Christmas recipes

While I wish I had an oven capable of handling a Christmas ham, I’m going to make all the holiday goods I can in my minimal kitchen.

Would love to see some others’ recipes.

Here’s the recipe for a nice frozen raspberry mousse my aunt always makes.

2 egg whites
1 cup sugar
1 quart/liter frozen raspberries
1 tbsp lemon juice (5 mL)
1 tsp. vanilla (15 mL)
1/2 pint whipping cream (500 mL)

Beat egg whites and sugar until stiff.
Thaw berries slightly and add to egg whites.
Beat 20 minutes.
Add lemon juice and vanilla.
Beat whipping cream in separate bowl and fold into berry mixture.
Freeze.
Serves 12.

Made this for an office dinner yesterday and it was a big hit.
If you don’t have a proper blender, but have a whisk and a strong arm, you can whip it into shape in about 40 minutes.

Sounds good.

We don’t have a real oven either; just an on-the-counter, big-enough-for-a cornish-hen-sized one. But with a 4 year-old child, I decided we needed to make christmas cookies, in particular those you cut out into stars, reindeers, gingerbread man, etc and decorate with colored stuff, so we did.

I probably should’ve asked my mom to send a few good recipes, but instead I looked online and the results were fine. We found everything we needed (ingredients, new cookie sheet, cutters) at the local DIY baking store, I used a bottle for a rolling pin (worked fine), we had a great time, and the tiny oven even did the job. They cook reaaaally fast in such a small oven, but if you turn it low and keep a close eye on it, no problem.

Anyway, I don’t have the recipe (and it was no biggie), but we had a lot of fun, my daughter proudly delivered a box of cookies to her old nanny, and we’ll bake a different cookie recipe this weekend. :slight_smile:

I thought I might try this stuffing recipe for our turkey this year.

1 loaf of day old French bread, cut into 3/4-inch cubes (about 10-12 cups)
1 cup walnuts
2 cups each, chopped onion and celery
6 Tbsp butter
1 green apple, peeled, cored, chopped
3/4 cup of currants or raisins
Several (5 to 10) chopped green olives (martini olives, the ones with the pimento)
Stock from the turkey giblets (1 cup to 2 cups) (can substitute chicken stock)
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley
1 teaspoon poultry seasoning or ground sage (to taste)
Salt and freshly ground pepper (to taste)

1 If you haven’t already made the stock, take the turkey giblets - heart and gizzard - and neck if you want, and put them in a small saucepan, cover with water and add a little salt. Bring to a simmer; simmer for about an hour, uncovered. Strain the stock into a container for use with the stuffing. Alternatively, you can use chicken stock or just plain water with this recipe.

2 Toast the walnuts by heating them in a frying pan on medium high heat for a few minutes, stirring until they are slightly browned (not burned) OR put them in the microwave on high until you can smell the aroma of them toasting, about a minute or two. Let them cool while you are toasting the bread, then roughly chop them.

3 Heat a large sauté pan on medium heat. Melt 3 Tbsp butter in the pan, add the bread cubes, and stir to coat the bread pieces with the melted butter. Then let them toast; only turn them when they have become a little browned on a side. Note, if you aren’t working with somewhat dried-out day-old bread, lay the cubes of bread in a baking pan and put them in a hot oven for 10 minutes to dry them out first, before toasting them in butter on the stove top. The bread should be a little dry to begin with, or you’ll end up with mushy stuffing.

4 In a large Dutch oven, sauté chopped onions and celery on medium high heat with the remaining 3 Tbsp butter until cooked through, about 5-10 minutes. Add the bread. Add cooked chopped walnuts. Add chopped green apple, currants, raisins, olives, parsley. Add one cup of the stock from cooking the turkey giblets or chicken stock (enough to keep the stuffing moist while you are cooking it). Add sage, poultry seasoning, salt & pepper.

5 Cover. Turn heat to low. Cook for an hour or until the apples are cooked through. Check every ten minutes or so and add water or stock as needed while cooking to keep the stuffing moist and keep it from sticking to the bottom of the pan.

Serves 8-10.

How about a Christmas stew?

http://www.trinigourmet.com/index.php/trinidad-stew-beef-with-herbed-dumplings-recipe/

This one is tasty, cheap & easy to make.

Black cake anyone? [/url]

Christmas stew? That’s a great idea! I’m going to try that one.

I got stuck into some pigs in blankets today. :pig:
And then I grave dug a 16 year old thread.