Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

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potato with shredded meat on the side

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Christmas Eve around the world

December 23, 2013 • In Entertaining, Christmas, Meat, Fish

For a large number of countries the big culinary focus and main celebrations of the festive season are actually held on Christmas Eve.

As early as the 6th December, celebrations begin in the European and Germanic cultures where gifts and homemade gingerbread are given on St Nicholas’ Day, whilst for a large proportion of countries the big celebrations are actually held on Christmas Eve.

In Spain, Latin America, and even in the Philippines, you will probably mark “Nochebuena” or “the Good Night” on Christmas Eve with a traditional meal with your family. In Central and Eastern Europe, particularly in Poland, Lithuania, Russia and the Ukraine, a twelve-course meal is traditionally served on Christmas Eve, ahead of opening gifts and attending midnight mass. In Eastern Europe, the Christmas Eve meal is always meatless, usually beginning with beetroot soup or perhaps mushroom soup, followed by plenty of fish, including smoked salmon and fresh carp, and dumplings filled with cabbage, forest mushrooms, soft potato and cheese. With Polish roots myself, the Christmas Eve meal, known as the Vigil meal or ‘Wigilia’, is the meal I most look forward to all year round.

To invoke the flavours of an adventurous, international Christmas table, try serving up Eastern European-inspired potato salad with smoked salmon & horseradish crème fraiche, cups of steaming, earthy beetroot soup topped with sour cream and dill, all followed by a delicious Almond cake with lemon & poppy seeds. For a Latin American vibe, I’d recommend a seafood dish, perhaps a Peruvian ceviche, centred around a super-fresh sea bass, or perhaps a tasty fish soup, packed full with salmon, prawns, white fish, tomatoes and plenty of lemon and parsley.

Whether you are huddled around the fire relaxing, celebrating at home with friends and family, or wrapping gifts and getting the last-minute preparations organised, don’t forget to have a large pan of mulled red wine on a gentle simmer. With clementine peel, whole cloves, cinnamon sticks and a star anise, there’s nothing better to fill your house with plenty of Christmas Eve aroma and festive cheer.

Wishing you all a healthy and happy Christmas!