crisp crust
This is a strong pick when you want a “center of the table” feel. Make a dense mushroom filling, wrap it in puff pastry, and bake until deep golden. Slice at the table like a roast. Pair with gravy or a red wine mushroom sauce.
Baked pasta that feels like a holiday hug
Lasagna, baked ziti, or a creamy baked mac-and-cheese can be the main dish, not a backup plan. Add a big salad and roasted vegetables, and you’re done. Bonus: baked pasta reheats well and makes the next-day meal easy.
When you plan for leftovers, store them safely. For fridge and freezer timing, use a reliable reference like FSIS leftovers and food safety, then label containers with the date so nothing gets forgotten behind the milk.
Match the main dish to your schedule
A Thanksgiving win is less about fancy recipes and more about timing. If you want a calmer day, pick a main that either:
- cooks mostly hands-off (braises, pork shoulder, ham), or
- finishes fast at the end (salmon, steak, baked pasta), or
- can be made ahead and reheated without turning sad (pot roast, lasagna, stuffed squash filling).
Then plan your sides around oven space. If your main is on the stove, your oven is free for casseroles and roasting. If your main owns the oven, lean on stovetop sides like mashed potatoes, sautéed green beans, glazed carrots, or a quick pan gravy.
Table of turkey-free main dish options
This table is meant to help you pick fast. Choose the main that matches your people, your kitchen, and your mood.
| Main dish | Best fit | Prep notes |
|---|---|---|
| Glazed ham | Crowds, big leftovers | Warm gently; glaze late; slices serve fast |
| Pot roast | New cooks, cozy tables | Sear first; braise long; gravy comes with it |
| Prime rib | Big occasion feel | Salt ahead; roast; rest well before carving |
| Pork shoulder | Feeding 8–16 people | Long roast; uncover to brown; serve sliced or pulled |
| Sheet-pan salmon | Smaller groups, lighter meal | Quick roast; sauce on side; easy portioning |
| Seafood stew | Stove-first kitchens | Make broth ahead; add seafood near the end |
| Stuffed squash | Vegetarian centerpiece | Cook filling early; roast squash day-of; assemble and warm |
| Mushroom wellington | Slice-and-serve vegetarian | Dry the filling well; chill before baking for clean slices |
| Lasagna or baked ziti | Make-ahead hosting | Assemble a day early; bake or reheat while sides finish |
Build a full Thanksgiving plate without turkey
Once the main is chosen, the rest is just good hosting math: one starchy side, one green side, one bright side, and one sauce. That’s a plate that tastes balanced and looks full.
Starchy sides that play nice with any main
- Mashed potatoes: the universal peace treaty
- Roasted sweet potatoes: sweet, caramelized edges
- Rice pilaf: a great match for seafood and vegetarian mains
- Buttery rolls: store-bought is fine; warm them and brush with butter
Green sides that keep the meal from feeling heavy
- Green beans: sauté with garlic and lemon, finish with toasted almonds
- Brussels sprouts: roast hard for crisp edges, toss with balsamic
- Big salad: use a sharp dressing and crunchy bits like pepitas
One bright, sharp thing
Thanksgiving plates love contrast. A tangy element keeps rich mains from feeling sleepy.
- Cranberry sauce: add orange zest for fragrance
- Pickled onions: quick-pickle in vinegar and sugar, chill
- Apple slaw: thin-sliced apples with cabbage and a cider dressing
Sauces that make everything taste intentional
You don’t need turkey drippings to make gravy-style comfort. Try one of these:
- Mushroom gravy: works with pot roast, pork, mashed potatoes, and vegetarian mains
- Pan sauce: for steak or salmon, built from browned bits and a splash of stock
- Herb butter: melts over fish, vegetables, and rolls
If you’re planning leftovers for the next couple of days, storage rules matter. In Canada, Health Canada has a clear one-page visual on storing leftovers that’s easy to follow when you’re packing containers during cleanup.
Make-ahead moves that save your sanity
Make-ahead cooking is what separates “busy but fun” from “why did I do this to myself.” The goal is fewer moving parts on the actual day. You want the day-of tasks to be reheating, finishing, and serving.
Great make-ahead mains
- Pot roast: tastes better after resting; reheat in its juices
- Lasagna or baked ziti: assemble early; bake when guests arrive
- Stuffed squash filling: cook the filling early, roast squash later
- Ham: glaze can be mixed early; ham warms while sides cook
Make-ahead sides that still taste fresh
- Cranberry sauce: holds for days and gets better chilled
- Salad components: wash greens, prep toppings, mix dressing
- Mashed potatoes: make early, reheat with a splash of milk and butter
Label what you make ahead. Date it. Then you can relax. If you want a simple tool that helps with storage windows, the FoodKeeper app is handy for fridge and freezer timing.
Table for a simple cook-and-serve timeline
Use this timeline as a template, then swap in your own dishes. It’s built to keep the last hour calm and predictable.
| When | What to do | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2 days before | Shop for shelf-stable items and prep sauces | Make cranberry sauce; mix dry rubs; label containers |
| 1 day before | Cook make-ahead mains and assemble casseroles | Chill covered; set serving platters out if space allows |
| Morning of | Prep vegetables and set a serving plan | Wash greens; chop aromatics; set a burner and oven map |
| 3 hours before | Start the main if it’s a long roast or braise | Keep it covered; rotate sides later |
| 90 minutes before | Roast vegetables and warm casseroles | Use foil to hold dishes warm without drying |
| 45 minutes before | Finish sauces, mash potatoes, warm rolls | Keep lids on; stir once in a while |
| 15 minutes before | Rest roast meats or plate the main | Resting gives cleaner slices and juicier servings |
| After eating | Pack leftovers and cool safely | Portion into shallow containers so they chill faster |
Easy menu pairings to copy
If you want the whole thing decided in one minute, steal a menu. These combos are built so flavors match and the cooking rhythm stays manageable.
Ham menu
- Glazed ham
- Mashed potatoes
- Roasted Brussels sprouts
- Cranberry sauce
- Sharp salad with apples
Pot roast menu
- Pot roast with carrots and onions
- Mashed potatoes or buttered noodles
- Green beans with lemon
- Pickled onions
- Warm rolls
Salmon menu
- Sheet-pan salmon with lemon and herbs
- Rice pilaf
- Roasted squash or carrots
- Big green salad
- Simple yogurt-dill sauce
Vegetarian menu
- Stuffed squash or mushroom wellington
- Garlic mashed potatoes with mushroom gravy
- Roasted green beans or Brussels sprouts
- Cranberry-orange relish
- Crunchy salad with nuts
Host with less stress and better leftovers
A turkey-free Thanksgiving doesn’t need a speech. It just needs a good main, a smart plan, and food that tastes like you meant it. Pick a centerpiece that matches your day. Cook what you can early. Keep the last hour simple.
Then do yourself a favor: pack leftovers while the kitchen is still warm and you’re already standing there. Chill them promptly, label them, and you’ll thank yourself tomorrow.
References & Sources
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Safe Minimum Internal Temperature Chart.”Temperature targets for cooking meats and other foods with a thermometer.
- USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS).“Leftovers and Food Safety.”Storage windows and safe thawing guidance for cooked leftovers.
- FoodSafety.gov.“FoodKeeper App.”Tool for checking storage times to reduce waste and keep food safe.
- Health Canada.“Storing leftovers.”Fridge and freezer storage timing guidance presented in an infographic.