Thanksgiving brings together three integral parts of American life: food, family and football.

The fourth Thursday of November features a trio of games this year as millions of people will pile up their plates with mashed potatoes, gravy, stuffing and cranberry sauce to watch the Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, Dallas Cowboys, Kansas City Chiefs, Baltimore Ravens and Cincinnati Bengals play on national television.

Advertisement

This year will see the Thanksgiving debuts of two-time NFL MVP quarterbacks Patrick Mahomes and Lamar Jackson. Stars like Ja’Marr Chase and Kyle Hamilton will make their debuts as well, while other Thanksgiving regulars are back again, such as Micah Parsons, Jahmyr Gibbs and CeeDee Lamb.

While there are many stars on the field for the NFL on Thanksgiving, there’s a star on the dinner plate as well: turkey.

Or, for the brave of stomach, Turducken.

Thanks to one legendary NFL broadcaster, the dish local to Louisiana has notoriety throughout the country. It’s not for the faint of stomach to handle on Thanksgiving, though. What exactly is turducken and how did it get linked to the NFL? Here’s what to know.

1 / 12

From ‘Butt Fumbles’ to Barry Sanders: NFL’s Most unforgettable Thanksgiving moments

What is turducken?

Turducken’s true origins are unknown but the dish is most commonly associated with Louisiana. New Orleans-based chef Paul Prudhomme is considered the first to popularize it at his restaurant, K-Paul’s Louisiana Kitchen, in the French Quarter. His 2007 cookbook “Chef Paul Prodhomme’s Always Cooking!” includes a very detailed recipe for preparing it.

Advertisement

A turducken consists of three types of poultry: turkey, duck and chicken, hence the name. To prepare the dish, all three are deboned, and the chicken is stuffed inside the duck, which is then stuffed inside the turkey. It’s seasoned and can be cooked similarly to a traditional turkey.

The legs and wings of the turkey are still included, though, so it gives the appearance of a regular turkey. Since it is deboned, it’s easier to carve compared to a traditional turkey.

John Madden and turducken

On Dec. 1, 1996, Madden and his longtime broadcast partner Pat Summerall were calling a Week 14 matchup between the then-St. Louis Rams and the New Orleans Saints. Madden mentioned late in the first half that he’s still eating Thanksgiving leftovers but, with the game in New Orleans, was just introduced to a local dish that he called “the triducken.”

Advertisement

After a commercial break for the two-minute warning, he corrected himself.

“Here’s my turducken,” he said. “It’s turkey — you got the turkey on the outside. Then you stuff the turkey with the duck, then you stuff the duck with the chicken. ‘Tur’ for turkey. ‘Duck’ for duck. And ‘-en’ for chicken. Then you just mix it all up. I’ve been eating it all day.”

A year later, Madden and Summerall had one in the booth. With the Lions holding a 21-point lead in the fourth quarter, Madden broke down how to carve the turducken on national television.

“You just kinda cut this right down the middle and then you cut sideways and you get a little turkey, a little chicken, and a little duck,” Madden said.

Advertisement

It wasn’t the only bird in the booth, though. Madden also had a six-legged turkey to be given to the MVP of the game he was calling. That delicacy came about when Cowboys running back Emmitt Smith complained in 1990 that he didn’t have turkey legs to give to his offensive linemen. A year later, a Texas barbecue owner made sure that didn’t happen again and sent Madden a six-legged turkey.

Madden took time to explain that one as well.

“Now over there, we have the turkey,” Madden said. “You have one leg, two legs, three legs, four legs, five legs, sixth leg, so six of these legs or one of these legs or two of these six legs are going to be given to someone.”

Since his passing in 2021, the NFL has honored Madden’s memory on Thanksgiving. Each network will select a Madden Thanksgiving MVP for their game and the winner will receive a $10,000 donation to be given to a youth or high school football program in their name.

Advertisement

This year, the coin for the Cowboys-Chiefs game will feature Madden’s silhouette on one side for “heads” and the turducken on the other side for “tails” to be used at the coin toss.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What is Turducken? How the Thanksgiving dish ties to NFL football

Share.