tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post7112648915210562762..comments2023-10-02T11:24:07.835+03:00Comments on Christmas Blog: Russian New Year TableAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01402374725121986926noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-89205886333887219482012-12-24T03:13:22.137+04:002012-12-24T03:13:22.137+04:00No more commentaries!No more commentaries!Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01402374725121986926noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-41078274070171592722012-12-23T18:38:57.338+04:002012-12-23T18:38:57.338+04:00A new-year table usually is not large: on 8-12 per...A new-year table usually is not large: on 8-12 persons. Therefore cold snacks put in one general dish. Soups do not give to the new-year table. However hot dishes give two times - to New Year, usually, fish dishes and after stew or fried meat (mutton, veal or beef) with a potato on garnish; meat dumplings, pilau, stuffed goose or hen, ochpochmaks, peremech et cetera. In the end give tea or coffee. With tea put sugar, jams, candies, with coffee sugar, hot milk or creams. Sweet baleshes add to the tea-table, also cakes, kosh-tele et cetera.Елизаветаhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01937946732061068493noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-42088098439108883982012-12-22T18:13:38.058+04:002012-12-22T18:13:38.058+04:00There is also a tradition in Russia to give childr...There is also a tradition in Russia to give children sweet presents. It may be chocolate, sweets, lollipops and so on, so we can also consider it to be a part of New Year's table.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13654129877180049501noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-45196171210410161602012-12-21T02:33:57.913+04:002012-12-21T02:33:57.913+04:00Appetizers known as zakuski follow the soup course...Appetizers known as zakuski follow the soup course. These zakuski range from salads made with vegetable oil or, preferably, sunflower oil, instead of mayonnaise because of the fast, and great quantities of pickled fish, shrimp and vegetables like gherkins, mushrooms or tomatoes. Pickled cabbage or sauerkraut is the star at the Russian Christmas Eve table and appears in many dishes, including the filling for pirozhki and other dumplings. Sometimes, it is served as a salad with cranberries, cumin, shredded carrot, onion rings, and a splash of sunflower oil. Vegetable "caviars" like ikra are also popular.Dark_Soulhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14950879142898434833noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-77222193010216397742012-12-21T01:04:54.526+04:002012-12-21T01:04:54.526+04:00Many yummy dishes are cooked for New Year’s eve. I...Many yummy dishes are cooked for New Year’s eve. I'd like to tell you about such a delicious dish as 'Holodets'. <br />What is holodets? You know those jello creations that have carrots, fruit, or some other food-like substance entombed in jello? Holodets is sort of like that. Except the food-like substance is meat, and the jello is concentrated meat broth that has been allowed to become gelatinous. To make holodets, you take a large quantity of meat--usually several different kinds (we had pig and duck)--and boil it with carrots, onions, and spices for many hours. This softens and cooks the meat, freeing it from the bones, and it makes a strong broth, which you further boil down until it becomes thick. You then put the cooked meat into a pan, pour the broth over it, and put the whole creation into the fridge overnight. The broth thickens into a clear jello-ish concoction that encases the meat. <br />Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-68496308265764285332012-12-18T11:50:37.850+04:002012-12-18T11:50:37.850+04:00Dressed herring, colloquially known as herring und...Dressed herring, colloquially known as herring under a fur coat or just fur coat (Russian: Сельдь под шубой - Sel'd' Pod Shuboi, Russian: Шуба - Shuba) is a layered salad composed of diced salted herring covered with layers of grated boiled vegetables (potatoes, carrots, beet roots), chopped onions, and mayonnaise. Some variations of this dish include a layer of fresh grated apple and some don't.<br /><br />Grated boiled beet root covered with mayonnaise as a final layer gives the salad a rich purple color. Dressed herring salad is often decorated with grated boiled eggs (whites, yolks, or both).<br /><br />Dressed herring salad is very popular in Russia, Ukraine, and other countries of the former USSR. It is one of the traditional dishes served at New Year and Christmas celebrations.Natalyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04487894119688247858noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-69580119109211326562012-12-18T02:39:21.994+04:002012-12-18T02:39:21.994+04:00There is no such thing as traditional Russian Chri...There is no such thing as traditional Russian Christmas Eve bread. While many English-language websites claim pagach to be Russian Christmas bread, it is in fact Slovak—nothing to do with the Russian culture. In Russia, pies were traditional winter food because they were hot and more filling. I have to admit that the amount of wrong information about Russian Christmas on the Web is above human imagination.<br /><br />All food served on Christmas Eve had to be tepid, so that the hostess didn't have to rush to and fro warming the dishes up, but could sit down and enjoy a spiritual conversation. The meal ended with more prayers before going to the midnight service which would last until 4 or 5 a.m.Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-11662667126591673292012-12-18T02:38:55.237+04:002012-12-18T02:38:55.237+04:00Russian Sauerkraut is the queen of the Russian tab...Russian Sauerkraut is the queen of the Russian table at Christmas Eve, served with cranberries, cumin, shredded carrot, onion rings, and sprinkled with unrefined sunflower oil. The recipe for it is slightly different from traditional European ones: the Russian Sauerkraut must be fresh-looking and crisp, not soggy,which is achieved by using special frost-resistant varieties of cabbage and storing it at subzero temperatures.