I woke up on the morning of December 24th with a host of notifications on my Facebook page from my German family. That's because, in Germany, Christmas Eve is a bigger deal than Christmas Day. Germans keep centered on the birth of the Christ Child as the reason for Christmas. That's why each Sunday of Advent is BIG to Germans, too.
My German mom (born in Frankfurt) married my dad (an American soldier stationed in Germany) in 1964. After arriving in this country, mom had my sister and me. One tradition that she and my dad carried forward from Germany is to make a BIG deal of Christmas Eve. On Christmas Day, we'd head to a relative's house from a very American Christmas celebration.
So....as a gift on Christmas Eve...I wanted to share with you some research done by Fox News on strange and wacky Christmas traditions.
- Candy Canes were invented to keep kids quiet
Legend has it that candy canes were invented in 1670, when the choirmaster of the Cologne Cathedral commissioned candies shaped like a shepherd’s crook so they could be handed out to children attending the church’s crèche scene in order to keep them quiet. The stripes came later.
- Sugar Plums had nothing to do with plums
From the Sugar Plum Fairy to visions of sugar plums dancing in children’s heads, sugar plums definitely have a place in Christmas lore. But what are they, exactly? You might not have guessed by their name, but these sweet treats are a type of candy. When they first came around in the 1600s, the term “plum” denoted any dried fruit, and typical sugar plums are made with a combination of dried fruit and spices that are rolled into balls, then coated with a hard candy shell.
- Animal Crackers were originally a Christmas treat
Animal crackers were first introduced around Christmastime in 1902. The string on the box was originally intended to be used to hang the boxes on Christmas trees.
- Fruit Cake was intended to last all year
If you’ve ever received a fruitcake as a gift, you probably know that those suckers can last for a long time without ever going bad, thanks to the preservative properties of the sugar and the booze they contain. Actually, that’s a part of the design: they were originally intended to be baked at the end of the harvest season and saved to be eaten at the beginning of the harvest season the following year, for good luck.
- Mince Pie was originally topped with a Jesus effigy
The earliest mince pies date back to medieval times if not earlier, and typically included minced meat, suet, fruits, nuts, and spices like cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg. The pie was originally crustless, but over time a crust was added, and a pastry effigy of the baby Jesus was traditionally laid on top. Today, thankfully, meat usually isn’t an ingredient.
- Turkey wasn't the main dish at Medieval Christmas feasts
Roast turkey or another type of poultry is the main protein in a typical British Christmas dinner today, but back in medieval times the preferred poultry was actually peacock! Boar was also a Christmas mainstay. It wasn’t until Henry VIII had turkey for Christmas in the sixteenth century that it became the norm.
- Australians usually grill on Christmas
It’s funny to think that Christmas falls right in the middle of summer Down Under, but it does. The meal is still based on traditional English and North American traditions, but in order to avoid the hot oven most Australians actually prepare their Christmas dinner on the barbie.
- Christmas Dinner usually contains over 7,000 calories
Between the wine, mixed nuts, multiple helpings of turkey and sides, pie, cheese, and booze, the eating and drinking done during Christmas Day alone can add up to more than 7,000 calories per person, according to one study. Maybe skip that second piece of pie this year. Or don't. It's Christmas!!!!!