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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1Argentina
 




2Australia
 




3Bangladesh
 




4Belarus
 




5Belgium
 




6Brazil
 




7Canada
 




8Chile
 




9China and Taiwan
 




10Colombia
 




11Cuba
 




12Czech Republic and Slovakia
 




13Denmark
 




14Dominican Republic
 




15Finland
 




16France
 




17Germany
 




18Greece and Cyprus
 




19Greenland
 




20Guatemala
 




21Haiti
 




22Hong Kong and Macau
 




23Hungary
 




24Iceland
 




25India
 




26Indonesia
 




27Israel and Palestine
 




28Italy
 




29Jamaica
 




30Japan
 




31Korea
 




32Lithuania
 




33Malaysia
 




34Malta
 




35Mexico
 




36Netherlands
 




37New Zealand
 




38Norway
 




39Panama
 




40Paraguay
 




41Philippines
 




42Poland
 




43Portugal
 




44Puerto Rico (U.S.)
 




45Romania
 




46Russia
 




47Samoa, Tonga and Tuvalu
 




48San Marino
 




49Serbia
 




50South Africa
 




51Spain
 




52Sweden
 




53Trinidad and Tobago
 




54Ukraine
 




55United Kingdom
 




56United States
 




57Venezuela
 




58Vietnam
 




59See also
 




60References
 




61External links
 













List of Christmas dishes






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Argentina[edit]

Vitello tonnato is a popular Christmas dish in Argentina, where it is known as vitel toné. The Piedmontese dish is valued during the summer for its cold serving temperature, and is the legacy of the large Italian immigration to the country.[1]

Panettone (known locally as pan dulce) and turrón are the most popular Christmas sweets in Argentina regardless of socioeconomic status, with 76% of Argentines choosing the former and 59% the latter in 2015.[2] Mantecol, a typical peanut dessert, is also popular, being favored by 49% of Argentines in the same survey.[3] Sparkling wines, ciders and frizzantes concentrate most of their sales during Christmas season; sparkling wine is mostly consumed by small families with high and medium socioeconomic status living in Greater Buenos Aires and the country's largest cities, while cider and frizzantes are popular among lower classes and large families.[3]

Australia[edit]

Candy Cane can be hung as edible decorations.

Bangladesh[edit]

Belarus[edit]

Belgium[edit]

Brazil[edit]

Panettone

Canada[edit]

Gingerbread house

Chile[edit]

Pan de pascua

China and Taiwan[edit]

Colombia[edit]

Colombian Buñuelos
Colombian natilla

Colombian Christmas dishes are mostly sweets and desserts. Some of the most popular dishes include:

Cuba[edit]

Czech Republic and Slovakia[edit]

Christmas cookies (vánoční cukroví)

Before the Christmas holidays, many kinds of sweet biscuits are prepared. These sweet biscuits are then served during the whole Christmas period and exchanged among friends and neighbours. Also very popular are a preparation of small gingerbreads garnished by sugar icing.

Denmark[edit]

Danish Christmas meal

Dominican Republic[edit]

Drinks:

Desserts:

Finland[edit]

AKarelian pasty
Mulled wine

Christmas smorgasbord from Finland, "Joulupöytä", (translated "Yule table"), a traditional display of Christmas food[27] served at Christmas in Finland, similar to the Swedish smörgåsbord, including:

Other meat dishes could be:

Desserts:

Drinks:

France[edit]

Foie gras en cocotte
Kouglof

Germany[edit]

A Christmas Stollen

Greece and Cyprus[edit]

Greenland[edit]

Guatemala[edit]

Haiti[edit]

Hong Kong and Macau[edit]

Hungary[edit]

Töltött káposzta

Iceland[edit]

Möndlugrautur

India[edit]

Indian ChristiansinIndian subcontinent celebrate Christmas by enjoying several dishes, such as Allahabadi cake, Candy canes, Plum cakes etc. Some of the popular dishes eaten during Christmas in India are:

Church services are also held in churches throughout India, in which Christmas dinners are held which include dishes such as Allahabadi cake, candy canes, christmas cookies.

The Koswad is a set of sweets and snacks prepared in the Christmastide by people of the Konkan region. South Indian states such as Kerala have traditions observed of home-brewed wine, mostly grapes but sometimes other fruits as well like Apple & Rose Apple; ethnic recipes of slow-cooked beef fry, Rice & Coconut Hoppers, Lamb stew, Fried Rice Indian and Fusion Style; Desserts such as Falooda, pastry, and a whole array of steamed, boiled or baked sweets, often with coconut, jaggery, sugar and spices such as cardamom & cloves (Achappam, Murukku, Tapioca chip, Sukiyan, Neyyappam).

