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CrAnIuM
12-23-2011, 11:49 AM
I don't really have any 'traditions', well, none that are not connected to the military at least.


But many folks world wide celebrate Xmas mainly by gathering friends and family together for some foods that they consider an xmas staple and usually only associated with Xmas.

Being as I don't really have traditions I try and find things I normally did not have that last time.


So this year, tomorrow actually, I will cook the following:


Viennese Christmas Goose


An Austrian favorite:

http://swollencranium.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=2893&d=1324658952




FOR THE GOOSE:
1 11–13-lb. fresh or thawed frozen goose, trimmed off excess skin and fat
1 tbsp. dried marjoram
1 tbsp. dried thyme
Salt and freshly ground black pepper
2 apples
2 medium yellow onions, peeled
6 whole cloves
1 tbsp. vegetable oil
1 cup white wine
3 cups Chicken Stock

FOR THE APPLES:
1 cup raisins
3/4 cup rum
8 mcintosh apples
2 tbsp. butter, cut into 8 pieces

FOR THE DUMPLINGS:
4 russet potatoes
Salt
2 1/4 cups flour
2 eggs, beaten
2 tbsp. butter
Leaves from 2 sprigs parsley, chopped

FOR THE CABBAGE:
1 small yellow onion, peeled and thinly sliced
1 small red cabbage, quartered, cored, and thinly sliced
1/2 apple, peeled, cored, and julienned
2 1/2 cups red wine
3/4 cup fresh orange juice
1/2 cup fresh cranberries
1 tsp. sugar
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon
Pinch ground cloves
Pinch ground nutmeg
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

FOR THE CHESTNUTS:
6 tbsp. butter, melted
6 cups cooked peeled chestnuts
1/3 cup heavy cream
3 tbsp. honey


1. For the goose: Preheat oven to 425°. Trim off goose wing tips, put into a small pot, and set aside. Prick skin all over with the tip of a paring knife. Rub bird, inside and out, with marjoram, thyme, and salt and pepper to taste. Stud apples and onions with cloves, then stuff into cavity of bird. Tie legs together with kitchen twine. Heat oil in a large heavy roasting pan over medium-high heat. Add goose and cook until browned all over, about 15 minutes. Set goose aside. Drain off fat from pan into a medium bowl and set aside. Return pan to medium-high heat. Add wine and 1 cup water and cook, scraping browned bits stuck to bottom of pan with a wooden spoon, for 2 minutes. Transfer goose, breast side up, to pan and roast until skin begins to get crisp, 35–45 minutes. Siphon off fat in pan with a bulb baster (add it to bowl with fat), leaving any pan juices in pan. Reduce oven temperature to 350° and continue roasting goose until juices run clear when pricked and skin is brown and crisp, 35–50 minutes more, siphoning off fat from pan once or twice as it roasts. Meanwhile, add stock to pot with wing tips and simmer over medium heat for 30 minutes. Strain stock, discarding solids, and set aside.



2. For the apples: Soak raisins in rum in a small bowl until plump, about 1 hour. Preheat oven to 350°. Core apples, leaving bottoms intact, and put into a medium baking dish, hole side up. Drain raisins, then stuff into apple cavities and top each with a piece of butter. Add 1 cup water to dish, cover with foil, and bake until apples are soft but still intact, 45–50 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 200° and keep apples warm in oven.



3. For the dumplings: Put potatoes into a large pot of salted water and boil over medium-high heat until soft, 25–30 minutes. Drain and set aside to let rest until just cool enough to handle. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of generously salted water to a boil over high heat. Peel potatoes, then press through a potato ricer onto a clean surface. Gather potatoes while still warm into a mound and make a well in the center. Add 2 cups of the flour, eggs, butter, and 1 tbsp. salt to well and gently knead dough until smooth, adding up to 4 tbsp. more flour if dough is too tacky. Divide dough into 12 equal pieces. Lightly flour your hands and roll each piece of dough into a ball. Working in 2 batches, add dough balls to pot of water, reduce heat to medium, and gently simmer, stirring occasionally, until dumplings float and are cooked through, 20–25 minutes. Transfer with a slotted spoon to a warm plate, cover with foil, and keep warm in oven with apples.