<br /><br />It can be followed by more pies or porridge, especially buckwheat with fried onions and fried mushrooms, seasoned with unrefined sunflower oil (seriously yummy!). For dessert, fruit pies, cookies like gingerbread and honeybread are followed by fresh and dried fruit and more nuts. There are no strict rules about which particular dishes to use, apart from kutia and vzvar mentioned earlier.<br /><br /><br />Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-59175760793824416022012-12-18T02:38:24.332+04:002012-12-18T02:38:24.332+04:00Other dishes can include vegan beetroot soup (bors...Other dishes can include vegan beetroot soup (borsch) or vegan potluck (solyanka) offered with single-serving vegetable pies, especially cabbage, potato, or mushroom ones (the pie dough should be vegan, too, made with flour, yeast, water, salt and a tad of vegetable oil). Please note that the Orthodox church regulations forbid fish on Christmas Eve (no matter how many layman websites say otherwise), but allow vegetable oil and red wine in moderation.<br /><br />Various vegetable starters and salads follow the soup—mainly vegetable preserves in brine, like gherkins, mushrooms or tomatoes, as well as potato salads with vegan dressings based on vegetable oil, or root vegetables. The best choice of vegetable oil is unrefined sunflower oil which is the ingredient that gives Russian savory starters their typical taste.<br /><br /><br />Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-17469302096174588622012-12-18T02:35:10.034+04:002012-12-18T02:35:10.034+04:00Russia's history is one of suffering. In times...Russia's history is one of suffering. In times of the peasant famine, the Stalinist purges and numerous blockades, Russians have a bleak history when it comes to food. Often, the most basic foodstuffs, such as bread and milk, were not available for decades.<br /><br />Even the most famous Russians remember the shortage. In his memoirs, Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin recalls how his mother was left for dead in a pile of corpses when people thought she had starved to death during the Leningrad blockade. Lucky for Putin's mother, she was found and recovered completely.<br /><br />These are the stories of numerous Russians though. So when it comes to celebrating with copious amounts of food, it really is a celebration.<br /><br /><br />Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-54039211800755978552012-12-18T02:28:32.048+04:002012-12-18T02:28:32.048+04:00Champaign is a must on the table. The food include...Champaign is a must on the table. The food includes Russian salad called Olivje, fish salad ' Seledka pod shuboj' (it is salty raw fish in a 'coat' which includes boiled vegetables and beet root). Salads are in general important part of Russian holiday’s menu.<br /><br />The drinks include campaign, vodka, cognac, and bear. Russians are not great wine drinkers, but vodka must be good. There are many recipes for drinks, some of which look like competitions. One of the popular is Bloody Mary for preparation of which vodka must be poured into the tomato juice down the knife. One of the funniest is 'Morning Cocktail' which is made the following morning by pouring all the remained drinks from all the glasses into one.<br /><br />Ten minutes before the New Year Russians listen to the speech of their President and in the minute before the midnight they all follow the countdown by the main clock in the country – the clock on the Spaski tower of the Kremlin which for all the Russian people is the only exact criteria for the arrival of the New year.Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-37154784242995971822012-12-18T02:28:04.256+04:002012-12-18T02:28:04.256+04:00For many Russian people the New Year's Eve and...For many Russian people the New Year's Eve and day is one of the biggest holidays of the year. Children attend numerous performances, so called Fir-Trees (Joločki), an equivalent of Christmas-tree, and they can visit several of such performances before, and even after the New Year's Eve. Thus they celebrate the New Year several times.<br /><br />The New Year’s Eve is usually celebrated with the family members, watching films together. One of the 'must to watch' and favorite films is 'Irony of Fate' (Ironija sudbi or S legkim parom), which Russians watch every New Year’s Eve for the past 30 years. It is a romantic film, fun, innocent and moral, just like the many other films from the Soviet times.Maria Sergeevna Pavlovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04376220013436057183noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492337578292102061.post-46281048783819320252012-12-17T11:57:49.587+04:002012-12-17T11:57:49.587+04:00The Dinner
There are no traditional New Year dish...The Dinner<br /><br />There are no traditional New Year dishes in modern Russia, however, since the Soviet times, the Russian salad is somewhat mandatory. In Russia and the CIS it is called Olivier in honor of Lucien Olivie, a chef who invented the recipe. However, the modern Olivier has nothing in common with the dish that was so popular in Moscow of the 1860s. Butterbrots with caviar, salmon fish, sausages are very common, I believe, for all Russia’s provinces. The main dish can be fried chicken (the whole chicken or parts), pork, beef – actually, everything. In the Soviet Unions the smell of tangerines was one of the things associated with New Year. The reason is that there were standard New Year gifts for kids that included chocolate (natural dark chocolate only, no substitutes), candies, one big apple and tangerines and/or oranges. Those gifts smelled like heaven and the dominant note was, of course, the tangerine.<br /><br />As I said above, champagne is a special New Year’s beverage. That doesn’t mean that this is the only popular alcohol for the New Year party. Actually, people drink everything during the party, but right at midnight, families and friends gather around the table, stand up and clink glasses of champagne wishing each other a healthy, happy and prosperous new year.Anastasia Streltsovahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06173608756275106959noreply@blogger.com