When putting out mince pies and brandy for Father Christmas, don't forget to put a carrot out for his reindeer too. This was an essential addition in our house!
When I was a kid it was always a carrot for the reindeer and a glass of milk for Sannta. It was only later I figured out that the milk was because my dad doesn't drink alcohol. 😄
one time i ate the carrot the day after because i wanted to know what it was like to be a reindeer and i got so ill we never did it again lmao. i was throwing up the entire day 😂
We always left out a bucket of water and carrots for the reindeers. One of my tasks on the way home from Midnight Mass was to tip out some of the water and nibble on the carrots to make it look as thought they've been. Then indoors to fill all the stockings and sacks
i thought the brandy was there for the kids to sneak and try then it knocks them out so easier for the parents to sort the santa sack... i used to drink a bit anyway lol
I'm 63 - born in the UK and as children we always burnt our letters to Santa. Started the tip burning and then 'sent' them up the chimney (with strict parental guidance!) x
@@lorrainecole8608 Thanks for sharing your knowledge of this practice actually taking place. The other commenter and I must have been born on the cusp of this practice disappearing. Perhaps we were at the start of the gas fire generation. 😄
Didn't know about this until right now. Not many people have open fires now, so I can see it wouldn't be common now. Although since the price of a first-class postage stamp is increasing from £1.35 to £1.65 tomorrow, I can see this tradition making a return. Royal Mail has a guide on their website on what address to use, and unsurprisingly specifically says "Don't forget your stamp!"
4. We don't usually call the "chipolatas", they are usually called "cocktail sausages", but we usually use regular sausages wrapped in bacon, and they are called "pigs in blankets"
Santa magically comes down the chimney, so the letters magically find their way to Santa through the same chimney, total logic, how he gets down after 60 million cookies and alcoholic drinks is still a mystery, no wonder he only works one night a year
Never heard of throwing Santa's letters in the fire....mostly because these days there aren't many open fires !!!! I'm 70 , and we've never heard of it !!
The letters float up the chimney or burn and the smoke drifts to the North Pole We didn’t have a fireplace when my children were small but e did have an old fashioned cast iron boiler with a flue. The children wrote their notes on light weight paper then we opened the vent an up the chimney it flew. Things are too sophisticated nowadays to do this without wrecking the boiler.
@@roseoconnor5938 Same, 76 here and we did have an open fire for some years. I remember we left a mince pie and a glass of brandy out on the fireplace. As kids if we got too excited about Father Christmas before bedtime, one of my parents used to surreptitiously ring a little brass bell and say 'Sleighbells! He's on his way so you'd better go to sleep!'. A pillow case was put over a drawer in the dresser for presents (which had been sent/collected from relatives during the previous couple of weeks); invariably we'd wake up about 2 o-clock in the morning and see a pillowcase transformed, now bulging with pressies, run into our parents' room, jump on the bed shouting 'he's beeeen, he's beeen!!'. Our poor parents didn't get much sleep those couple of days ☺ Have a wonderful Christmas all 🎄🦌🎅🎁
Boxing day.This is mentioned in Samuel Pepys' diary entry for 19 December 1663. This custom is linked to an older British tradition where the servants of the wealthy were allowed the next day to visit their families since they would have had to serve their masters on Christmas Day.
Correct. It was called Boxing Day, because they were generally sent home with a small box of gifts, usually food, often clothes, and a Christmas bonus usually an extra days pay, because they worked Christmas Day, hence tradition of double time wages if working Christmas in hospitality.
That was a very misleading description of Boxing Day. It's really not just a 'Black Friday' type event. It's a public holiday which to some extent serves as an extension of Christmas Day; people continue to eat and drink and celebrate (or suffer) with extended family. Yes, some go shopping but it's also traditionally a time to talk a walk, go to watch a football match and basically just get out of the house for some fresh air. Oh, and the Christmas Pudding is not a cake. It's extremely rich and dense - you won't want a large portion. It's traditionally served with a cream infused with brandy called brandy butter.
@@JuneSivell, we always had turkey and ham on Xmas day and roast pork with stuffing and apple sauce on Boxing day. None of our family have ever had to work over Xmas, so it's basically Christmas week that ends on the 1st January with another big family dinner - usually roast beef.
