What are you eating on Christmas Day this year?
What are you eating on Christmas Day this year?

Poll: What are you eating on Christmas Day this year?

Total Members Polled: 184

Turkey: 87
Beef: 40
Pork: 14
Duck: 11
Lamb: 8
Goose: 11
Chicken: 11
A vegetarian option: 5
Fish: 4
Whatever's put in front of me: 37
Author
Discussion

FurtiveFreddy

Original Poster:

8,577 posts

263 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Aylesbury duckling for us. Slow roasted with lovely crispy skin and gallons of duck fat for the roast potatoes. I think it's more of a treat than a turkey, personally and we don't have a huge family to feed anyway.

RizzoTheRat

28,497 posts

218 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Did a turducken last year, and a Pheaturducken the year before. Given that we froze about 3/4 of the meat and ate it later in the year I might go for something smaller this year like a turkey crown biggrin

FurtiveFreddy

Original Poster:

8,577 posts

263 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
quotequote all
Nice to see duck taking an early lead in the poll biggrin

Don

28,378 posts

310 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Not cooking this year, so no idea. It will probably be Turkey and Pork as my Mum-in-Law is doing the honours.

Quite nice not to be responsible.

When I am responsible then if it's a gathering I'll do Goose as the main roast but with pigs in blankets and meaty stuffing balls. If it's just the two of us it's usually a chicken, made special by doing "all the trimmings" that one doesn't usually bother with.


Tickle

6,210 posts

230 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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We are having a few mallards and beef joint.


Le TVR

3,097 posts

277 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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I'm thinking quail with chestnut+armagnac stuffing, wrapped in bacon, served on a slice of toast and Foie Gras with a wild mushroom sauce. No idea about veg yet tho'.

Don

28,378 posts

310 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
quotequote all
Le TVR said:
I'm thinking quail with chestnut+armagnac stuffing, wrapped in bacon, served on a slice of toast and Foie Gras with a wild mushroom sauce. No idea about veg yet tho'.
That really does sound excellent. I'm a big fan of quail.

Will you bone out the quail or serve it on the bone? I've done that chicken ballotine thing where it is a whole chicken but boneless - I guess that must be really fiddly with a quail.

I have a few partridge in the freezer and have been thinking of turning them into Ballotines so they're easy to eat. Did it with a grouse last year and it was excellent....

HappyMidget

6,794 posts

141 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Pizza. Wife is veggie so no point doing a full roast effort. Plus it means she isn't in the kitchen all day cooking.

Don

28,378 posts

310 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
quotequote all
HappyMidget said:
Pizza. Wife is veggie so no point doing a full roast effort. Plus it means she isn't in the kitchen all day cooking.
Sounds great!

And seriously: Christmas is about family/friends/good cheer/good company. The more of that the better. You should only slave away in the kitchen if YOU like doing it and you'll make your friends and family happy with the produce of your efforts. If pizza meets requirements - pizza it is!

condor

8,837 posts

274 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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I'm hoping for a chateaubriand joint of beef.

LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

222 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Will be doing the local farmers home grown turkey for the family but I always have another joint for me as I find turkey a bit boring.

Made an epic slow cooked pork a few weeks ago but pork just feels a bit, well not cheap exactly but maybe not enough of treat. Be nice to have crackling on Xmas day mind you scratchchin

That's along with a Coca-Cola Ham for Boxing Day and the week ahead.

Problem being, whatever I treat myself to everyone else will want some as the grass is always greener smile

Le TVR

3,097 posts

277 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Don said:
That really does sound excellent. I'm a big fan of quail.

Will you bone out the quail or serve it on the bone? I've done that chicken ballotine thing where it is a whole chicken but boneless - I guess that must be really fiddly with a quail.
.
On the bone, it is just too fiddly to bone it first. Life is too short especially on christmas day!

Bonefish Blues

35,476 posts

249 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Turbot or Brill I expect smile

Riley Blue

23,137 posts

252 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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There'll be just the two of us this year and we won't be seeing any family so it 'll probably be a turkey crown plus every trimming known to man - yummy, best meal of the year!

ikarl

3,980 posts

225 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Chicken curry, fried rice and some prawn crackers. Yum.

Iva Barchetta

44,044 posts

189 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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None of the above.....lick

Not for religious or veg etc reasons.

Bill

57,941 posts

281 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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I could C&P from last year's thread. smile

Smoked salmon and fizz to start while we do presents.

Then, because it's fantastic and I see no reason the bugger about with it:

Turkey (legs off, boned and stuffed) plus an extra couple of legs as they're the bit that get fought over, sage and onion and chestnut stuffings, pigs in blankets, bread sauce, Tom Kerridge's carrots with the star anise toned down, sprouts, roasties, roast parsnips.

I tried to persuade SWMBO that we should just have legs but she put her foot down.

We have four extra this year so might get to have the Xmas pud as it's only me that likes it normally.

Vyse

1,224 posts

150 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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For those that have eaten Mallard duck, how do they differ to regular ducks. Which do you prefer?

Sharted

3,131 posts

169 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Capon.

anonymous-user

80 months

Sunday 20th November 2016
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Vyse said:
For those that have eaten Mallard duck, how do they differ to regular ducks. Which do you prefer?
Mallard smaller and a lot less fatty as they are wild birds.

One each really.