Christmas is here! Merry Christmas to one and all – may you have a happy and joyous Christmas day. This year I thought it would be nice to see what we are all eating on Christmas day – so I am going to start the ball rolling by telling you what people in various nations will be eating, and you can then use the comments to tell us what you will be eating. This will be a nice way for us to all get to know the nicer details of Christmas as enjoyed by Listversers! The source for this list is Wikipedia, but there are many sites around on the net containing details of international dishes, so be sure to have a look around – they can be quite fascinating.
In the areas of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (e.g., Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania), an elaborate and ritualised meal of twelve meatless dishes is served on the Eve of Christmas (24th December). This is because the pre-Christmas season is a time of fasting, which is broken on Christmas Day. As is typical of Slavic cultures, great pains are taken to honour the spirits of deceased relatives, including setting a place and dishing out food for them.
A traditional Christmas meal in the Czech Republic is fried carp and potato salad. This tradition started after excessive increase of fishpond cultivation in the Baroque era. Many households also prepare a great variety of special Christmas biscuits to offer to Christmas visitors. These preparations take place many days and weeks prior to the feast and take a long time to decorate with the remainder usually ending up on a Christmas tree as a decoration.
On Christmas Eve (Noche Buena), the extended family join together for a succulent dinner around the turkey, stuffed with ground beef and peanuts and decorated with fresh slices of pineapple and cherries; roast potatoes and apple sauce. The desserts include marzipan and assorted bowls with raisins, almonds and the panettone, accompanied by a cup of thick hot chocolate. At midnight, a toast is made, and good wishes and hugs are exchanged. A designated person runs to put Child Jesus in the Nativity scene. Then, the family members take their seat in the dinning room while singing Christmas Carols.
Joulupöytä (translated “Christmas table”) is the name of the traditional food board served at Christmas in Finland, similar to the Swedish smörgåsbord. It contains many different dishes, most of them typical for the season. The main dish is usually a large Christmas ham, which is eaten with mustard or bread along with the other dishes. Fish is also served (often lutefisk and gravlax), and with the ham there are also laatikot, casseroles with liver and raisins, as well as potatoes, rice, and carrots. The traditional Christmas beverage is either alcoholic or non-alcoholic mulled wine (glögi in Finnish).
In English Canada, Christmas dinner is similar to that of its colonial ancestor, England, as well as to its neighbour the United States. Traditional Christmas dinner features turkey with stuffing (dressing), mashed potatoes, gravy, cranberry sauce, vegetables and plum pudding for dessert. Eggnog, a milk-based punch that is often infused with alcohol, is also very popular around the holiday season. Other Christmas items include butter tarts and shortbread, which are traditionally baked before the holidays and served to visiting friends, at various Christmas and New Year parties, as well as on Christmas day.
Other ethnic communities may continue to use old world traditions as well. For example, a Ukrainian Canadian family may eat a traditional Christmas meal of 12 meatless dishes, or may simply add perogies to a westernized meal. In French Canada, traditions may be more like those of France.
In Denmark the traditional Christmas meal served on December 24th consists of either roasted pork, goose or duck. This is served along with potatoes, red cabbage and plenty of gravy. It is followed with a dessert of rice pudding, often with an almond hidden inside, the lucky finder of which is entitled to a present referred to as the almond gift. Traditional Christmas drinks are Gløgg (pictured above) and traditional Christmas beers, specially brewed for the season. These usually have a high alcohol percentage.
Christmas dinner in The Netherlands is a bit different from customs in neighbouring countries. One typical Dutch tradition is that of ‘gourmet’. This is an evening long event where small groups of people sit together around a gourmet-set and use their own little frying pan to cook and season their own food in very small portions. The host has prepared finely chopped vegetables and different types of meats, fish and prawns/shrimps. Everything is accompanied by different salads, fruits and sauces. The origin of gourmet lies most likely in the former Dutch colony Indonesia.
The Dutch also enjoy more traditional Christmas-dinners, like roast beef, duck, rabbit, pheasant or roasted or glazed ham. This generally served with different types of vegetables, potatoes and salads. In recent years, traditions from Anglo-Saxon countries have become increasingly popular, most notably the UK-style turkey. Pictured above is the Dutch version of Santa Claus.
