View Full Version : Christmas Dinner
Hosakawa Tito
12-24-2009, 00:14
So what all y'all having for Christmas dinner? Many families have traditional stuff & special family favorites & treats.
We're having a smaller gathering than usual this year. Just the wife and I, my two step children, my mother & one of my sisters. We're all kinda tired of turkey and ham, so we decided on prime rib with mashed potatoes & gravy, squash, green bean casserole. Pumpkin & mince-meat pie for dessert.
Due to diet restrictions I haven't had red meat in awhile. I'm salivating just thinking about that juicy prime rib.:elephant:
pevergreen
12-24-2009, 00:21
Lunch is the order of the day here.
Prawns, ham, chicken besides that: whatever we want.
Dinner is leftovers from lunch.
Centurion1
12-24-2009, 01:03
depends ive had prime rib, ham, turkey, duck, goose.
im not even sure what it is this time.
Turkey this year. I made my Traditional Cranberry sauce (The secret ingredient is aniseed), Mince Pies and the Marzipan for the Christmas Cake.
Major Robert Dump
12-24-2009, 07:09
The old guard is finally getting to old to call the shots, but despite my lobbying I have yet to get a deep fried turkey on the menu. For XMAs we usually do a big roast beef and some turkey, complete with my grams secret chicken noodle recipe which she still wont give anyone. I think I may get it this year.
No idea. We're visiting relatives for the day, and whatever they cook up, I feel certain it will be awful. The wife, who shall remain unnamed, thinks she can cook. (She can't.) We will gulp down the food as quickly as possible, smile, and claim it's great.
Of course, the children have no filter, so if one of them yells that the food is yucky, there's nothing to be done.
Wish me luck.
Hooahguy
12-24-2009, 08:30
roasted chicken, sweet potato, potatoe kugel, fresh bread, um and anything else thats a normal Sabbath dinner.
enjoy christmas dinner everyone!
Lamb Roast, Homemade Wedding Soup, Ravioli with Homemade Marinara Sauce, Homemade Eggplant with Marinara Sauce, and Brussels Sprouts
I cannot wait.
Pannonian
12-24-2009, 12:23
No idea. We're visiting relatives for the day, and whatever they cook up, I feel certain it will be awful. The wife, who shall remain unnamed, thinks she can cook. (She can't.) We will gulp down the food as quickly as possible, smile, and claim it's great.
Of course, the children have no filter, so if one of them yells that the food is yucky, there's nothing to be done.
Wish me luck.
You should try hotpot (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_pot). Slice the meat and vegetables up (make sure there's a good selection, at least a dozen different foodstuffs) as if to prepare them for stir fry. Put them in a deep sieve which you dip into the boiling water to cook. Serve with different sauces - salty and hot work especially well, but anything strong flavoured will do. Everyone gets a say in what goes in in each round of cooking.
Sheep's (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinnekj%C3%B8tt) for dinner.
Major Robert Dump
12-25-2009, 04:14
I Don't get Christmas dinner this year. I am snowed in, blizzard in Oklahoma City, car stuck in a snow drift 1/4 mile from house, having to get dressed up as a soldier and go help people who are retarded enough to keep driving.
The 50 car pileup in Edmond was amusing to see, however.
KukriKhan
12-25-2009, 14:15
I Don't get Christmas dinner this year. I am snowed in, blizzard in Oklahoma City, car stuck in a snow drift 1/4 mile from house, having to get dressed up as a soldier and go help people who are retarded enough to keep driving.
The 50 car pileup in Edmond was amusing to see, however.
Maybe you'll get lucky and the Mess Hall will bring chow out to you. Merry Christmas, GI; thanks for taking care of unwise motorists. :thumbsup:
Cod roasted in Olive Oil with garlic and roasted potatoes....delicious....that´s christmas eve dinner.
the lunch on christmas day is roasted lamb....christmas day dinner is normally leftovers.
Shame on me. Shame! On! Me!
The Christmas Dinner was fantastic, flawless, perfect. The relative's wife (who shall remain nameless) pulled it off with style and skill. And here I was thinking I would have to gulp my chow down like a prairie dog chewing on an acidic bug. Nothing could have been further from the truth.
The reality is that I had to lie down on the couch after stuffing myself past the bounds of reason and sanity. The food was that good.
GeneralHankerchief
12-26-2009, 03:35
We had both Thanksgiving and Christmas at my house this year, so Mama GH was burnt out on turkey. Instead, we did Italian for Christmas and I promptly stuffed myself with as much spaghetti, ravioli, meatballs, and chicken parmasian as my stomach could, well... stomach. I'm going to be lobbying for this to become a new tradition from here on out. :yes:
Hosakawa Tito
12-26-2009, 03:39
Here's hoping Major Dump gets some hot chow delivered for his good deeds.
