Hank W. wrote:Were we the only family that had a 'plain' macaroni casserole? And its done with those big thick hollow long macaronis too? I remember that been a Christmas special as my mom didn't make it so otherwise.
I’ve heard of others... (See
this discussion, for example.) But I admit it hasn’t been on our Christmas menu, for some reason. Might be a case of
NIH syndrome; pasta being associated more with the Italians than the traditional Finnish dishes... Or perhaps it is just deemed bit too ordinary fare for Christmas (but that doesn’t explain the liver casserole, which in that case should probably share the same fate, being served regularly in school cafeterias and whatnot...)
Hank W. wrote:Then of course for the starters there was two-three kinds of salmon, and herring
We tend to “do” the Christmas dinner mostly in smörgåsbord fashion these days. The warm dishes are located near the stove (some in the oven to keep them warm) while the cold cuts, hundreds of varieties of herring, salads, relishes, pickles, cheese, bread, drinks, etc. are on a side table. You take your plate and pick whatever you want, then return to the dinner table to savor your loot. Potatoes, Karelian stew, slices of ham, mustard, refills of drinks etc. might be passed around or served by someone to the main table when needed but most of the other stuff you go and pick yourself. (We don’t observe any strict order for the dishes, so everyone’s pretty much free to follow whatever scheme they want to... except that the dessert, coffee, etc. is served only after everyone has finished and the plates have been cleared away.)
Our Christmas time extended get-together family is religious enough to begin the Christmas dinner with the reading of
Luke 2:1–20 and singing a couple of verses from the hymn
Enkeli taivaan (aka
Vom Himmel hoch, da komm’ ich her or
From Heaven Above to Earth I Come (Listen)) I’m sure there are many families who are now secularized enough that they would squirm at the thought... but it’s all part of the family tradition for us, and a custom that most Finnish families would have shared in one form or the other still some decades ago. (Many still probably do. Even if not everyone sitting at the table would be particularly religious, it can be thought of as paying homage to the past, passing, and older generations and their beliefs.)
Hank W. wrote:the store-bought rosolli is far too vinegary
Yep, that’s one of the big differences, too.
Hank W. wrote:I remember whole boiled potatoes, lipeäkala (a delicacy for my dad everybody else was holding their noses and told him off on it - was quite a tradition) and then the white sauce with hard-boiled eggs.
(
Lipeäkala =
lutefisk, for the benefit of those readers who know it better by that latter name.) We bought some lutefisk for the Christmas dinner just yesterday...
Back when Grandpa was still alive and the entire family used to gather to my grandparents’ place for Christmas, lutefisk and white sauce were served as an appetizer some time before the actual dinner.
Hank W. wrote:And *thick* rice porridge and that sekametelisoppa of dried fruits...
That’s still on our menu, but served during the day, at around noon and the
declaration of Christmas Peace [1]...
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[1] Full text