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Posted: 2022-12-21T08:00:04Z | Updated: 2023-11-29T17:35:46Z Here's How Christmas Eve Dinner Looks All Around The World | HuffPost Life

Here's How Christmas Eve Dinner Looks All Around The World

From India to Uganda, here's how cooks around the world bring their own flavors to the holidays.
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Christmas Eve dinners around the world.

While many familiar Christmas traditions originated in Western countries, people from all around the world and from different cultural backgrounds celebrate the holiday with the same spirit of gratitude and togetherness. No matter where, recipes passed on through generations are central to family gatherings. From callaloo to chicken tikka masala, find out what renowned chefs and food influencers around the world are cooking on Christmas Eve.

Mexico 

Martha Ortiz Chapa is the head chef at Tuch de Luna at La Casa de la Playa in Riviera Maya. She was the chef-owner of Dulce Patria, which had been named one of the 50 best restaurants in Latin America and the best restaurant in Mexico City before closing earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic. She has also served as a judge on “Top Chef Mexico,” and in 2020 was named one of the 40 best chefs in the world.

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Courtesy of Martha Ortiz
Martha Ortiz and her turkey in mole.

Our December traditions begin with the Posadas (a religious festival held from Dec. 16-24), which lead the way to the grand celebration of Christmas Eve. During this time, Mexicans hang seven-point-star piñatas (the peaks representing a different capital sin, including gluttony) made with contrasting colored tissue paper and filled with pieces of sugar cane, tejocotes (a fruit), orange wedges, peanuts, candies and sugar-coated almonds. We blindfold the guests, who take turns hitting the piñata until someone breaks it, in celebration of the predominance of virtue and abundance.

On Noche Buena (the night that is good), aka Christmas Eve, I elegantly present these crafts to my guests. I usually use a dark tablecloth as a canvas and decorate it with wooden kitchen utensils, such as grinders, spoons and saucepans, surrounded by colorful flowers. I personalize each guest’s place on their plate with a small piñata, which holds inside a traditional sweet or piece of candy and a message of friendship and love, in the hope that they will take it home with them and, when they break it, the abundance of affection, bonds and the celebration of life will grow.

As a proud Mexican, I begin with traditional dishes such as romeritos (tender sprigs of seepweed) with cactus strips, and mole (made with at least 50 ingredients) seasoned with dried shrimp. I serve a salad called Noche Buena, which is prepared with diced jicama, apple, beet, orange wedges and crunchy peanuts. For main, we have pork leg in spicy pulque marinade. I wash it down with my personal favorite, a punch of tejocotes, tamarind, jicama pieces, piloncillo (a raw form of pure cane sugar), guavas and spices and a touch of hard liquor.

I add the leftover punch to the mother sauce to prepare a fruity mole and serve it with turkey pieces that have a crackling-like crunchy skin. And, if there’s some left over, I make a delicate cheesecake to remember all the flavor of the Posadas days.

With this celebration of classic and modern dishes, I honor my grandmother’s cooking and think about the great wealth of ingredients from Mexico. This is how, surrounded with piñatas and sweet smiles, I wish that each Christmas Eve will become an early memory of tradition, lineage, and my pride of being a female Latin, Mexican chef.

St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands

Julius “The Chef” Jackson is a professional chef, Olympian boxer, community leader and author of the cookbook “My Modern Caribbean Kitchen: 70 Fresh Takes on Island Favorites.” He currently offers private interactive culinary social events through “The Chef’s Cooking Lab” and is the head chef and manager at the nonprofit My Brother’s Workshop Bakery and Café in St. Thomas.

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Courtesy of Julius Jackson
Julius Jackson and his Christmas Eve roast pork.

We have such a melting pot of cultures in the Virgin Islands that we have created our unique mashup. You can see this to be true in the way we celebrate the Christmas season.

