Developing Your Own Holiday Food Traditions
Every holiday season, many of us look forward to eating special
treats made using long-held and cherished family recipes. Many families have holiday food traditions
they hold dear. There are those who cannot imagine a holiday without Grandma’s date pinwheel cookies or
Great Uncle Peter’s cornbread stuffing. Year after year, we enjoy these treats and use them as a way to
stay connected with our families and personal histories.
More than mere sustenance, the traditional foods we enjoy year
after year are a source of family pride and lead to conversations about family members and fond memories of
holidays past. Family food traditions can be one of the most important parts of the holiday season for
many people.
There was once, however, a time in each and every family history
before those recipes existed. Grandma had to make those date pinwheel cookies for the first time.
When she did, she may have placed them right next to sugar cookies made with her Grandma’s secret recipe,
having no idea they would become such an integral part of the holiday. Great Uncle Peter’s cornbread
stuffing only came about because Great Aunt Beth was sick years ago and he had to come up with some way to
stuff a bird himself on Christmas morning. His reliance on a simple recipe card with a few personal
touches started a family tradition, too. Grandma and Great Uncle Peter didn’t intent to create a
longstanding tradition that generation after generation would enjoy. They simply hoped that they could
add a little bit to the holiday meal by doing something different.
The holiday food traditions to which we now look forward were
the byproducts of experimentation. The creators of the original dishes may have never intended to make
them again. They just happened to feel like doing something different or adding something new to the
holiday table.
Holiday food traditions are special to many of us, and it is
wonderful to experience those comforting recipes each and every holiday. It’s a great idea, however, to
remember how those traditions began. By realizing the source of those traditions, we can be spurred to
create our own.
This holiday season consider doing something new. Think
about adding a different plate to the dinner or treat table. Make a side dish not generally found on
your holiday table or produce a cookie with which you are not familiar. Try a few new ideas and see
what happens. Some of the new notions may not be universally well received. Others may be
enjoyed, but not to the extent of your family’s holiday classics. One, however, might receive such rave
reviews that you decide to try it again next year.
Over time, that simple decision to experiment may turn into part
of your family’s traditional holiday table. The new cookie recipe you find in a holiday recipe
collection this year may eventually become a staple item that your great-grandchildren cannot imagine
missing.
Traditions are important and enjoyable. They form part of
the essence of one’s family. Wouldn’t it be nice to add your generation’s mark to the food traditions
you all hold so dear? Inventing new holiday traditions has no precise formula. One cannot really
intentionally “design” a new holiday food tradition. They tend to grow over time. However, new
traditions do require a willingness to prepare an inventive new dish. This holiday season, consider
your potential role as a creator of a meaningful holiday tradition and add something new to the holiday
feast.
|