5 Tech Tricks That Make My Thanksgiving as Easy as Pumpkin Pie


If you’re hosting for Thanksgiving, you’re likely already too busy to worry much about new technology. The secret of the right smart home devices is how they can save you stress and time without making things more complicated.

To demonstrate, here’s how I use everyday smart home technology to handle Thanksgiving get-togethers with more peace of mind. You don’t have to add anything extra to your cooking routine or upgrade to pricey new appliances for these tricks.

Note: If you do want more smart cooking technology, visit our guides for air fryers, smart kitchen tools, smart scales and smart ovens.


Don’t miss any of our unbiased tech content and lab-based reviews. Add CNET as a preferred Google source.


1. Voice command timers

an Echo Show 8 screen on a brown counter, showing timers.

A smart display can do far more than just timers — but it’s so handy!

Tyler Lacoma/CNET

When juggling multiple timers in the kitchen, I love the ability to tell Siri or Alexa to set independent timers for me so I don’t have to try keeping track of everything in the oven or in my head. I know using a voice assistant for mere timers sounds like overkill, but if you already have a device listening for commands, you’ll see how useful those timers can be. I can also set reminders for specific times, like “Hey Google, remind me to check the turkey in two hours.”

I prefer my smart display for this (currently the Amazon Echo Show 11, which I’m testing) since I get visual countdowns, but any smart speaker can also work.

2. Giving lights a warmer hue

Philips Hue LED globe lights closeup with warm lighting.

You can adjust most smart bulbs to gentler colors or dimmer light.

Philips Hue

I have both smart standard bulbs and smart LED floodlights in and around my hosting areas at home. For a lengthy event like Thanksgiving, I use my light apps to adjust the color or color temperature to a lower, warmer orange. It’s easier on everyone’s eyes and will work even better as evening sets in and things get darker. Plus I can keep the lights above the kitchen bright for cooking as necessary.

3. Phone-controlled speaker volume

A long rectangular white Sonos Arc soundbar sits on a wooden console table below a TV next to a pair of white Sonos Ace headphones.

Smart speakers let you control them from afar.

David Carnoy/CNET

TVs often get turned up during Thanksgiving — which is fun, but can be distracting for conversations or impede family announcements, especially in smaller homes. I have a smart soundbar with big sounds for sports that I can also control with my phone or a quick voice command to Alexa. Believe me, that comes in handy when I need a few moments of quiet to say something or calm things down. Many home theater speakers or smart speakers that you can connect to TVs (like the Echo Studio 2025 have this capability.

4. Smart temperature operation

Nest Thermostat on wall showing temps and blue sky graphic.

Nest’s thermostat is pretty but the real advantage is the savings inside. 

Tyler Lacoma/CNET

When you’re cooking all day, your home can grow a lot hotter than normal. With my smart thermostat, I can adjust the temperature on the fly, bumping it off its schedule and down a few degrees so it doesn’t make things worse, or even dropping it to switch my heat pump to cooling mode and lowering the temperature. If people complain about it being chilly after sunset, I can likewise raise temperatures again (and lock the thermostat so no one can manually mess with it). These controls work via app or voice command, no matter what I may be doing.

5. Automatic air quality monitoring

a white SwitchBot CO2 meter screen on a counter in front of potted plants.

SwitchBot’s comprehensive air monitoring solution works in any part of your home.

Tyler Lacoma/CNET

Another issue all that cooking brings, similar to indoor heaters and fireplaces, is a lot of inside air pollution. I have a handy air quality monitor I can set up near the kitchen that keeps an eye on temperature, humidity and carbon dioxide. If levels start getting really high, it’s time to turn on fans, my air purifier, and maybe crack open a window or two. That benefits everyone’s health and comfort.

Thanksgiving is only one day out of the year, but home tech helps out year-round. For more ways you can prepare your home for events, take a look at my guides to the best smart locks and the top video doorbells for your porch. 





Source link

  • Related Posts

    Apple reportedly axed its planned AI health coach

    Apple is no longer launching an AI service that can “replicate” a doctor and act as a personal health coach, according to Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. The company has reportedly scaled…

    Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for Feb. 9 #1696

    Looking for the most recent Wordle answer? Click here for today’s Wordle hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Mini Crossword, Connections, Connections: Sports…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Auston Matthews touches down ready to savour 2026 Olympic experience

    Apple reportedly axed its planned AI health coach

    Apple reportedly axed its planned AI health coach

    Taxi Driver still feels disturbingly contemporary half a century later

    Taxi Driver still feels disturbingly contemporary half a century later

    Ukraine war must become ‘untenable’ for Russia, Zelenskyy says after latest strikes

    Ukraine war must become ‘untenable’ for Russia, Zelenskyy says after latest strikes

    From AI investment to GDP growth: An ecosystem view

    Portugal elects Socialist Party’s Seguro as president in landslide | Elections News

    Portugal elects Socialist Party’s Seguro as president in landslide | Elections News