@@gillianrimmer7733 Turkey butties and milky coffee sat in front of the open fire listening to the footy results on the wireless (no T.V. until years later) Cosy, comforting, sat with parents and siblings. Bliss.
That sounds like brandy cream, not brandy butter. Not sure if that's a regional/class distinction, but I hadn't even heard of brandy cream until a couple of years ago when, for some reason, brandy butter just wasn't in the supermarkets at all.
With my children we put a pillowcase with presents in it at the end of their beds. It always contained a satsuma. In the past getting an orange in a stocking was a real treat because they were expensive ( my dad who was born in 1927 told me it was often the only time he had an orange all year)
Panto is an amazing tradition. As said it's usually a 2 hour theatre production around a children's fairytale. It has men dressed as women and women dressed as men. A lot of audience participation. Singing and jokes aplenty aimed at kids but some more adult humour is usually slipped in. Each town usually has it's own panto and local news is often scripted into the panto.
it's full of slapstick, double entenres, bad jokes, ropy songs, dancers, men as women, women as men, moments of glorious f***uppery (prop fails, lighting issues, people forgetting lines, dancers exiting on the wrong side of the stage, slips, trips and wardrobe malfunctions) and worth going to see one for all that and more 😁 grew up doing panto and yeah, I was that uncoordinated tap dancer in the lineup.
When I was small we had a coal fire, my letters to Father Christmas were thrown up the chimney not into the flames, the heat carried the letters up the chimney to the north pole 😊, stockings were put at the end of the bed and usually contained a small toy, a mandarin orange & chocolate coins. My children had stocking right up until the left home, with the same sort of contents plus a comic, it kept them busy while my husband lit our coal fire before we had gas central heating, my children carry on the same tradition with our grandchildren. Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from Yorkshire, England 🇬🇧
I'm also from Yorkshire. The presents for my sister and I were put in a pillow case at the bottom of the bed. I never once woke up until the weight of the full pillow case could be felt. Big presents were kept downstairs.
The Queen banned Monopoly in her christmas household as it always evoked arguments. Christmas pudding can be served with custard, double cream, brandy or rum sauce or brandy butter. Some people have the leftovers fried the next day.
In the UK, it was traditional to put a silver sixpence coin into the mix, so some lucky person would get it with their pudding. The pudding can be served with Custard, Cream, or Cream laced with Cognac or Baileys Irish Cream. 🎄🎀🎄
There were tradition silver tokens ,which meant something to the recipient . Apart from the money ,I can remember only a few; a tiny horseshoe , a stirrup, and often the housewife`s gold wedding ring . None of these things were to be kept, but washed and returned to the kitchen for next year`s pudding.
The name comes from a time during Queen Victoria's reign when the rich used to box up gifts to give to the poor. Boxing Day was traditionally a day off for servants - a day when they received a special Christmas box from their masters. Boxing Day is also known as St Stephen's Day - Stephen was the first Christian martyr, stoned to death in c34 AD. Being a saint's day, it has charitable associations. Charitable boxes - collections of money - would have been given out at the church door to the needy.
The paper crown tradition can be traced back to the ancient Romans, who wore festive headgear to celebrate Saturnalia, a festival that took place around the winter solstice. A lot of things we do in the UK are from pagen traditions slowly watered down over the ages. Mistletoe, for instance, was a druid ritual to bring it in the house for good luck for the household and ward off evil spirits, now used as a sign of love and friendship.
Personally, our family didn't put Santa letters in the fire. We put them up the chimney above the flames. You didn't see them burn. They were supposed to be transported by the hot air out the top of the chimney.
That is exactly what I did as a kid, well my dad would do it as you have to put your hand in above the fire and let the letter go so it is sucked up with the smoke. Thing is that practically nobody had an open fire anymore, most houses don’t even have working fire places. Central heating is king now. My children didn’t grow up doing this as we didn’t have a chimney let alone fireplace. Honestly we didn’t do the letters to Father Christmas as to me having grown up with the tradition I had anything else just seemed a let down!
