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What's everyone cooking for Christmas?   Go to last post Go to last unread
#1 Posted : Saturday, December 20, 2014 8:08:50 PM(UTC)

Hi all,


I'm not hosting any meals this festive season, so I'm hoping to live vicariously through all of you. What are you planning on cooking for Christmas or other holiday celebrations?


Cheers, and happy holidays!


j_h

#2 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 4:51:35 AM(UTC)

It's just the two of us this Christmas, so I am trying to pare things back a bit! What we've done the last couple of years where it was just us, is on one day we've had canapes and nibbly things with drinks, and on the next day we've had a roast of something, so we get to feast on all the good stuff without actually exploding!


 


So on Christmas eve we're having seafoody canapes (crab salad on pea pancakes, scallops, cucumber salad and taramalasalata in pastry cups, smoked salmon & horseradish cream on rye crackers) with champagne, and on Christmas Day we're having a roast goose crown with a celeriac and potato gratin, and a winter salad of persimmon & chicory. I'm not making a dessert because I'd have to eat it all, but I have some nice chocolates if I want something sweet.

#3 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 1:51:30 PM(UTC)

Since losing mom, brother's family moving to the east coast, it's been just the two of us most Christmas now.  This year, we have been invited over to our neighbor's house and each of us are bringing side dishes.  I am going to bring sweet potato and blue cheese au gratin and Asian inspired salads.  There will be few vegetarians in the group, so my contributions will be vegetarian friendly. 


In the past, we've always made cioppino when mom was still alive.  It was our family tradition.  Now, after the Christmas I get busy making osechi cooking which is Japanese New Years Day food that should last about 4-5 days. 

#4 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 1:53:09 PM(UTC)

I wish some of us posting here live nearby so we can cook together.  I know we will have a wonderful time doing so. 

#6 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 2:32:57 PM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: Rinshin Go to Quoted Post


I wish some of us posting here live nearby so we can cook together.  I know we will have a wonderful time doing so. 



Rinshin, I would love to cook with you!  Unfortunately, since you live in Northern California and I live in Washington DC, it's not likely.  Which brings me to another issue: I really wish that EYB would focus on the 'social' aspect of the website and enable private messaging between members.  There have been so many times when I would have liked to contact another member privately to ask a question or to offer a suggestion, but alas it's not possible.  I'd love to know what other members live in the Washington DC area and might like to get together to cook or just talk about recipes, cookbooks, and food in general. 

#5 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 3:49:27 PM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: Rinshin Go to Quoted Post


I wish some of us posting here live nearby so we can cook together.  I know we will have a wonderful time doing so. 



 


Don't know about that... I'd love to eat with you, but I am a territorial bitch in the kitchen. My mother is pretty much the only person I can cook with harmoniously (you should ask my husband, I am a cow when he cooks!) ;)


But how amazing would an EYB potluck be?

#8 Posted : Sunday, December 21, 2014 5:07:34 PM(UTC)

hahaha, that's funny Foodycat.  I did a stint after my regular work hours as a chef assistant at a local culinary school.  That really prepared me to work around people in the kitchen in a small space.  Lots of culinary egos with all of us, but we were able to work around that and enjoyed the class full of particpants and after they were gone, eating the food together. 


I was a forum host until few years ago and my co-host came all the way from Canberra Australia to spend few days with us.  We had a great time cooking together. 

#9 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 12:28:13 PM(UTC)
I love the idea of a local EYB cooking group or just a potluck every so often. Several friends and I have talked about the fact that our generation of working women have so few opportunities or time to just hang out together doing things that we all enjoy. For the past two days I was cooking and baking for a Christmas open house we had at our home yesterday. Luckily my daughter is visiting for the holidays and a good friend volunteered to come cook with us. We totaled my kitchen with flour all over (but the labrador took charge of keeping the floor clean), made lots of wonderful appetizers, cookies and mini-cakes, and had a lovely time together telling stories and laughing all day long. The party was a great success and everyone got to take a box of cookies and cakes home with them so we won't end up being bad and eating too many sweets.
#10 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 4:30:35 PM(UTC)

We've recently developed a tradition of having roast beef for Christmas dinner.  My middle son insists on "cheesy potatoes" - aka Au Gratin Potatoes and we'll round out the dinner with broccoli and dinner rolls.  It's not particularly fancy but we all look forward to it.

#11 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 4:45:12 PM(UTC)

To an outsider it looks as though Americans have much more varied Christmas meals than they do for Thanksgiving. Do you think that is true? 

#12 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 6:26:53 PM(UTC)

While nearly all American eat turkey for Thanksgiving, Christmas meals are varied.  Some religions and cultures have traditional meals while others have roast beef, ham or even another turkey.

#13 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 6:32:40 PM(UTC)

I think that's very true.  Thanksgiving is turkey and maybe ham but I know some who opt for duck.  I don't like duck so for me it's turkey on Thansgiving.


 


Here is something that has caught on in Japan.  Christimas means chicken (from the American influence) and since most people do not have full kitchen ie ovens, KFC is very, very popular for Christmas meals.  Some wealthier families or those who have bigger kitchens go for whole roast chicken and I've even heard some people even roasting turkey too although that's an exception.  Christmas also always mean strawberry cream cake. 

