Archive for the ‘Christmas’ Category
Handmade Christmas Cards
It is tradition to exchange Christmas cards with your friends, family members and anyone you care about. Nowadays, the card making industry is booming so people love to make their own Christmas cards to send out. Handmade Christmas cards are a lot more popular nowadays than other kinds of Christmas cards. Even though, a lot of people prefer to create Christmas cards online to just email to people, there is still a very large group of people who prefer to send out Christmas cards the old-fashioned way. All handmade Christmas cards are unique. You can make funny Christmas cards as well as photo Christmas cards easily.
How did Sending Christmas Cards Become Popular?
People have been sending out Christmas cards for all were hundred and 50 years now. While, it is not very cost-effective for people to buy Christmas gifts and mail them to everybody they want to, it is affordable to mail Christmas cards. It’s the thought that counts so sending Christmas cards show people that you care about them. If you make your own Christmas cards, it is even more meaningful. People who receive handmade Christmas cards usually are more touched and they usually keep the cards for a long time.
If you want some ideas of what handmade Christmas cards to make, this book below has great tips and project ideas.
Sketches are one of the hottest trends in today’s card-making community, and this holiday-card design resource has more than 125 card designs created from 28 original sketches—making it a great tool to jump-start the creative process. Each project in this collection includes a clear, close-up photo and detailed materials list. The sketches and projects are arranged in categories based on the most popular card sizes used today. Including a list of holiday sentiments, this resource ensures any card maker a season of creative cards.
CardMaker’s Sketch Book: Christmas Celebrations
Mario Batali Holiday Food
With the infectious enthusiasm of a kid on Christmas morning, Mario Batali–who presides over a culinary empire that includes the popular Food Network television show Molto Mario, four acclaimed New York restaurants, and a wine store–presents four complete menus for the holidays and captures all the fun and festivity that epitomize Italian celebrations. True to the commitment to simple cooking evident in his first book, Simple Italian Food, the dishes here deliver maximum flavor and enjoyment without being overly complicated.
Batali’s version of the famous Italian seafood extravaganza traditionally served on Christmas Eve–known as the Feast of Seven Fishes–includes no fewer than 15 enticing dishes. Marinated Fresh Anchovies are both surprisingly delectable and delightful in their simplicity. Salt Cod with Capers and Mint, Grilled Lobster with Herbs and Arugula, and Sea Bass Ravioli with Marjoram and Potatoes would each be showstoppers as the centerpiece of any meal. Served together, they comprise a truly unforgettable feast.
The Christmas Day menu is equally lavish, centering on a succulent boned turkey breast stuffed with chestnuts and prunes, while the New Year’s Day spread is pure decadence. The latter begins innocently enough, with a refreshing aperitivo of tangerine juice, Compari, and soda, then proceeds through a parade of richly flavored dishes, from the hot-pepper-spiked Octopus in the Style of the Prostitutes of Napoli, to the meatball-filled “mythic pasta dome” known as Timpano di Maccheroni, to the prosciutto-wrapped Braised Pork Roll. An irresistible selection of dolci (sweets), including Cinnamon Chocolate Pudding with Pine Nuts and Waffle Cookies, rounds out the meal. New Year’s Day welcomes a relaxed daylong open house replete with an ever-changing spread of antipasti, pasta, and dolci, most of which can be prepared at leisure and served at room temperature, enabling the hosts to enjoy the party as much as the guests.
Photos, along with helpful wine suggestions and practical advice on technique, accompany each menu. Throughout, Batali paints a portrait of his Italian-American family that reminds readers that the simple joy of being together is what the holidays are really about. The 60 simple yet elegant recipes can be mixed, matched, and adapted for any occasion. Served together or separately, each is cause for celebration. –Robin Donovan
From Publishers Weekly
Americans tend to think of Italian cooking as easy: we have come to rely on 15-minute pastas and hearty, seasonal dishes like minestrone. But here, Batali of Food Network’s Molto Mario presents the most cherished Italian dishesAthose served, often after days of preparation and with fanfare, during the holidays. Batali focuses on the seafood-rich Amalfi coast, beginning with a Christmas Eve menu that includes Vongole Origanate (clams oreganato), Baccal? Vesuviana, Ravioli alla Spigola (Sea Bass Ravioli with Marjoram and Potatoes), and in case you still have any room for dessert, Classic Cannoli. The book consists of traditional Italian menus that take you through the four holidaysAChristmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Eve and New Year’s DayAbut the recipes can be used for an impressive meal or snack any time. (There is also a separate section on the wines of Campania.) Cooking from scratch is the name of the game, so don’t expect shortcuts; however, instructions are generally to the point and the results are well worthwhile. Recipes like Mythic Pasta Dome (a sort of pasta torte) capture the elaborate and festive nature of holiday Italian cooking. Beginners might be intimidated: Baba (lemon cake) requires a yeast rising and the insertion of fine holes in the cake into which a lemon mixture is “infused.” But once practiced, recipes become easy, and there are some simple yet gratifying recipes, such as No-Bake Chocolate Cookies. If you want to enliven your Italian repertoire with authentic, celebratory dishes, this book is invaluable. Photographs by Quentin Bacon. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Christmas Traditions
There are many Christmas traditions all around the world. Different countries have different Christmas traditions. But, many of them have some things in common. Every year, people all over the world celebrate Jesus birthday on December 25th. There are many different ways to celebrate. But, they are all festive and joyful.