I have never heard of tgst custom and it is definitely something we would not have done when I was young in the 1960s: it would have risked setting the chimney on fire and having to call the fire brigade!
When I was young (back in the 60s) I remember we children sent letters to father christmas. We wrote them on tissue paper and then threw them in above the coals and watched them magically fly up the chimney. It seemed totally believable to us. Did anyone else do this?
I was a young child in the late 70s, into the 80s, and we still sent letters up the chimney. Although we'd moved on to sheets of lined or plain paper by then.
The biggest difference that jumps out for me is that you call it ‘The holidays’, we tend not to use that frase, here it’s just Christmas time. .Have a wonderful Christmas, don’t forget the mince pies..
I think one of tne reasons the yanks call it 'the holidays' is because it's possibly the only holiday they get all year, whereas in the UK we take holidays lots of different times during the year. There is no *THE* Holidays, but lots of different ones. Summer holidays, seaside holidays, foreign holidays, sunshine holidays, city break holidays, activity holidays, relaxing-at-home holidays ... you get the idea. That can only happen when _everyone_ gets ample paid time off from their job.
Oh my word, filling a stocking and getting them into our children's bedroom without waking them up was an annual event... but when they ran into to our bedroom on Christmas morning showing what had been left by Father Christmas was priceless ...
I'm from the UK & our stockings were always around the fireplace. The letters were left in the chimney when the fire was out & not thrown in the flames.
Our stocking was allways at the fire and we always lit the cornor of the letter and it whooshed up the fire. We had 4 fireplaces in our house growing up and 3 of the 4 were always lit before we did anything on Crimbo day. Father Christmas always left a new daecoration we would have to find. We also had a fry up breakfast before we opened any gift.
I think the fireplace is THE tradition, but it's complicated with concept of bedrooms and heating. some families will have all slept in the same room others may or may not have had children's bedrooms with or without fireplaces. Then there's the tradition that you had to be asleep or Santa wouldn't come, which makes more sense if the prezzies are left by your bed.
When I was a kid in what feels like "Victorian Times" now, we used to give all the people who delivered things to our doorstep a "Christmas Box" tip. In the week before Christmas. When we had daily/weekly visits from the milkman, bread man, paper boy, rent collector, loan collector, insurance man, Football Pools man, and garbage collector etc.
The insurance man and the pools man! That’s a blast from the past! I was a Saturday boy in the local butchers shop in the early to mid 90s. Christmas was definitely the best. Delivering to the local people, helping the oldies with their shopping. Being given a ‘Christmas box’ of a pound coin or a bag of sweets. Happy, happy memories.
Santa found a bottle of scotch one year in our house, after that he found the fridge, ate a whole christmas pudding, threw up in the bathtub, and went to sleep on the lounge floor where the kids found him on christmas day, where somebody had been sick on him. He has been strictly excused alcohol on christmas eve for the last 34 years and has behaved himself ever since.
The letters don't burn in the fire. They go up the chimney with the heat of the fire and the draw of the fire. It really looks magical as they fly off to Father Christmas 🎅
Myself and my family don't go shopping on Boxing Day - the video is a bit tongue in cheek here. It is a Bank Holiday so most people don't go to work. In fact, many people have the whole period from Christmas Day to New Year's Day off, sometimes as part of your annual paid leave allowance . Boxing Day is often a day for meeting up with friends and family you didn't see on Christmas Day, and a day for eating up Christmas leftovers and bringing out generally lighter food. We traditionally have cold meats and chutneys, with bubble and squeak and baked beans.....
Regarding the Christmas pudding ,it is placed on a plate after cooking then you warm some brandy pour over the pudding and then light it,we usually have the lights turned off at this point everyone cheers.She didn't mention the Christmas cake,a rich fruit cake covered in white icing (not frosting) decorated with a snow scene .Merry Christmas to you all
Boxing Day in our family has always been a huge family lunch with cold meats, pickles, bubble and squeak (mashed potatoes and Brussels mixed up, and fried into patties). Christmas pudding again with custard or/and cream. Then later a big buffet with an evening of games. Physical games like musical hats, guess the playdough item, and paper games, guess the celebrity, flags of the world, etc, etc. Great fun
Christmas pudding is not really like a cake - it's incredibly dense and you only need a tablespoonful or so in a dish and then smothered in custard, cream or brandy sauce. Leftover Christmas pudding is also lovely sliced, fried in butter and eaten with cream or ice cream.
