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Healthy Habits:
Starting
Family Food Traditions
by Cheryl Tallman and
Joan Ahlers
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Growing up our Mom and Dad were
big on food traditions, especially at this time of the year.
Every year around the holiday season, Mom would make her famous
rum cakes as a gift for all of Dads big clients. We always
looked forward to homemade spiced cider and a big plate of shrimp
cocktail on Christmas Eve while we opened our gifts, and every
year since we can remember we have eaten goose for Christmas
dinner. We could go on with so many more examples.
Its nice to have food traditions;
they make for fond memories, lasting impressions, and great stories.
Sometimes even funny stories, like the year Joanie proudly took
over Christmas dinner responsibility from Mom, and forgot to
put the goose in the oven. Lets just say, we had a very
late Christmas dinner that year (and many laughs about it).
Whether you carry on the traditions
of your family, or invent new ones (Joanie has ditched the goose
and now serves cheeseburgers for Christmas Dinner), they provide
your family with something to talk about, something to look forward
to, and something to remember.
Outside of the serving traditional
meals during your holiday feast, here are a few ideas for starting
a tradition that may remain with your family for years:
Pot Luck Dinner Party: These are great family fun, easy to
put together, and you wont spend the night in the kitchen.
Here is how they work: each family you invite to the dinner brings
a dish. When you do your inviting specify what type of dish (i.e.
pasta side dish, veggie appetizer, main dish, etc.) you want
each family to bring. Let them know how many people it needs
to serve. Also, ask everyone to bring recipe cards for the dish
they are bringing. Keep it simple by setting the dinner up buffet
style. Collect all the recipe cards and send each family home
with a mini cookbook of the evening.
Make homemade gifts: Preserves, salsa, relishes and candies
make thoughtful gifts. Find one of your grandmothers famous
recipes and bring it back in her honor. The kids can help cook,
and they can also help decorate the packaging. If the thought
of more cooking during the holidays does not sit well with you,
a fruit basket makes a wonderful holiday gift. Decorating the
basket or hand making cards adds a great personal touch.
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