4. For the cabbage: Heat 3 tbsp. of the reserved goose fat (save remaining fat for another use) in a medium pot over medium-high heat. Add onions and cook, stirring often, until soft, 4–5 minutes. Add cabbage and apples and cook for 3–4 minutes. Stir in wine, orange juice, cranberries, sugar, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, and salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to medium-low, cover, and cook, stirring occasionally, until cabbage is very soft, 35–45 minutes. Keep warm over lowest heat.



5. For the chestnuts: Melt butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add chestnuts and cook until heated through, 2–3 minutes. Add cream and honey and cook, stirring occasionally, until sauce is thick and chestnuts are glazed, 4–5 minutes. Cover skillet and keep warm over lowest heat.



6. Discard kitchen twine and apples and onions from cavity of goose. Put goose on a large serving platter and allow to rest for 15–20 minutes. Meanwhile, drain fat from pan, then set pan on top of stove and heat over medium-high heat. Add reserved stock, scraping browned bits stuck to bottom of pan, and boil until reduced by one-quarter, about 15 minutes. Season to taste with salt and pepper, then strain gravy into a warm gravy boat.


7. To serve: Fill goose cavity with the warm chestnuts. Put cabbage next to goose on platter. Arrange apples and dumplings around goose. Moisten goose and cabbage with some of the gravy. Garnish dumplings with parsley. Serve gravy on the side.

CrAnIuM
12-23-2011, 11:50 AM
What about you?

Any special thing that is a recurring xmas favorite for you?

Mamba
12-23-2011, 01:52 PM
What a good thread!

I am making nearly the same as last year. I don't have time to post the recipes right now, but it's:

Roast Turkey (always always have turkey Christmas day 25th)
Roast Potatoes
Yorkshire puddings (you haven't lived until you've had a British roast with all the trimmings - including Yorkshire puddings!!)
I might make my own gravy, if I can be bothered.
Some variation of stuffing (usually bacon and onion - and it's effing delish!!!) - served separately NOT inside the turkey.
I might make either glazed carrots or cauliflower cheese - or both.... haven't decided yet!

Also in the morning we have buck's fizz (champagne and orange juice) and smoked salmon on brown bread. Yeaaaaaaaaaaaaaah!!

Zeabot
12-23-2011, 05:30 PM
This is a good thread. Unfortunately, I have no holiday recipes to share. I'm pretty lame and most recipes are I use are just pulled up from the interwebs. I'm looking forward to everyone posting their tasty creations.

Bunnee
12-23-2011, 06:15 PM
My mother made a certain fruit cake when i was younger, I am very lucky to have her give the recipie to me.

However, since it's super secret, I can't tell you the ingredients!

But on my menu tomorrow is:-

Breakfast
Pancakes
bacon and eggs


Lunch
Prawns (or shrimp for you americas)
BBQ bacon garlic prawn skewers
Seafood salad
Potato salad
Garden salad
Potato bake
various roast veges and greens
Roast pork with crackling and apple sauce
Roast turkey breast
Lamb shanks
Ham on the bone


Desserts
Super sekret fruit cake w/custard
Trifle (cake, custard, jello, peach slices)
Chocolate mousse


Dinner for the next month

left overs!

Absinthe
12-24-2011, 08:34 AM
When I was little, my parents used to make a large bowl of potato salad for the 24th (with Frankfurters or Wieners as some people here call them). They were just too busy with Christmas preparation to make a fancy dinner and we loved the potato salad. Now my brother has taken over the cooking for the 24th and he goes all out and makes something fancy.

CrAnIuM
12-24-2011, 06:49 PM
I will cook the following:

Well I could not find a 'fresh' goose anywhere. And the frozen bastards would take two days to properly unfreeze.