In France and some other French-speaking countries, a réveillon is a long dinner, and possibly party, held on the evenings preceding Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. The name of this dinner is based on the word réveil (meaning “waking”), because participation involves staying awake until midnight and beyond. Common dishes include goose or duck liver (foie gras); oysters; smoked salmon; lobster; roasted duck, goose or turkey with chestnuts and stuffing; and, for dessert, a traditional christmas cake called “La Buche de Noel” (Christmas log), a cream cake that comes in different flavours (chocolate, hazelnut…) and which has the shape of a log. The beverage served is traditionally Champagne. In Provence, the tradition of the 13 desserts is followed: 13 desserts are served, almost invariably including: pompe à l’huile (a flavoured bread), dates, etc.
The Christmas customs of New Zealand are largely identical to the United Kingdom due to its status as a former British colony, the ethnic Caucasian population being almost exclusively British or Irish in descent, and the still pervasive British cultural influence on the country courtesy of constant movements of people between New Zealand and the UK. Christmas dinner consists of roast turkey, roast vegetables, stuffing (or dressing, as it is known in North America), cranberry sauce. Alternatively, roast ham may be offered as a main course and lamb is also very popular.
One important exception from British dinner is the absence of goose, as it is not raised in New Zealand and the government prohibits importing foreign meat products. Desserts are almost without exception mince pies or Christmas pudding (or plum pudding) and brandy butter, inherited from British practices. Enjoyment of non-British Christmas foods, such as stollen from Germany, Bûche de Noël from France, and panettone from Italy, was virtually unheard of in New Zealand until the late 1990s and is still extremely rare today. Due to New Zealanders celebrating Christmas in the summer, it is also common to barbecue, and eat seasonal fruit such as cherries and strawberries. Pictured above is a Pavlova – a typical New Zealand meringue based pudding often served at Christmas (and throughout the year).
Christmas dinner in the United Kingdom (and Commonwealth nations) is usually eaten in the afternoon. Dinner in the United Kingdom and in Ireland usually consists of roast turkey or roast goose (although duck is common alternatives depending on the number of diners), sometimes with ham or, to a lesser extent, pork; roast potatoes; vegetables (usually boiled or steamed), particularly brussels sprouts; stuffing; chipolatas or pigs in blankets; cranberry sauce; with dessert of Christmas pudding (or plum pudding) and brandy butter.
In England, the evolution of the main course into turkey did not take place for years, or even centuries. At first, in Medieval England, the main course was either a peacock or a boar, the boar usually the mainstay. After the French Jesuits imported the turkey into Great Britain, it became the main course in the 1700s.
A common tradition in the United Kingdom is to use the turkey’s wishbone to make a wish. Two people pull opposite ends of the wishbone until it breaks, with the person holding the larger fragment of the bone making a wish. The dessert of a British Christmas Dinner is almost always Christmas Pudding. Mince pies, a Christmas Cake or a Yule Log may also be eaten.
Many Christmas customs in the United States have been adopted from those in the United Kingdom, although customs from other European countries are also found. Accordingly, the mainstays of the English table are also found in the United States: cranberry sauce, turkey, stuffing or dressing, corn, squash, and green beans are common. Dessert often reflects the ethnic background of the participants, but examples include pumpkin pie (pictured above), marzipan, pfeffernusse, sugar cookies, panettone, fruitcake, apple pie, carrot cake, oreo pie, and mince pie. Ham or roast beef is often served instead of turkey, particularly since turkey is the mainstay at dinner for the American holiday of Thanksgiving in November.
Regional meals vary: Hawaii has Turkey teriyaki, Virginia has oysters and ham pie, and the Upper Midwest includes dishes from the predominately Scandinavian backgrounds such as lutefisk and mashed rutabaga or turnip. In the Southwest, especially New Mexico, a traditional Christmas dinner might include posole, tamales, empanaditas (mincemeat turnovers) and biscochitos.
This article is licensed under the GFDL because it contains verbatim quotes from the Wikipedia article Christmas Dinner.
Contributor: JFrater






























Why is the U.S #1? This list is TOOOO AMERICANIZED! You Americans always think you are the center the the earth!
lol, just kidding!