In my house it was sherry rather than brandy. Monopoly kills family gatherings through people throwing a strop (Trivial Pursuit can have a similar result) - better off sticking to Game of Life or Cluedo (Scrabble lies somewhere in-between).
Most kids in the UK, will pretend to be asleep when our folks sneak in to fill our Christmas stockings. Christmas pudding is very filling, so you don't need much to fill you up.
In our house, we use the left over christmas pudding. In a big fry up, on boxing day morning. Its delicious sliced and fried with sausages, bacon and eggs.
@@emeraldgirl7374 The boxing day fry up lovely but we cook the left overs from the chistmas dinner not adding the christmas pudding we just eat the christmas pudding all year round lol we always buy far too much of it
I grew up in Scotlad so Santa had Whisky also a carrot for the Raindeer. Parsnips are wonderful. Our gravy is diffrent to yours and i love bread sause. The white on the xmas cake is brandy sause which is butter icing sugar and brandy all mushed together. I have never gone shopping on boxing day.
As a child, I remember waking up early on Christmas Day and feeling the weight of the presents on my bed. It was so exciting. We also leave carrots for Fr Christmas’ reindeer.
And yes as parents we do indeed sneak into our children's bedrooms at night to fill stocking. It does vary from family to family as to if Father Christmas or parents leave the stocking presents or 'main' bigger presents under the tree. Each family does it different
Just thought it needs to be made clear that you pull crackers between two people (usually everyone around the table pulls together with those on either side) and the person that gets the biggest part gets the prize inside. Mentioning as I recently saw (in a film) Americans attempting this tradition but pulling it like this woman did.
Also “British Tradition” is very subjective. I had never even heard of bread sauce till having a meal in the south of England. I truly was surprised by it and admit that it looked so bad (like wallpaper paste) that I didn’t bother to taste more than a finger tip dip’s worth. I don’t know ANYONE who has ever watched the queen’s speech or even cared about, it and care even less about one by Charles. We never refer to Father Christmas, but always Santa or Santa Claus, sometimes even Auld Nick and our Santa drinks Whisky and eats shortbread and mince pies. Traditionally the bird we ate was goose but the cheaper big Turkey bird to feed lots of people has replaced the traditional goose to the extent that many people think that Turkey is traditional, and I suppose it is the modern / current tradition.
@@kitchfacepalm I think that a lot of 'traditions' came out of the Victorian era and the turkey one was almost entirely the result of Dickens character Scrooge giving a turkey to the Cratchits. Turkey, at that time, was exotic and expensive whereas many people were able to keep a goose, so turkey was aspired to. Funny how it's now the other way round. I'm surprised about the bread sauce. My Nanna was from Newcastle and she always made it (as did the other Grandma from Dorset). Is it just because it's a bit old fashioned (for a start it has to be white bread)?
When I was young in the before I knew days My dad would sneak the presents into our room and then go stand at the other side of the house and shake some bells to make it sound like Santas sleigh bells and we would wake up to find the presents in a sack at the end of our bed. I did the same with our son except I put a red bulb at the end of a stick rang the bells and then slowly pulled the bulb away from the window. Was so awesome seeing his face when he burst in to tell his mum.
