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Christmas dinner


sammynb
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I found out on the weekend that my extended family are coming to ours for Christmas dinner, a bit of a shock but that's family for you.

Anyway I wouldn't mind doing something different to turkey, so for consideration is roast goose or claypot cooked guinea fowl.

 

Thoughts?

 

What are you doing?

 

btw I thought there was another thread on the subject but I couldn't find it.

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My parents for food and it will be the traditional turkey and trimmings. :lol:

 

What no haggis?

WTF is haggis actually like?

 

I don't normally have haggis at x-mas.

 

Its normally something to have on burns night. I will have it once a year at most. But it tastes all right.

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Turkey= Best cold or in a pie.

We will be having roast beef and all the trimmings. (If I'm still well enough to cook it that is)! Redcurrant and red wine gravy, pigs in blankets, red cabbage with sultanas, roasted parsnips and carrots with honey and black pepper. Yorkshire puds and probably mashed swede I think. I think I wil make my own stuffing too.

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My first christmas in France. Foie gras and oysters apparently.

 

Fucks sake :D

 

Well that's Mr Chez's present Christmas night sorted then :lol:

 

Its not christmas night either, its christmas eve for the dinner.

 

manc-mag is right, it's like we lost the war or something.

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I would beat your face in if I turned up on Christmas day to guinea fowl.

 

What's wrong with guinea fowl scotty?

It's unnecessary. Turkey is the bird. If you want to do a ham or beef in addition that's fine but don't mess with turkey.

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I would beat your face in if I turned up on Christmas day to guinea fowl.

 

What's wrong with guinea fowl scotty?

It's unnecessary. Turkey is the bird. If you want to do a ham or beef in addition that's fine but don't mess with turkey.

 

Oh ok.

I actually bought one today to cook on Friday night as a test run.

Cover it with a sage, juniper berries, thyme, then wrap it in clay - cook for an hour and there you go claypot baked guinea fowl.

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I'm with Gemmill on this, Chrimbo dinner's got to be Turkey for me. Essentially a larger version of a Sunday roast, with stuffing, honey roast parsnips, sprouts, carrots, mash, roasties and lashings of gravy made from the bird's juices. The only thing I don't indulge in on the traditional side is I tend to have bread sauce with mine as opposed to cranberry jelly.

 

As a kid I recall we used to make an extra effort and have a starter (usually prawn cocktail - though in latter years this changed to pate, chutney and toast. Dessert on Chrimbo day was always a selection of the standard Christmas pud, a chocolate torte and probably a trifle.

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