So, we went with a chicken in its place.


The recipe is a real pain in the ass and requires a lot of concurrent work to be done but unless you have more than one oven you are gonna have to cook things and let them sit while others cook.

Plus, the apples sound like a great idea and SMELL awesome but were bland. It was pointed out to me that they needed Ice cream <--- I concur.

The potato dumplings are far to labor intensive and I will not cook them again now that I've checked the block on 'homemade'.


I don't think cooking a goose would have made this meal any better.



I give it a C-.

Dirty Hippie
12-24-2011, 11:38 PM
I bet the apples would have turned out nice if instead of water in the dish it was a simple syrup with some lemon squeezed in there to perk them up a bit.

I make cabbage quite often in a similar fashion so I can imagine that was pretty tasty though.

I can't say that I have any specific foods that I associate with Christmas however.

Absinthe
12-25-2011, 10:17 AM
I make cabbage quite often in a similar fashion so I can imagine that was pretty tasty though.

We used pre-made red cabbage. Comes in a glass jar and can usually be found where the international foods are. My Dad's trick was to add some dark berry jam (black berries, blue berries etc or a mix). Turns out great every single time and takes only minutes to prepare.

Firestorm
12-25-2011, 09:31 PM
What about you?

This year we decided to do a 12 pound prime rib. Had never done the basil, oregano, sea salt and pepper crust thing before, so it was an experience. Came out great though, very lightly spiced and soft as butter after being slow baked at 200 for about 6 hours (I say about because no one knows exactly when it went in the oven).

Mashed potatoes, red wine gravy, a green bean casserole with french onions and fresh rolls finished the meal.

Not exactly traditional, but it worked for the size group we had.

Mamba
12-26-2011, 11:48 AM
What a good thread!

I am making nearly the same as last year.

Roast Turkey (always always have turkey Christmas day 25th)
Roast Potatoes
Yorkshire puddings (you haven't lived until you've had a British roast with all the trimmings - including Yorkshire puddings!!)
I might make my own gravy, if I can be bothered.
Some variation of stuffing (usually bacon and onion - and it's effing delish!!!) - served separately NOT inside the turkey.
I might make either glazed carrots or cauliflower cheese - or both.... haven't decided yet!


Well, the turkey was perfect and the roast potatoes were yummy, and crispy (just like they're supposed to be! The key is: Hot pan, hot oil and bash them about a bit to make the ends crisp up nicely)

Yorkshire puddings didn't turn out so well, as I had the heat turned up too high and they kind of burned -- oopsss. - but they were still yummy with lashings of gravy over them.

The stuffing didn't turn out so well, as I used too much oil. I didn't have time to make the cauliflower cheese (and I ran out of pans...and oven space...)

But the carrots and homemade gravy were perfect!!

I would give it a C+ (My boyfriend gives it A+ as he says yorkshire puddings that look perfect don't taste right... and apparently he liked the oily stuffing - so I'll just have to defer to his judgement...haha)

KommieKat
01-25-2012, 12:36 AM
Sorry for late pics and also pic quality.

I made the salad!
http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a126/buddhaboyjp/Salad.jpg

Wife cooked the remaining:

Cheese with Italian ham
http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a126/buddhaboyjp/Cheeseandham.jpg

Baked potato something or other
http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a126/buddhaboyjp/bakedpotato.jpg

Fois Gras on apples
http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a126/buddhaboyjp/FoisGras.jpg

Salmon with some sauce or other
http://i10.photobucket.com/albums/a126/buddhaboyjp/salmon.jpg

All in all, it was not too bad but honestly, I don't let her do most of the cooking.
She's better with the Chinese food.

LEAVE THE WESTERN DISHES TO ME!!

Mamba
01-26-2012, 04:29 PM
Looks pretty good!

Camera sucks though, dude...or did you take the pics in the dark? :) Good of you to post up and make the effort though!

What is sauce on salad? And baked potato? Or potato gratin? I looooove potato gratin.