Merry CHRISTmas everyone
I’m a bit disappointed that Italy wasn’t included, but still I’ll use this nice list to borrow some new dishes for next year’s holidays! My family’s from the centre of Italy and from the Eve to Boxing Day it’s one big gorging-fest. Only today, I’ve had tortellini cooked in meat broth, said boiled meat served with fruit mustard, a pork roast in walnut sauce, with peas and bacon on the side. I made a russian appetizer of blini, though, to go with several pickles and patés. For dessert we had panettone, assorted chocolates and cookies and frozen vodka! Can’t wait for tomorrow when I’m cooking pumpkin and sausage risotto. Then I’ll probably have a paper thin mint chocolate and explode.
Merry Christmas!!!!
Oh yeah, and happy holidays everyone!
I wonder how accurate these are since when i read the dutch one it was so deliciously inaccurate i actually laughed out loud.
58. AutoFocus -
thank you.
uh..what are the 8 days btw? i did know about the oil. just never sure about the dates.
jfrater: did you see Andri above? Iceland! Did you even consider them, they have leafbread and Santa Claus’ named after trolls! Infinitely more exciting than ‘…in number 1 spot, we have AMERICA with turkey and vegetables’!
So we have a list named ‘Top 10 Christmas Dinners of the World’, with AMERICA conveniently in first place, when Christianity and its associated Christmas is the largest religion in the world and celeberated in all of North and Latin America, most of Europe, Oceania, a big chunk of Africa and parts of Asia. And the best you could come up with is ‘USA with turkey and vegetables’!
Though I suppose that American companies are the ones who advertise on the site, so you do need to appease them somehow. A bit of journalistic integrity please Mr Frater!
Merry Christmas everyone! I’m new to the list and I absolutely love it. Actually I’m addicted to to the list. Anyway, I’m making ham, potatoes and other things. But before eating I’ll be meeting a friend, my son and brother at a local tavern for quite a few Holiday drinks before coming back for food. Enjoy the season!
Happy Holidays! We’re having a canadian dinner tonight, with some scottish influences from my grandparents, which includes stuffing (not dressing), sweet potato and brussel sprouts! And naturally, there is turkey!
67. Hifo -
or should i say Grinch? i’ve already said and J has concurred this is NOT a ranked list.
as for the other garbage you’re spewing…way to go w/ the holiday spirit dude! NOT!
now can we please keep this at least civil and on topic if not the slighest bit in the holiday spirit?
thank you.
and MERRY CHRISTMAS!!
In New Zealand, I’d say it’s more common to have a BBQ on the beach or at a Bach (holiday home) than a full-on UK traditional dinner. Perhaps the expats do?
There are quite a lot of Germans and Dutch here as well (the Dutch named this country!).
We do salmon and risotto. No particular reason, just started doing it a few years ago and its become the norm.
I was wondering if the Czechs would make it onto this list! We live in Prague, but we are American. Before I came home for Christmas, we were walking by these huge bins in the street full of live fish. You pick one out, they snag it with a net, and kill and clean it for you. Kinda made me feel bad for the carp! Maybe worse for the guys who stand by the bins covered in fish guts all day.
Merry Christmas everyone, hope its been a lovely day
Merry Christmas! Great list, wonderful how even though the meals are all different, the theme is the same; Sharing what you love best to eat with those you love most.
This year I decided to have Roast Beef and Yorkshire pudding for Christmas dinner and save the turkey, stuffing, (I’m Canadian btw, my Mom and Grandparents called it dressing, I use either), and cranberry sauce for boxing day. That way, not only do I get to relax on Christmas day (much less fuss), we get to eat awesome leftovers for the rest of the week.
PS: Jamie that meringue dessert looks awesome. It’s not too sickly sweet is it?
Thanks cyn!
In our home in California, we will be having Lamb, mashed mix of potatoes & yams, green beans, salad and corn meal muffins with jalapeno, corn and pimentos. For dessert, a 3 layer vanilla cake with chocolate frosting.