It’s very traditional for us to have callaloo as a starter for the Christmas Eve meal. This stew made from okra, spinach and pork is influenced by African cuisine. My personal favorite is the seafood version, which I make with shrimp, conch, lobster and saltfish. The warm green goodness gives me the feeling of the Christmas season on a tropical island.

I also love roasting pork for our Christmas Eve or Christmas Day dinners. This dish came about from our Puerto Rican brothers and sisters that migrated to the U.S. Virgin Islands, and we adapted it within our culture. I generously rub the butt, shoulder or the whole pig down with seasonings and cloves, make incisions into the skin to allow the seasonings to penetrate inside the meat and under the skin. Then, I roast the pork for 5-6 hours until the skin is super crispy. This is one of my all-time favorites dishes because I love the tender and salty meat with the crispy skin.

The guavaberry fruit has also become a major part of our tradition here in the Virgin Islands. The slightly sweet- and tart-tasting fruit that looks like red and purple blueberry comes from our West Indian neighbors. During Christmas time, we consume guavaberry rum or incorporate it into desserts, such as homemade guavaberry tart and guavaberry cheesecake.

After dinner, we carol calypso/quelbe Christmas tunes at home and around our neighborhood, stopping at homes of friends and family members for snacks and rum.

India

Vikas Khanna is an Indian American chef, restaurateur, cookbook author, filmmaker and humanitarian. He grew up in Amritsar, India, served as a judge on “MasterChef India” and received a Michelin star for six consecutive years for his New York restaurant Junoon. He has authored over two dozen books and directed and produced several films.

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Courtesy of Vikas Khanna
Vikas Khanna makes paneer tikka masala for Christmas Eve, but in a smaller appetizer form.

Christmas Eve is celebrated in India with as much fervor as all other religious festivals, especially more so in the northern state of Punjab, where I hail from. For us Punjabis, it is one more occasion to celebrate and feast on good food.

We usually plan an elaborate dinner with near and dear ones (which in Punjab can be a lot of people). My special guests on Christmas Eve are all the elderly grandparents who I look forward to cooking for. Most of the dishes I cook are keeping in mind their palate and preferences, so it’s an Indian-style Christmas dinner. It is also my way of expressing my gratitude towards my grandmother, who was my first culinary teacher.

December yields some of the best farm produce, giving me an array of choices of ingredients. The weather in Punjab is cold this time of the year, so the dishes are served warm and spicy.

I make several dishes using paneer (Indian cottage cheese), because paneer and Punjabis are made for each other. We are a dairy-rich state! So, I make paneer tikka masala for appetizers, stuffed paneer paratha, paneer and mixed vegetables, and a curry. For the meat eaters, I make a chicken version of the same dishes.

Also, instead of the popular regional Punjabi dish, chole bhature, which is served at most festive occasions, I prefer making bo wale kulche, which non-Amritsaris find smelly because the dough is double-fermented, but I find them aromatic and absolutely relish them. Some of these recipes are in my book, “Amritsar — Flavours of the Golden City .”

After a hearty dinner and loads of friendly conversations, it’s time for desserts. The one dessert that is mandatory at my Christmas Eve dinner is whipped fruit cream with fresh seasonal fruits. It reminds me of my childhood when my grandparents would take me and my siblings out for this treat. Making the same dish for my special guests feels like completing the circle.

The happy faces of my guests, especially the grandparents, fill my heart with joy and energize me for the new year ahead.

France 

Herve Palmieri (who goes by Hervé Cuisine) is a Paris-based videographer, food blogger and author of “Easy and Amazing Desserts” and “Easy Aperitifs With Friends.” His YouTube channel featuring cooking tutorials has over 1 million subscribers.

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Courtesy of Herve Palmieri
Herve Palmieri with a Black Forest cake, and French onion soups like the ones he makes on Christmas Eve.