It's probably a generational thing....us older people when growing up practically every house had an open fire. When you threw the letter on the fire if you were lucky the updraft would take it up the chimney!! Magic!! LOL
Hi both…..we don’t generally call Christmas time “ the holidays”, it’s just Christmas. Chrimbo is just a shortened version of the word Christmas 🤷♀️….us Brits do love a shortened word haha! Christmas pudding is lush if you like lots of fruit but it’s very rich so go steady! Crackers are fun and the hat never fits me lol! I’m just heading off to spend Christmas in Cornwall with my family….its where I come from. Happy Christmas to you both and Sophia 🎄🎅🏻⛄️❤️
The British tradtion was always Sherry and Mince Pies for Santa, which you will discover if you Google it. Not sure why she said Brandy, perhaps because Sherry is not as popular as it once was, so people have started substituting it with Brandy. Most likely as they get to drink it after the kids have gone to bed! 😁
Christmas Pudding with Custard Cream Brandy Sauce Heated up brandy in a ladel lit and poured over hot pudding This not done much now. It was a spectacle bringing into a darkened room Spooned into bowls Used to put sixpence in pudding ( coin) and lucky to find
Pantomimes start from around October til about Feb. Sorry for the overload messages. Also i have never heard of the Xmas tree coming down after 12 days , it is usually down before New Years
Boxing day is a repeat of Christmas Day. Family, parties, left overs etc. Some people go shopping but many people just hunker down for another day of fun and celebration
Or white brandy sauce 😋. And pouring brandy over it then setting on fire, burns off the alcohol leaving pure brandy flavour. Don't forget the sixpence!
The stockings....best way to sneak in and "fill" them...DUPLICATE STOCKING!! put the empty one on their bed, when they're asleep, remove the empty one and replace with the full one. That way u spend no more than a few seconds in the room and voilà
We used a pillowcase as a sack for some toys left at the bottom of your bed. Larger presents under the tree. Mince pie & milk for Santa and a carrot for Rudolph.
Christmas crackers are a traditional Christmas favourite in the UK. They were first made in about 1845-1850 by a London sweet maker called Tom Smith. He had seen the French 'bon bon' sweets (almonds wrapped in pretty paper) on a visit to Paris in 1840. He came back to London and tried selling sweets like that in England and also included a small motto or riddle in with the sweet. But they didn't sell very well. In 1861 Tom Smith launched his new range of what he called 'Bangs of Expectation'! Legend says that, one night, while he was sitting in front of his log fire, he became very interested by the sparks and cracks coming from the fire. Suddenly, he thought what a fun idea it would be, if his sweets and toys could be opened with a crack when their fancy wrappers were pulled in half. However, looking into the history of the Tom Smith company, it's thought that Tom actually bought the recipe for the small cracks and bangs in crackers from a fireworks company called Brock’s Fireworks. The story of him sitting by the fire was probably added to help sell his new items. Crackers were also nicknamed called 'cosaques' and were thought to be named after the 'Cossack' soldiers who had a reputation for riding on their horses and firing guns into the air. When Tom died, his expanding cracker business was taken over by his three sons, Tom, Walter and Henry. Walter introduced the hats into crackers and he also travelled around the world looking for new ideas for gifts to put in the crackers. The crowns might have been inspired from Epiphany cakes from Europe which are often decorated with a paper crown on the top.
We didn't burn our letters to Father Christmas - they went straight up the chimney by the force of the hot air from the fire. My mum would hold them above the flames and let go, and they would 'magically' fly up the chimney straight to the North Pole.
Have you ever witnessed a chimney fire. Put the letters in the fire, the smoke goes strait to Father Christmas. Children have a great imagination and love to play along, like pretending to be asleep when the stockings are taken to fill and being thrilled to see mince pie crumbs and an empty brandy glass. Long live imagination - oh yes it is!
We usually finish work on Christmas Eve and don't return to work until the 2nd or 3rd of January because most work places close between Christmas and New Year (depending on which industry that you work in)
One thing she kinda breezed past is how huge a deal television is on Christmas Day in the UK. Many tv shows air special Christmas themed episodes that air on Christmas. Particularly comedy shows and soaps. Here in America Christmas themed episodes air earlier in the month and not on the actual day itself.
If you write your letter to Father Christmas, a little earlier, not only did the parents have time to buy the gifts, but if you posted it with the address included, the children get a card from the Royal Mail, from Santa and some letters make it all the way to the North Pole & the letter comes back, with a story. Those cards and letters are treasured forever.
Father Christmas must get pretty drunk drinking all the alcohol, and rudolph gets a lot of carrots :) if the house didn't have an open fire? Father Christmas has a "magic key" of course!! 😂
We were told that Santa doesn't drink all the sherry/brandy. We were told it helps Rudolph's nose stay bright red because, as anyone who has drunk alcohol knows, the consumption of alcohol causes the drinker to get a red 'glow' about the cheeks. The same effect helps Rudolph guide the sleigh!