MERRY CHRISTMAS
…just as a side-note, Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, would consider themselves part of Central Europe and not Eastern Europe any longer. In fact, calling anyone from those countries is some-what derogatory because it is a reminder of USSR oppression.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitteleuropa
http://www.central2013.eu/
Sorry for being technical… I just know people from those countries who would be insulted :-/
All looks nice. I might have to go and raid the fridge now.
I’m from New Hampshire, in the USA.
Our Christmas dinner is a snack dinner eaten in front of the fire. We have assorted meats, cheeses, breads, crackers, vegetables, and dips (not to mention eggnog and coffee). It’s delicious (and fairly unique)!
-Tim
74. Blizard
Blizard : sorry about not mentioning bunuelos but I don’t know how to put the ~.
As for the care packages I remember my mom and I bought a bunch of mexican candy like tamarindo, chamoy, and cajeta for some care packages I was making while I was part of a community service project and to a friend of mine that’s in a tour. I could always send you some.
Thank you…Merry Christmas Blizard!
In Korea, Christmas is too recent an importation (essential only since the end of the Korean war) for any special traditions to have arisen. They also seem not to celebrate mid-winter (the big celebration is lunar new year, in late Jan/early Feb) so there are no “Yuletide” customs to graft onto Christmas. The Irish priest at church mentioned that for some years there was a curfew in Korea. This was lifted for Christmas eve, to allow the rapidly growing Christian population to attend services. Young couples took advantage of the lift to spend a night out together.
Yesterday (now – it’s 26th here already) I had a western-style buffet lunch and a Chinese banquet dinner with two different sets of my wife’s friends.
BTW in how many countries is 26th Dec also a public holiday? I grew up with the confusingly named “Boxing Day”. In any case, school broke/breaks up in mid-Dec at the latest, and most businessness now shut down between Christmas and New Year. So it is a bit of a shock to the system to be sitting at school for one day’s worth of school (no classes, fortunately) before we go on vacation. Even vacation isn’t what I’m used to. I get one week off, then two weeks of vacation classes, then three weeks off for “winter vacation”, then one week of classes in early Feb, then another couple of weeks off for “spring vacation”.
Two years ago, during my first Dec in Korea, I spent the whole of Dec telling people that it’s summer in Australia, and Christmas is hot, I mean hot. Then on 26th Dec I had to tell them that it sort of like, well, snowed in parts of Australia on Christmas day.
BTW isn’t pavlova an Australian recipe????
Happy holiday(s) of whatever variety to all ListUniversers. Happy anniversary of a sort to me, too. My diary for last year records that 26th Dec was the first day I visited this site.
Merry Xmas…
but..
I’m glad to see Peruvian Dinner here.. as a Peruvian
that picture is definitely NOT from a Peruvian Xmas dinner xDDD.. if you want I’ll send you a pic from Xmas dinner I ate yesterday ;D
Cyn,
The Jewish religious tradition tells it took a full eight days for the Maccabee Jewish Rebels to clean an purify the Temple after it has been violated and ransacked by the Hellenistic empire’s soldiers. The eight day holiday is in honor of their victory, and in remembrance the renewing of worship at the Temple.
Modern research, though, claims the eight day span is simply a remnant of an older Pagan winter festival, celebrated at the turning point of Winter. Very much like what is claimed to be the origans of Christmas, by the way (celebrated eight days before New-Year’s).
Well, I’m from the south in the U.S. and we are eating Turkey and dressing, made from cornbread, not stuffing. We also cooked ham, green beans, creamed corn, mashed potatoes, deviled eggs, giblet gravy, and rolls. For dessert, we made hershey chocolate pie, butterfinger cake, and homemade cheesecake. But, we usually have a pumpkin pie or pecan pie most years, just not this time. We’ll be eating ham sandwiches and turkey sandwiches for a week, lol. It just isn’t Christmas without my mom’s dressing. I would die if I couldn’t have that. It’s delicious, my favorite part.
i ate ham and corn and green bean casserole (where was green bean casserole on this list) and scalloped potatoes ! yay ! happy birthday sir isaac newton !
merry christmas LVers.
the pic in number 5 for the netherlands reminds me a david sedaris bit about christmas over there called “6-8 black men”. it is hysterical.