The first thing that comes to mind when I think about Christmas Eve is my family. We all live in Provence in the southeastern part of France. I have one son, two sisters and six nephews and nieces. In France, Christmas is a very special time when families come together, forget, forgive and give. We always try to get together on Christmas Eve, taking turns to either host or rent a place in the Alps or in the national park of Queyras.

Everyone participates with the Christmas Eve meal planning. The kids help prepare puff pastry treats for appetizers that we cut out in Christmas tree shapes and fill with cheese, nuts, honey and raisins. They also like making tapenade (olive paste that’s popular in Provence) and goat cheese mix. Then, we display everything on the table like a buffet so everyone can taste a bit of everything.

Traditionally, we also serve some poultry and several sides. For instance, we would include grilled veggies like glazed carrots and sprouts, pureed parsnips or sweet potatoes with spices. For dessert, we have a tradition to serve two cakes: Black Forest , that I’ve been doing according to my mom’s recipe for years probably since I was 10 years old, and a buche , which is a more traditional recipe often made with chestnut puree and chocolate (or you can make it more exotic with mangoes and coconut).

Both of my parents, who come from Vietnamese and Italian origins, my sisters and I, love to cook or bake. So, for Christmas lunch, we prepare Vietnamese fried spring rolls, a recipe my grandfather passed on to my mother when she was a young girl and needed to help prepare the meals for her family of six children. For Christmas Day dinner, we usually make a typical French onion soup made with yellow or white onions, olive oil, vegetable broth and a crust of melted cheese and croutons with herbs like thyme and rosemary. It is very simple, tasty and supposed to help you cleanse your body after a heavy meal.

Christmas Eve is not all about eating, though. We like to play some group games, like the Wolf, which is a strategy game opposing wolves and villagers that you play in a circle in dim light, even though my father always falls asleep before the end of the game! We also go for a late walk outside in the little village in the Alps called Aiguilles en Queyras, even if it’s freezing, because you know, we do eat more than usual on that night.

Uganda

Sophia Musoki is a Ugandan food writer and food photographer. She is author of “A Kitchen in Uganda,” one of the most notable food blogs in the country, and three e-books, one of which received a Gourmand World Cookbook Award. Musoki also produces and hosts the podcast “Our Food Stories” where Ugandans share food stories.

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Courtesy of Sophia Musoki
Sophia Musoki and her Ugandan fried potatoes.

For my family, Christmas Eve is a time when everyone arrives at my grandparents’ home in Kasese, in western Uganda, from various parts of the country to end the year together. Their home is situated on the edge of one of the many Rwenzori ranges with a dizzying but scenic view. Banana and coffee tree plantations surround the house, giving it a lush green backdrop for our African Christmas.

Christmas Eve is more of a preparation day for me and my family. We have 15-20 people crammed in the small kitchen, which is located about 5 meters away from the main house. Each of us has an assigned task. Older male relatives set up a corner to slaughter a mature goat for the meal, while the female relatives peel potatoes, bananas and yams. In another corner of the kitchen, my cousins, nieces and nephews shell fresh beans to make soup, using beans my aunts bring from either their gardens or the market. I love getting involved in the chopping, cutting, cleaning and slicing of all the condiments like tomatoes, onions, local garlic and garden eggs .

While everyone is busy, my grandmother puts on a big pot of green banana and black beans katogo (a stew of starch and a protein pottage) on fire to simmer for the evening meal.

On Christmas Eve, we also spend some time selecting cookware, such as heavy cast-iron pots for steaming and clay pots for stewing meat and boiling beans. If we don’t have enough, we either go out to the market and purchase some or borrow from generous neighbors.

Aside from cooking, this is also a time for the family to share good news, like the birth of a child, graduation, a wedding anniversary or a baptism. This cheerful atmosphere is filled with children playing hide and seek, which is more fun to do at night and among many people. The adults tell stories of their travels while neighbors drop by occasionally to join in on the conversation. We generally serve visitors fresh fruits. My favorite part of Christmas Eve is the camaraderie of the meal preparation. As we roll into the evening, we leisurely peel, slice and eat fruits like mangoes, sugar cane and jackfruit, which I believe “takes a village” to do. This keeps us occupied until the katogo is served on large shared trays, which is often very late into the night.