Hanging Stockings
In a lot of countries, children hang Christmas stockings. By Christmas, each stocking will be filled with little gifts or stocking staffers.
Decorating Christmas Trees
It is tradition to put up a Christmas tree in December for Christmas. Some families put up Christmas trees as early as November. People, especially children, love to put Christmas ornaments on the Christmas trees and Christmas Angels on top of the trees.
Christmas Gifts
Perhaps, the part that children most look forward to at Christmas time is the receiving Christmas gift part. Young children, especially, receive tons of Christmas gifts and toys. Christmas presents are put underneath each Christmas tree. On Christmas Day, children get to wake up in the morning and open their presents.
For more Christmas traditions, there are lots of books that you can read. Below are some suggestions.
Christmas in America: A Photographic Celebration of the Holiday Season
Thanksgiving & Christmas: Top 200 Recipes
Thanksgiving & Christmas: Top 200 Recipes (All Recipes Tried & True)
In TRIED & TRUE THANKSGIVING & CHRISTMAS, all of your favorite holiday recipes are collected in one comprehensive cookbook, along with essential preparation, meal planning, and cooking tips.
Featuring:
- Homestyle Turkey the Michigander Way,
- Hot Buttered Rum Batter,
- Rockin Oysters Rockefeller, and
- Santas Favorite Cake,
this festive TRIED & TRUE volume includes those treasured dishes that families have shared for generations.
Buy Thanksgiving & Christmas: Top 200 Recipes (All recipes Tried & True)
The Nantucket Holiday Table
Visitors to Nantucket usually return home with glowing food memories. Maybe the sea air livens appetites, but more likely it’s the good Yankee cooking. Susan Simon’s The Nantucket Holiday Table offers 75 recipes interlarded with personal stories, historical lore, and interesting asides such as “What’s It Like in the Wintertime?” Rooted in old New England culinary tradition, the recipes also take a modern approach.
Readers should enjoy making:
- Almond French Toast with Caramelized Applesauce,
- Roasted Squash Risotto, and
- Grilled Turkey with Corn Bread and Oyster Stuffing, among Simon’s many savory dishes.
Arranged mainly by courses, the book also features chapters on:
- holiday breakfasts,
- cocktail parties, and
- food gifts.
From Publishers Weekly
What do native Nantucket Islanders do during the winter when the summer visitors aren’t looking? It turns out that they’re doing quite a lot of sophisticated dining. Simon (The Nantucket Table), a part-time resident of the island, offers up a celebration of hearty dishes that she suggests for Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanukkah and New Year’s, such as Cider-Soaked Baked Ham with Honey-Rum Glaze and Turkey Shepherd’s Pie, which sports a sweet-potato topping and a spicy filling. The breakfast section is particularly pleasing because Simon treats breakfast as the important opening act of a nourishing, joyful day with recipes like Salmon Hash with Poached Eggs and Coronation Scallops on a Bed of Parsley Rice. Some dishes that sound mouthwatering, like Apple-Molasses Pancakes with Honey Butter and Laura Simon’s Root-Vegetable Latkes, are bland; however, the dessert section more than makes up for these few disappointments with innovations that make excellent use of native ingredients, including Cranberry Shortcakes, Cranberry Beach-Plum Cheesecake and Indian Pudding with Hard Sauce. Photographs by Jeffrey Allen of quaint island scenes and tantalizing foods complement the reliable, straightforward recipes to create a cookbook that works in the kitchen as well as on the coffee table.