#14 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 6:40:17 PM(UTC)

Here at Cucina bc, tradition is the key to success it seems.  Despite my personal desire to take a new path, the majority has spoken and I'm told we must have all the usual suspects on the table. That said, our Christmas dinner will be:


 



  • Roasted Ontario Turkey (fresh vs frozen)

  • Creamy roasted garlic mashed potatoes

  • Maple-cider roasted sweet potatoes

  • Brown butter glazed carrots

  • Roasted Brussels sprouts with chestnuts

  • Dressing (vs stuffing) 

  • Gravy

  • Cranberry-orange sauce


...and you can bet there will be plenty of Pinot Noir flowing to wash it all down.


 


I don't love turkey FWIW.

#7 Posted : Monday, December 22, 2014 9:55:00 PM(UTC)
Originally Posted by: Laura Go to Quoted Post
<p></p>
<p>Rinshin, I would love to cook with you! &nbsp;Unfortunately, since you live in Northern California and I live in Washington DC, it's not likely. &nbsp;Which brings me to another issue: I really wish that EYB would focus on the 'social' aspect of the website and enable private messaging between members. &nbsp;There have been so many times when I would have liked to contact another member privately to ask a question or to offer a suggestion, but alas it's not possible. &nbsp;I'd love to know what other members live in the Washington DC area and might like to get together to cook or just talk about recipes, cookbooks, and food in general.&nbsp;</p>


I live in DC...and would love to! Except that I am about to spend the next 4 months in Mexico City. But definitely when I return.....

Happy holidays to all....
#15 Posted : Tuesday, December 23, 2014 4:05:36 AM(UTC)

I like the idea of tradition, but we haven't developed one yet! Except the idea of splitting the meal over a couple of days. I grew up in Australia, in a largely vegetarian family, so Christmas was never ham and turkey for us. My husband grew up in South Africa, and Christmas for them seems to have always been two roast animals on the table, whether pork & beef or lamb & chicken it was always two, and a ham.


Together we've had goose, beef and turkey breast, but haven't settled on one thing as *our* Christmas meal.

#16 Posted : Wednesday, December 24, 2014 10:10:43 AM(UTC)
Our family tradition has gotten me out of lots of work- Christmas Eve we eat out at our neighborhood Italian restaurant then drive around looking at lights. For Christmas breakfast I make either baked french toast from Pannetone (courtesy of said Italian restaurant ) or 'Cowboy Breakfast'- a savory baked french toast with sausage, garlic, scallions and cheddar. I believe it is a Bon Appetit recipe. Over the years I have been able to make it vegetarian as the girls have cycled through that phase- this year real meat but no pork.
For Christmas dinner, we just nosh on appetizers, saving me from spending the whole day cooking. This year most will be purchased but I'll make the devilled ham, and use my pickled figs and plums on the cheese plate .
#17 Posted : Wednesday, December 24, 2014 11:45:26 AM(UTC)

That sounds lovely, Barb!


 


Merry Christmas, everyone!

#18 Posted : Wednesday, December 24, 2014 1:26:25 PM(UTC)

What you all wrote about your own traditions sound so wonderful.   Merry Christmas to all of you!

#19 Posted : Friday, December 26, 2014 7:51:28 PM(UTC)

Hope everyone's Christmas was festive and peaceful!


We did a mini-Thanksgiving because the s.o. missed it so -- we were away and attended a vegetarian family Thanksgiving with a pretty non-traditional menu.  So for the two of us last night it was roast chicken (with thyme and lemon), mashed potatoes with mushroom gravy, steamed Brussels sprouts, and dressing (bread-rice-onions-celery-apples-currants-herbs). Gift dark chocolates for dessert.


The Christmas menu can be anything at all.  Growing up, it was often roast beef, with scalloped or au gratin potatoes, Harvard beets, and Sally Lunns (yeast rolls); more times than not, the meal began with oyster stew.  During Christmas and into the new year, there'd always be a ham (this is western Virginia; the ham in question is the cured, very salty kind, to be eaten in small amounts with biscuits), This year a relative sent us a package of very thinly sliced Virginia ham that's perfect for us -- enough to enjoy over the week as a pre-eggnog snack, the tastes bringing back my childhood at holiday time, but not so much that it would overwhelm us, like a real ham.  Our hams threatened to overwhelm my parents and me back then, too, but when that happened my mother would cut up the remains and freeze them. She'd use them in the summer when cooking green beans or greens from my father's garden.


A dessert tradition was plum pudding, acquired from our church bazaar early in December and ritually soaked in brandy.  One year we even set it aflame successfully!

#20 Posted : Sunday, December 28, 2014 9:18:16 PM(UTC)

My four children were home for Christmas with various amours.  I cannot vary much from our traditions or I will be lynched!  


Turkey a la Gordon Ramsay with sage and mushroom stuffing and gravy


Mashed roasted garlic potatoes


Maple yams


Roasted root vegetables (Martha Stewart)


Cauliflower and cheese sauce


Green bean casserole (no canned soup!)


Hot mushroom salad


Home made bread rolls


Sea foam lime mold (I curse the day I introduced that onto a menu!)


Trifle and plum pudding


I cooked for four days as my husband's birthday is on Dec 23.  I got into the groove and my feet stopped hurting about day 4 !

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