I’m sorry but I’m form Holland and it;s tru I just did that to night:)
But the picture… isend abound charismas that’s siterklaas and santa claus means kerstman so…I know its easy to mix up but I just that I mention it:)
Since when do Americans call stuffing “dressing”?
French Canadians also celebrate réveillon, with their own traditional foods, most particularly tortiere, a 2 crust pie filled with a mixture of spiced ground pork, mashed potatoes and onions. Dessert should include pate a sucre, (sugar pie), which is basically pecan pie, without all those annoying pecans.
Merry Christmas, all!
83. AutoFocus -
thank you.
i’m now an atheist but was raised w/ Christian traditions in ‘the Bible Belt’. so i’ve not had much experience w/ the Jewish traditions.
its interesting how many ancient rites or practices affect so many so called modern religions. i am more familiar w/ the ancient roots of Christianity. i’ve just always looked at from that perspective instead of the Jewish aspect of even Christianity.
the history is so much richer than modern practice even allows for. really kinda sad.
thanks again.
btw-
enjoying reading about the food even if it makes me hungry.
thanx guys.
I’ve been alone all week. I had Triscuits.
Blizard (46) Are you really a Marine in Iraq? God bless. Post an address. I’s love to send a care package. Semper Fi!!
On the north american dressing note I live in the USA and grew up in Pittsburgh PA and there dressing is just something used on a salad it wasn’t until I moved to Columbia SC did I hear of it being used to refer to stuffing. So yea I think it is just a southern thing In the USA not all of North America.
92. Vera Lynn -
might i suggest exchanging info. at forums via the private messaging system there?
either of you might not want your email listed publicly here.
and a care package is a good idea.
i’m sure those are welcome any time of year.
Haha…I just called my uncle who at the moment is living in France and just mentioned many of the plates listed under France and he made my mouth water.
Here, I just order Chinese take out.
we have pizza every year on christmas eve, just my close family, then christmas day have a big ham and assorted foods with the extended family. then we all go to my grandmothers where we sing happy birthday to jesus haha. everyone marrying into the family thinks we’re nuts.
Picture number 3 for New Zealand – yes it is a pavlova invented in Australia in honour of the ballerina Anna Pavlov. NOT invented in New Zealand!!!
i’m a French Canadian, and the traditional dishes aren’t alike the French from France at all o_o it’s turkey with stuffing, tourtière ( like described above ) or meat pie ( pâté de viande ) which is basically the same as tourtière only with diced potatoes added. There’s also the traditional cold buffet ( sandwiches, salads, sliced meat, cheeses and etc ) that people either do themselves or buy from grocery stores.
Thanks for the list Jamie! And Merry Christmas to everyone!
We ate a lot of food this year…as usual. I live in the U.S. so our cuisine is a mix of different things, like the list suggests.
We had a few German type dishes served since my mother’s side of the family is from Germany.
We also at a huge rib roast, corn pudding, broccoli casserole, hash brown casserole, a cauliflower, broccoli and carrot pizza (served cold and made with cream cheese spread on biscuit dough) and a huge assortment of breads and bite sized sweets and cookies.
The main dessert was the ever popular bread pudding with bourbon butter sauce. This is making me hungry just typing it out.
Thank god for left-overs!
Once again I hope that everyone had a wonderful Christmas! Cheers!
i was going to complain about calling eggnog a milk-based punch, but i then realized i had absolutely no way to describe it.
Although I am American, I do think that the UK/Canada/USA/NZ could probably be grouped as one. Italy should definitely be on here.
Well, Christmas is an enormous meal for us. As Italian-Americans…Christmas Eve is usually an assortment of pastas and seafood. This year we had linguine with clam sauce, various types of shrimp, salmon, calamari, a mushroom/artichoke/mozzerella casserole, and garlic bread.
Christmas Day is the tour de force: After appetizers of various cheeses, sliced meats, crackers, pretzels, chips, shrimp, stromboli, pizza rustica, and more…we had baked manicotti (or lasagna or stuffed shells), varieties of italian sausages, lard bread, italian bread, eggplant parmesean, stuffed artichokes, stuffed mushrooms, corn souffle, sweet mashed potatoes, potato croquettes, green beans, turkey with gravy, spiral ham, and bacon-wrapped fillet mignon.