I think it depends on the family. We NEVER had stockings in the bedroom. Always in the living room. If we didn’t have a fire place, they would be on the floor of the living room
The best thing about stockings left on kids beds is the extra half hour or so asleep they can buy you! My kids always used to have a few small toys, some chocolate, a drink and satsuma just to keep them occupied for a bit! Also, about traditions being lost, try starting your own with your kids. When mine were born we were poor as church mice our first few xmas', and we made many of the tree decorations. Now fastforward to my kids all being grown and i still had those old decorations we used to use, so i split them between them for their own trees. Its only a little thing but always sparks memories when they come out.
@@flo6956 Yeah its not 100%, but back then i would take what i could - i used to work retail selling fruit and veg, xmas week was always brutal especially xmas eve, so any extra rest was worth it!
She forgot Christmas Cake! A rich fruit cake, baked months in advance, and regularly dosed with Brandy afterwards. Finally covered with marzipan, royal icing and decorative icing. Eaten on it's own in the South and with cheese in the North (Wensleydale is best or Cheshire).
I remember one year, when my mother somehow forgot the marzipan! My father had to use a saw to cut the cake. The icing was like candy - you couldn't bite into it, so we sucked on it! She was mortified, but we all thought it was great. LOL
During the six yrs we lived in VA, we certainly celebrated Christmas as we always had. Many of our neighbours had a lesser event. I think this may be because only Christmas Day itself is a holiday for many Americans, whereas in the UK (Canada, Australia, etc) and in much of Europe, the days off work run from midday on the 24th to January 3rd.
Letters to Santa used to go in the fire as the smoke took the message to Santa. Now letters are posted and the wonderful post office deal with them. Santa fills the stocking used to be with nuts and oranges as they were expensive and were a treat.
I took my American friend to a pantomime when she visited and it was the funniest thing ever!!! I tutored her into the responses before we went. There are a lot of phrases used which everyone knows and knows how to respond to “He’s behind you!!!”
My partner and I spend Christmas just the two of us - but we still go the whole hog! You can never have too many leftovers! My fave tradition is making the kilties though (that's what we call the bacon wrapped sausages in Scotland!). It was the great Christmas job I started doing to help my Mum when I was a "big" girl, and 30 years later, hundreds of miles away ot still takes me home to the memory of all that love and laughter. The little traditions matter so much!
How do parents sneek in answer very carefuly and quitely ( I used to have a spare stocking so the empty one was laid at the bottom by the child then swapped by "santa" ) best feeling in the world when i was a child was waking up early and feeling the stocking full of pressies with your feet 😂
I laughed till I cried when the lady in the video said "Then we eat until we can't move, and watch telly (TV) till we pass out", and "We soak everything in alcohol, and then light it on fire" 🤣. Yep, that sounds like most Christmases I remember! 😂😍❤
Letters in the fireplace ?? Never heard of that, carrot for rudolf and mince pie for santa , nothing better than your child rushing into your bedroom in the morning full of excitement shouting Santa's been it's just the best . Merry Christmas guys 😊.
I'm 60 years old and have never heard of throwing the letters on the fire. Also, most houses don't have open fires and a chimney. I think most children leave out a glass of milk and a mince pie for Santa and a carrot for the reindeer.
Mid 50’s when I was a kid our house was heated by open fires only and yep,letters to Father Christmas magically went (I wonder if that’s where JK Rowling got the chimney travel idea from 🤷♂️). And I agree with an earlier post, “The Holidays” just sounds strange,holidays are what you go on in the summer!!
Brandy SAUCE is traditionally eaten with Xmas pudding! It’s a creamy sweet white sauce laced with brandy… yummmm. Some people like custard, or thick cream either.
A lot of what she says does not apply to all of Britain. My children and grandchildren put their letters to santa in a special santa post box, and the post office replied. Never heard of burning letters or throwing in the fireplace. Our stocking were at the bottom of our bed, or attached to the fireplace. A lot of traditions vary throughout the country and families.