Indonesia[edit]

Israel and Palestine[edit]

Italy[edit]

Panettone
Cappelletti
Abbacchio
Struffoli

According to tradition, the Christmas Eve dinner must not contain meat. A popular Christmas Day dish in Naples and in Southern Italyiscapitone, which is a female eel. A traditional Christmas Day dish from Northern Italyiscapon (gelded chicken). Abbacchio is more common in Central Italy.[40] The Christmas Day dinner traditionally consists by typical Italian Christmas dishes, such as abbacchio, agnolini, cappelletti, Pavese agnolotti, panettone, pandoro, torrone, panforte, struffoli, mustacciuoli, bisciola, cavallucci, veneziana, pizzelle, zelten, or others, depending on the regional cuisine.[41] Christmas on 25 December is celebrated with a family lunch, also consisting of different types of pasta and meat dishes, cheese and local sweets.

Jamaica[edit]

Japan[edit]

Korea[edit]

Lithuania[edit]

Malaysia[edit]

Malta[edit]

Mexico[edit]

Christmas roast

Netherlands[edit]

New Zealand[edit]

A homemade Christmas pavlova decorated with pomegranate seeds and Chantilly cream.

Norway[edit]

Scandinavian-style gingerbread

Panama[edit]

Paraguay[edit]

Philippines[edit]

Typical traditional noche buena meal in the Philippines, with a lechón as the centerpiece
Large bibingka from the Philippines

Poland[edit]

On 24 December, Christmas Eve, twelve dishes are served as a reminder of the Twelve Apostles. Polish people often do not eat meat on this day; instead, they choose from a variety of fish and vegetable dishes. The meal begins when the first star is seen.

Barszcz with Uszka
Makowiec

Portugal[edit]

Bolo-Rei

Puerto Rico (U.S.)[edit]

Drinks:

Dessert:

Romania[edit]

Cozonac

Romanian Christmas foods are mostly pork-based dishes.[58] Five days before Christmas, Romanians are celebrating the Ignat Day, a religious holy day dedicated to the Holy Martyr Ignatius Theophorus, associated with a practice that takes place especially on villages scattered around the country: the ritual of slaughtering the pigs. And they are using everything from the pigs: from their blood to their ears. Five days later their tables are filled not only with generous pork roasts but also with:

Russia[edit]

Samoa, Tonga and Tuvalu[edit]

San Marino[edit]

Bustrengo

Serbia[edit]

South Africa[edit]

Christmas is in the summer in South Africa, so many summer fruits such as watermelon and cantaloupes are enjoyed at this time. Popular desserts include trifle, melktert and peppermint crisp tart. Many people in South Africa hold Braai barbecues for Christmas or New Year's Day.

Spain[edit]

Sweden[edit]

Julbord Christmas dinner in Sweden

Trinidad and Tobago[edit]

In Trinidad and Tobago traditional meals consists of generous helpings of baked ham, pastelles, black fruit cake, sweet breads, along with traditional drinks such as sorrel, ginger beer, and ponche de crème. The ham is the main item on the Christmas menu with sorrel to accompany it.[65][66]

Ukraine[edit]

Orthodox and Roman Catholic Christians in Ukraine traditionally have two Christmas dinners. The first is a Lent Dinner, it is held on the January 6 and should consist of meatless dishes. The second is a Christmas Festive dinner held on January 7, when the meat dishes and alcohol are already allowed on the table. The dinner normally has 12 dishes which represent Jesus's 12 disciples. Both Christmas dinners traditionally include a number of authentic Ukrainian dishes, which have over thousand-year history and date back to pagan times.

United Kingdom[edit]

Christmas pudding

In the United Kingdom, what is now regarded as the traditional meal consists of roast turkey with cranberry sauce, served with roast potatoes and parsnips and other vegetables, followed by Christmas pudding, a heavy steamed pudding made with dried fruit, suet, and very little flour. Other roast meats may be served, and in the nineteenth century the traditional roast was goose. The same carries over to Ireland with some variations.

United States[edit]

Roast turkey
Christmas ham

See also: Thanksgiving (the dishes tend to be similar)

Venezuela[edit]

Hallaca

Vietnam[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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  • External links[edit]


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