Feuerzangenbowle

christmas dinner

Let's Dish: What Are You Having For Christmas Dinner?

Christmas dinner traditions in the US are all over the map — there really is no such thing as "traditional"!

Christmas dinner traditions in the US are all over the map — there really is no such thing as "traditional"! From tamales to pastas to gravlax and stollen, every family does Christmas a little differently. On the YumSugar team, some of us will be enjoying pepper-crusted beef tenderloin and homemade mac and cheese, while others are digging into honey baked ham and buttery roasted potatoes. What are you eating for Christmas dinner?

Source: Flickr User kevygee

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Our Annual Holiday Party Menu

Don't forget to share your holiday food photos with us!

Don't forget to share your holiday food photos with us! Here, CasaSugar's Elka Karl tells us about her annual Feuerzangenbowle.
Every year, we throw a cozy Feuerzangebowle at our home. My husband's family is from Germany, and this German holiday party is centered around a bowl of mulled wine. A Feuerzangenbowle (pronounced "Foy-err-song-en-bowl-eh," German for "tongs of fire punch") is a traditional fruity and mulled wine finished with flaming rum.

A Zuckerhut (sugar cone) is doused in Barcardi 151, and then set ablaze. The caramelized goodness then drips into the heady and seasonal brew. The lighting of the punch serves as a particularly festive kickoff to a cozy little holiday gathering. It's liquid Gemuetlichkeit (cozy kitsch).

In addition to the mulled wine, we also put out a pretty massive spread of food. There's a lot of German and Scandinavian foods: fresh baked rye bread, cold cuts, pungent cheeses, stollen, quark, and gravlax, among other selections. Every year my husband makes the gravlax at least a week in advance, letting it cure in the fridge in its mixture of dill, brown sugar, and salt.

To check out a photo of the punch and see what else she served at the party, read more.