Dessert is never ending with all sorts of cookies, baked fruit dishes, italian pastries, ice cream, cheesecake, ricotta pie, fruit, etc. etc.
And, by the way, none of us are overweight
I hope all who celebrate had a wonderful Christmas and for those who don’t, I wish you happy holidays for your respective faiths and traditions.
I always thought making a wish with the wishbone from a turkey was practiced in the US too, we do that in Canada as well. Maybe it’s just a commonwealth thing…
Ooooh yeah… I almost forgot… Lechon (roasted suckling pig), spaghetti, and Pancit (noodles) never go out of style here in the Philippines! hehehe…
Yeah we have ham seeing as we already had turkey on Thanksgiving. Also my dad makes a Chrisapsimo Greek Christmas Bread.
We had our traditional ham sandwiches, shrimp and cheese and crackers on Christmas Eve and a fat turkey with augraten taters and green bean hot dish!!!! YUM!!!!
Merry Christmas everyone!!
Cyn (94)
I didn’t mean an address like that. I meant where would one send a package to in Iraq.
Vera-
http://www.carepackageproject.com/carepkg-project-needs-list.asp
http://anyairman.com/
Those might help a bit.
Ah, lutefisk with a dash of lemon juice and some lemon-pepper… that’s what I’m talkin’bout!
Our family has snagged up a few tidbits from all over the world when it comes to holiday dinners. I guess the melting-pot of America is more evident at the supper table than any place else I know.
Oh, and I made savory bacon-bit biscuits this year to go with the ham gravy…. mmmm mmmm mmmm.
Happy Holidays!
107. Vera Lynn
think
108. downhighway61
handled part of that.
and i know what you meant. still i don’t think this comment section is appropriate for exchanging any type of address. as for what dhw61 suggested, pretty sure that’s more generic.
posting specific contact info., personal info. of any kind or your own blog link here is just not a good idea. nor is it on any website. especially when we have the means to interact privately and more securely at our forums.
i do think care packages to our military is an excellent idea. there are many such programs that are set up to handle things securely and you’ll know it goes where its supposed to go. as for specific people…that is a more personal process that could be handled how i’ve recommended.
Hey everybody!
Although I REALLY appreciate the thought of getting a care package, even one that’s made specially for me, I don’t think I would get it in time; I’m about to leave this dump in a couple of weeks.
I do recommend however to send care packages for my fellow service members doing their time here, with the designated programs established above, at least. It is a great feeling getting something from back home and it makes everybody’s day when they get something in the mail.
I’m sorry I didn’t read these comments sooner but I have been a little busy.
I hope i don’t come out sounding ungrateful because I really want to give my “thanks” to everybody supporting the troops, even if you don’t support the cause, because without support we could not do what we do and remain sane.
Thanks again! Happy Holidays!
I found something really cool online too…
If you don’t believe in Santa, this might make you change your mind. Santa is after all in the XMAS spirit.
http://www.snopes.com/holidays/christmas/truce.asp
I’m from New Mexico, and our holiday meals usually consist of enchiladas, tamales, among a variety of other mexican foods. My family occasionally throws in steaks, ham, and turkey in the mix, but it’s mainly mexican food!
Although, I missed out on Christmas dinner yesterday due to the fact that I went snowboarding. So my meal consisted of pizza, bean burritos, and lots of booze!
#72 Nelia: Since carp killing is traditional, we have no problem with it. Well, except for the local Greenpeace, but who cares about them
81. astraya: As you know, my mum was Australian. We had Pavlova at every Christmas, Easter, birthday, brunch, “strawberries are on sale”, et al. We could have had it every day and never tire of it. I wish I had some right now.
Merry belated Christmas
I’m surprised Germany hasn’t been mentioned more often. We have amazing Christmas traditions, although the food varies by region. I live in eastern Germany and we ate this salmon casserole dish, potatoes (a must at every German meal), soup, and tiramisu. My mum is an excellent cook. Christmas time in Germany is unlike any other part of the world.
Netherlands looks lovely.
Christmas is such a wonderful time of year.
After 49 years i have had my first ever xmas dinner without turkey. Although my pork chops and sweet potatoes was v nice.
I wish the Americans didn’t turn everything into a competition though.
I forgot to mention above that i am in the US right now!