Christmas

Archived Posts from this Category

Good and Cold Friday

Posted by gls on 06 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Christmas, Easter

It was warm enough Christmas Eve to sit out on the balcony and smoke a cigar.

DSC_6149

Of course, Easter has to be frigid to make up for it.

This Side of Tradition

Posted by gls on 15 Dec 2006 | Tagged as: Christmas, Parenting, Pregnancy

Being pregnant — nay, expecting — in the Christmas season is about the most wonderful gift I can imagine.

Illuminating

Yesterday evening, K and I put on a CD of peaceful Polish carols, turned off all the lights, and sat in the glow of the Christmas tree, talking about the future.

Snow flake

A pregnant Christmas, like the first Christmas, is a Christmas of promise. It’s the thought of a whole series of Christmases stretching into the future, including toddlers, children, teens, adults, grandchildren — it’s sitting at the beginning of a new tradition. As the generations repeat, so too Christmas, each one following the previous, each different, each connected.

Straw Angel

That’s perhaps one of the nicest things about Christmas. It’s a tradition that invites new traditions. It’s a tradition about birth, about humility, about peace, and those are things that are eternal and yet ever-new. They’re things that surprise us and comfort us, like a good Christmas.

Christmas Dumplings

Posted by gls on 10 Dec 2006 | Tagged as: Christmas, Polska

Boyhowdy, at “Not All Who Wander are Lost,” has a wonderful post about the Christmas season. He writes,

Somewhere in those years I fell in love with someone who loves Christmas, and ceremony, and peace on earth. Christmas came into my house, and nestled in me. (Source)

It’s something I can really relate to. Having grown up in a church that didn’t acknowledge, let alone celebrate, Christmas, it wasn’t until I was in my twenties, in Poland, that I first celebrated Christmas.

That first Christmas was a little odd. I returned to my host family in Radom, Poland, and since I was always at odds with the family’s son’s passive aggression, it was only mildly enjoyable.

I didn’t realize it then, but what was missing was simply the key element of Christmas: family. Subsequent Christmases in Poland I spent with those nearest and dearest to me in the area where I lived, and it only took about fifteen minutes of the real thing for me to fall in love with it.

Essential to the Polish Christmas is food. Huge amounts of it. Food that is time consuming to make, both due to its character and quantity. Dumplings and soups; salads and sides; deserts, deserts, and deserts.

It’s best to get started early.

Hosting our second Christmas dinner, K and I began the cooking this weekend, making 100+ kraut and mushroom dumplings and around 80 mushroom dumplings (”ears” they’re called for barszca, the amazing Eastern European beet soup). All told, almost 200 dumplings.

That calls for cooking many, many mushrooms,

Cooking the Mushrooms

cooking much kraut, and squeezing the excess water out of it,

Squeezing

making a lot of dough,

Dough

and finally, making the dumplings.

Ears

It’s a time-consuming process, but it’s more than labor. It’s an investment, for the food serves as both the centerpiece of a traditional Christmas Eve and the backdrop for the talking and laughing that fills the evening.