Before You Go

Chefs Recommend The Best Non-Perishable Food Gifts
Diaspora Co. Chai Masala(01 of27)
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"Diaspora Co's Chai Masala is one of the best things I've tried recently. It's boldly fragrant, spicy enough to tickle the back of the throat, and just so soothing, too it's the gift of deliciously activated senses." Lukas Volger , author of "Snacks for Dinner "

"Chai masala from Diaspora is life-changing. So is their turmeric, and their aranya black peppercorns. ... [M]ost of their spices have a chance of changing your life." Tamar Adler, chef, food writer and author of the forthcoming cookbook "The Everlasting Meal Cookbook "
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Bjorn Qorn popping kernels(02 of27)
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"I am obsessed with Bjorn PopQorn . It's currently making up about 50% of my diet. Bjorn Qorn's perfect kernels pop into a very, very satisfying-to-eat butterfly shape, and every kernel pops every time! Who doesn't love popcorn? I also love the packagingwhoever designed it has an amazing sense of humor. But I won't spoil the surprise for you... you'll just have to order it to find out." Samin Nosrat , author of "Salt, Fat Acid, Heat " (credit:BjornQorn)
Jos Gourmet tinned fish gift set(03 of27)
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"Love, love, love, the packing of Jos Gourmet tinned fish that are illustrated by Joo Machado. Theyre so beautiful you dont need to wrap them." Odette Williams , chef and author of "Simple Pasta " (credit:Food52)
Haku Japanese Shoyu(04 of27)
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"Haku Japanese Shoyu are beautifully bottled, making them a perfect gift. My favorite flavor is the Black Garlic, which adds a soy flavor without the concentrated salt bomb of normal soy sauce. It's even delicate enough for salad dressings." Tara Lazar, chef and restaurateur behind F10 Hospitality and HIGH-Pie in Oceanside, California (credit:Food52)
Amber River soy sauce(05 of27)
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"This is my favorite soy sauce and its made with native Taiwanese black beans. Its soooo good." Frankie Gaw of Little Fat Boy and author of "First Generation: Recipes from My Taiwanese-American Home " (credit:Yunhai)
Coffee subscription from Trade Coffee Co.(06 of27)
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"I'm gifting the coffee lovers in my life Trade Coffee's three-month subscription service." Cy Nguyen , home cook and founder of Cy Loves Frogs (credit:Trade Coffee Co.)
Jacobsen Salt Co. sea salt slide tins(07 of27)
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"These mini flakey sea salt tins make for a great stocking stuffer I like to carry one with me in my knife kit (or purse) wherever I go." Karen Rosenbloom , chef and content creator (credit:Jacobsen Salt Co.)
California Olive Ranch 100% California extra virgin olive oil(08 of27)
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"I always keep this olive oil in my kitchen at home and we use it in our restaurants as well. It's a great gift for anyone that likes to cook as it's something they'll use everyday." Dan Kluger, chef and owner of Loring Place in New York City (credit:California Olive Ranch)
Mitica Orange Delights(09 of27)
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"My family always gives those weird chocolate oranges that you have to whack to separate the segments. This is the fancy version of that real candied orange dipped in dark chocolate. I eat them all year." Abra Berens , a Michigan-based chef and author of forthcoming "Pulp: A Practical Guide to Cooking with Fruit " (credit:iGourmet)
Grand Noodle colored noodles(10 of27)
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"I love these artisan-made noodles from Korea. [They come] in five flavors and colors and makes a gorgeous gift to anyone who loves food. Handmade by a noodle master, these Korean noodles are not only delicious, but also beautiful, and do not lose their vibrant color even after cooking. I like to keep the preparation simple to really showcase the noodles themselves toss them in flavorful oil (I love small production perilla oil, sesame oil or even French walnut oil), good black pepper and sea salt. Top them with sesame seeds and dried seaweed." Chef Ji Hye Kim of Miss Kim in Ann Arbor, Michigan (credit:Kim'C Market)
Momofuku chili crunch(11 of27)
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"This stuff is quickly becoming my 'I put that shit on everything' sauce. This blend of chilli, garlic, shallots (and more) from the fine folks at Momofuku adds a kick to pretty much anything you'd like. There's also black truffle, hot honey, and extra spicy variants. The hot honey is phenomenal. No bullshit." Chef Reactions, chef and content creator

