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I was a military brat who grew up in Germany, so many of my traditions

hark to the Old Country. We celebrate Christmas on the Eve with a

family gathering, and dinner is a bit unusual. Mom makes a huge

special-ordered Buffalo fish. Yech. Tastes like a bottom-feeder and

probably is. Carp can be substituted. LOL. The herb gravy with

parslied potatoes is delicious though, even if the fish isn't exactly

my favorite (what's wrong with some nice trout?) I've changed the

tradition at my house, but would like to hear some other C. Eve meals

first. What do you all have?

Dani

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I'm psyched to NOT be traveling to Nebraska for the first Christmas since

marriage--we

decided to start alternating the years we head to see the in-laws. But last

night my husband

and I talked about having our own little family tradition, and it was actually

kind of hard to

come up with a plan that competes with the massive 2 day in-law celebration!

We're going to

dress up and attend mass on Christmas eve, and have a fancy dinner, just the 4

of us (3 and

6 year old) and I recently found a chicken cherries jubilee (flambe) recipe that

I am going to

attempt, with a few NT modifications. The entree seems festive and not too

difficult...here's

a link. Appreciate any tips or suggestions:

http://www.recipesource.com/main-dishes/crockpot/03/rec0314.html

I figure they'll remember the year Mom set dinner on fire...

I've changed the

> tradition at my house, but would like to hear some other C. Eve meals

> first. What do you all have?

>

> Dani

>

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A few years ago we started to do fondu (cheese then chocolate) for supper.

Later on when

we open gifts we have REAL eggnog (yum) and stollen bread. My dd especially

loves the

fondu. My dh puts up with it. The eggnog and stollen tradition go back a long

time in my

family.

Lynn

would like to hear some other C. Eve meals

> first. What do you all have?

>

> Dani

>

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Hi Dani,

Christmas is a big deal at our house and all the meals are important, lol.

Our biggest most important meal is breakfast. We always have sausage bisquits

and gravy (a once a year treat), scrambled eggs for those of us who can have

them, fresh squeezed OJ, fresh fruit, and of course coffee with cream and either

a home baked muffin or coffee cake to snack on during prezzies being unwrapped

which happens before breakfast. (i know way too much sugar but like I said it

is a once a year treat).

Unwrapping prezzies takes a long time in our house even though there is only

four people and even though each of us only gets three gifts (A gold,

frankincense and a myhr) because only one person unwraps at a time, and we also

do devotionals so the meaning of the gold frank. and mryh gifts are understood.

So the muffins are essential to tide grumbly bellies over until the large

breakfast can be mixed.

I love Christmas traditions and we have at least a dozen.

Carol F

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Hmmm... is buffalo fish what they eat in Germany? Not sure how that

tastes like.

I grew up in Sweden and we celebrate on Christmas Eve with a

wonderful dinner of meatballs in brown cream gravy with

lingonberries, delicious " prinskorvar " (small sausages that come

twined together, made of very salty finely ground pork--think hot dog

consistency but smoother), " rodbetssallad " (pickled creamy beet

salad), baked ham with a mustard glaze along with " dopp i grytan " (my

mom was always the only one in our family to eat this but she

insisted on making it every year--it's the juices from the ham that

you dip semi-sweet milk bread into- " limpa " , too mushy for my taste

but the gravy's good of course), Jansson's Temptation (a gratin of

potatoes, onion, Swedish anchovies, cream and bread crumbs--truly

tempting!!) and probably some other goodies that I can't remember.

My mouth is watering by now!! Hope one of these years I'll be

ambitious enough to revive this tradition. Here we have dinner at my

mother-in-law's house and it's far from the same thing (think

microwaved this and that, and mushy, icky ham:(). Maybe once we get a

house we'll host and I'll make a nice Swedish Christmas dinner.

fina.

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No, I think they use carp in Germany, but the buffalo fish is very

similar and more readily available here. I love the " kräuter " sauce

that goes over the potatoes best. Your dinner sounds luscious, too!

But then, I'm an ethnic explorer at heart. Is there not way you could

orchestrate a dinner one year, and have others help you and the big

house? They might be glad for the change and the help. It's not a

very European approach, I know, but Americans tend to be a little more

flexible trying something different on occasion. Just a thought!

I love the fondue, idea, too. That's our traditional New Year's Eve

feast which attracts more friends and family than Christmas. I swear,

everyone's in-laws suddenly appear for a visit and get schlepped over

to my folks house! LOL.

Dani

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

> Hmmm... is buffalo fish what they eat in Germany? Not sure how that

> tastes like.

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