Here's wishing I could pop over to Ronin's for leftovers. The only time I ever tried to make lamb I did something wrong and it tasted like a goat smells.
Here's wondering what Lemur had.
Our prime rib was excellent, the first time I ever prepared it. Like Lemur I over ate, and it was touch and go in the bathroom for about half an hour. I guess my stomach isn't used to such a rich meal and making a pig out of myself didn't help. I managed to keep it down...barely.:sweatdrop:
I had the traditional turkey, gotta say though (and this isnt just christmas dinner) a good Sunday dinner is one of the best meals you can eat, imo, tasty and fairly nutritious if u have a mix of veg too. I know I'm not a nutritionist but I thought I'd slip it in. There was loads of turkey & we only got the crown.
To be precised I had Turkey, mashed potatoes, roasties (roasted potatoes? :egypt: ) carrots, sprouts (:sick:), stuffing, yorkshire pudding, peas, gravy....
didn't have pigs in blankets though, that was the only letdown :egypt:
And if you aren't sure by what I mean by pigs in blankets you are welcome to take the term literally. :yes:
Hosakawa Tito
12-26-2009, 03:58
I had the traditional turkey, gotta say though (and this isnt just christmas dinner) a good Sunday dinner is one of the best meals you can eat, imo, tasty and fairly nutritious if u have a mix of veg too. I know I'm not a nutritionist but I thought I'd slip it in. There was loads of turkey & we only got the crown.
To be precised I had Turkey, mashed potatoes, roasties (roasted potatoes? :egypt: ) carrots, sprouts (:sick:), stuffing, yorkshire pudding, peas, gravy....
didn't have pigs in blankets though, that was the only letdown :egypt:
And if you aren't sure by what I mean by pigs in blankets you are welcome to take the term literally. :yes:
Galumpkis, mmmm yummy.:2thumbsup:
Galumpkis
I just typed that in and it came up with a page full of recipes for cabbage rolls. :speechless:
Hosakawa Tito
12-26-2009, 04:12
I just typed that in and it came up with a page full of recipes for cabbage rolls. :speechless:
Yes. A lovely dish of Polish origin. Stuffed savory ground pork rolled in cabbage leaves usually, but I've also had the same filling stuffed in sweet green peppers topped with the same sweet and sour tomato sauce.
Big_John
12-26-2009, 05:02
I Don't get Christmas dinner this year. I am snowed in, blizzard in Oklahoma City, car stuck in a snow drift 1/4 mile from house, having to get dressed up as a soldier and go help people who are retarded enough to keep driving.
The 50 car pileup in Edmond was amusing to see, however.
misfortune in edmond gives me the warm fuzzies.
oh and...
ham, roast, mashed potatoes, sweet potato pie, cranberry-apple pie, nog, some kind of rum drink thing, pfeffernüsse from trader joes.
and salad supposedly.
Here's wondering what Lemur had.
The main course was ham, but saying "ham" doesn't really do it justice. The cook made absolutely everything from scratch, for starters. Every fudge stick, cookie, roll, side-dish, everything. Mrs. Lemur, who is a pro chef, was so impressed she started taking pics. So why should I tell you when I can show you?
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas1.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas2.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas3.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas4.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas5.jpg
Pannonian
12-26-2009, 09:20
We had both Thanksgiving and Christmas at my house this year, so Mama GH was burnt out on turkey. Instead, we did Italian for Christmas and I promptly stuffed myself with as much spaghetti, ravioli, meatballs, and chicken parmasian as my stomach could, well... stomach. I'm going to be lobbying for this to become a new tradition from here on out. :yes:
When the pilgrims arrived in the new world, they found life hard, and would probably not have survived the first winter were it not for the native Indians, who supplied them with ungodly amounts of Italian food. Therefore there is an American tradition of celebrating Thanksgiving with spaghetti, ravioli, and all eaty things Italian.
BTW, can you check the history of the pilgrims to see if the Indians supplied them with beer as well?
Hosakawa Tito
12-26-2009, 13:44
The main course was ham, but saying "ham" doesn't really do it justice. The cook made absolutely everything from scratch, for starters. Every fudge stick, cookie, roll, side-dish, everything. Mrs. Lemur, who is a pro chef, was so impressed she started taking pics. So why should I tell you when I can show you?
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas1.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas2.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas3.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas4.jpg https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v489/Lemurmania/Xmas5.jpg
Oh my! That is heavenly, and beautifully presented too. I think my blood sugar count just spiked 400 points.
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