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"Cuz it's hot fire and ready to coat wings and other things right out of the bottle. I keep the pantry stocked with a ton of hot sauces, and the chicken wing is my favorite cut of meat out there, so naturally I'm a fan of Buffalo sauce. New Orleans makes the best chicken and the best hot sauces I've ever had, and We Dat's is a prime example of New Orleans doing it right." Mason Hereford , author of "Turkey and the Wolf: Flavor Trippin' in New Orleans " (credit:We Dat's)
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"Burlap & Barrel is an NYC-based spice company that sources sustainably grown products directly from small farmers. Their spices are incredibly fragrant and flavorful- some of my favorites are the cured sumac and black urfa chili. I recommend browsing the Gift Collections on their website, where you will find several thoughtfully curated variety boxes. You can also build your own gift set or treat a loved one to a quarterly spice subscription!" Madeline Sperling, executive chef of Zou Zous in New York City (credit:Burlap & Barrel)
Fandango 2022 Olio Nuovo(14 of27)
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"I love this family farm co-owner Caroline always includes a handwritten love note to each customer. Their exquisite olive oil has won 85-plus awards, and rightfully so. There is a limited supply of their Olio Nuovo, harvested by hand and pressed on November 18, 2022! Peppery, green-grassy, delicious." Divya Alter, an Ayurvedic educator, author and chef behind Divyas Kitchen in New York City (credit:Fandango Olive Oil)
La Familia Masa mundle(15 of27)
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"I'm a big fan of gifts in twos, [so I'm also giving my loved ones] a couple of sauce and seasoning kits from Omsom, a wonderful Vietnamese-owned brand. They're affordable and very personalized. Plus, you get to support local businesses and chefs." Cy (credit:Omsom)
Ghetto Gastro OG Stack(17 of27)
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"Pancakes are back on the map in our house thanks to Ghetto Gastro and their Wavy waffle and pancake mix. Paired with their Sovereign Syrup sorghum, Ghetto Gastro created the perfect gift for any ingredient and taste-focused friend or family member. Depending on the day, we like to work in some coconut cream, cashew butter, or banana, and will often go the savory route with a fried egg, basil and finishing oil." Hana Dreiling, baker and founder of Holey Grail Donuts (credit:Ghetto Gastro)
The Chinese Essentials pantry collection from The Mala Market(18 of27)
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Chile Crunch(19 of27)
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Truffle Lovers gift set from Truff(20 of27)
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"If you love hot sauce and truffles and you haven't tried Truff products out yet, you are absolutely missing out. This kit comes with a delicious truffle hot sauce, truffle oil, and truffle pasta sauce. It's the best combo to make a spicy and savory pasta dish, or just use them on eggs, sandwiches, pasta, and more." Remi Cruz of Cooking With Remi (credit:Truff)
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Trader Joe's Italian Bomba Hot Pepper Sauce(22 of27)
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"I also love Trader Joe's Chile Bomba , fermented Sicilian chiles that are a perfect addition to penne alla vodka." Lazar (credit:Amazon)
Umami Spice by Chris Cosentino(23 of27)
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Maldon smoked sea salt flakes(24 of27)
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Kettl Soba Cha tea(25 of27)
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Selo Olive olive oil(26 of27)
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