Merry Christmas! Wine, meat, fish and what not on Xmas day
Kerala’s Christmas cuisine is probably the only thing that is yet to get
a makeover, despite the passing of time and as always, it includes
wine, all forms of meat and of course fish, with vegetable dishes not
that preferred.
One reason why Christmas cuisine generates a lot of interest in
Christian homes is that Dec 25th is the most keenly awaited day as many
devout Christians come in front of the dining table after a 25-day
period of Lent, when non-vegetarian dishes are taboo and in some case,
even milk and eggs are also not consumed.
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Districts in central Kerala – home to a large number of Christians who
make up 22 percent of the state’s 32 million population – mark the event
with the maximum fanfare.
Eighty-year-old great grandmother Jolly Mathew in Kottayam is all ready
for Christmas as she has already tasted her wine made out of lovlolikka
(a variety of cranberry) and has kept ready ducks and chicken that have
been reared by her to go under the table knife as her two children are
coming with their entire families.
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“Rearing my own poultry for our own consumption has been a practise I
have seen since the time I came to my husband’s home more than six-and-a
half decades back and this time too I have followed it,” Mathew told
IANS.
Incidentally, most traditional Christian homes become very particular
during Christmas time that food is prepared in separate sets of kitchen
utensils, especially different types of ‘urali’ (bellmetal vessel) while
preparing meat and fish dishes.
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Mary Xavier, a retired teacher in Thiruvalla, said that her husband is
very particular that meat and fish during Christmas is prepared using
only firewood and not on gas.
“Cooking pork, meat and fish curry in a urali on firewood gives the
curries an extra taste of the smoke. Moreover since urali vessels retain
heat for a long time, dishes are prepared on a low flame and after
placing a lid over the urali, charcoal is placed over the lid and the
urali gets heat from all sides and hence it becomes tastier,” Xavier
told IANS.
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The typical breakfast menu for Christmas includes a piece of cake and wine for starters.
For cookery expert Lucy George, her Christmas breakfast includes the appom (rice flour mixed with toddy) and stew.
“This time I have included fish molly and mutton stew. Then we have duck
roast, beef olathiathu and egg roast (sauted meat) as other side
dishes.