Burning letters in the fireplace is a British tradition that goes back hundreds of years. Ever since we had open fires in the house, it kind of died out when central heating was invented and houses had no need for fireplaces. Just because you haven't heard of it, doesn't mean it wasn't/isn't a tradition.?
Ah! ,you mustn’t be old enough then, I’m 76 and YES WE DID post our letters UP the Chimney, delicate act though, Dad did it because it had to be held just right over the fire so the draft whipped it UP the chimney and not on it. 👍👍. In our stockings, we opened first ,we got Half a Crown, (22 and half P),an orange, walnuts and chocolate money. 😃
I'm a Brit and I've never heard of burning letters or taking the tree down within ten days. Also, whipped cream on christmas pudding? No, it's brandy sauce. Happy christmas 😃
A blessed Christmastide to all three of you, and all whom you love. 🎄🤱 Santa doesn't visit Britain at all. His boss, Father Christmas does (leaving America to his assistant 😅). In Wales, as Father Christmas is a little large, our gifts are delivered down the chimney by Sion Corn (an elf named Chimney John). 🏴
@@no-oneinparticular7264 My daughter-in-law, who is Spanish, called him Papá Noel too, but when I was a student in Montréal, the French kids there called him Père Noël.
my son is 7 and he writes his letter to santa. Then we send off his letter santa by Royal mail and then he gets a reply back. The best Santa's reply was with a proper private company that we'd used last time, as they send you a far better more detailed letter back and it's in more realistic.
As Santa comes down the chimney, the idea was that route was the best way to dend letters (up with the smoke) most houses now don't have chimneys. The King follows the tradition of the Christmas 💆 televised 3pm Christmas afternoon.(pre recorded by him some weeks before. Boxingday is a holiday as well. Traditionally when upperclass families and royalty get outside either for the shoot, pheasants, or the fox hunt. Everyone else just goes for a walk, so as to walk off the effects of overeating,and a chance for kids to try out their new bikes . In Ireland it is St.Stephens day, when everyone goes to the horse races.
Gravy must be made using the water from the vegetables and poured into the meat pan with all the crunchy bits and meat juices thickened with bisto gravy granules and simmered stirring gently as it thickens .it has a wonderful thick rich meaty flavour like the taste of seared outside slice of a beef riasting joint of meat
Hello Both. One of my neighbours used to leave the veg peelings on the doorstep telling the kids that Santa’s reindeer had called by. No chimneys in my street! Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you all. Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda I chi, in Welsh. Chrimbo is just a childish version of Christmas.
Growing up Santa always left our presents in my parents’ bedroom (stockings weren’t big enough). Mum would wake us up to let us know he had been. Nowadays most people just put their presents under the tree. Boxing Day is the start of the January sales and the reason is to get rid of the Christmas stock they didn’t sell. The monarch’s Christmas speech tradition that goes back King George V and the invention of radio and has been shown on TV since 1957. It’s on at 3.00 pm, about the time everyone is dozing off after a huge Christmas dinner.
You put a penny (silver sixpence traditionally) in your Christmas pudding. And the lucky person why gets served the portion with the penny will have wealth and good fortune that year.
Or they end up with a broken tooth, having to find a dentist for emergency treatment and get hit with a massive bill from the dentist which coming hot on the heels of Christmas can be pretty alarming. Still, tradition right😊
I have always loved the Boxing Day lunch with 'bubble and squeak', usually leftover cabbage and roast potatoes fried up together, however the leftovers after Christmas dinner include roast potatoes, parsnips, brussel sprouts, pigs in blankets, stuffing, bread sauce(with all it's spices), carrots etc. I can't wait for this year's version (never the same twice), served with left over cold meats and chutneys. Happy Christmas, y'all from the South East of England.
HI STEVE AND LINDSAY DEBRA HERE FROM SOUTH WALES UK Say hi to Sophia for me, I hope she is being a good girl and not getting to excited for Santa, so she stays on his good childrens list. MY CHRISTMAS DAY Just like you guys, Santa, (as that is what we called him as well), left my filled stocking by the fireplace, my parents (aka Santa) left stuff for me to amuse myself with whilst I waited for my parents to get up later that morning and thren open up my main gifts. In my family we left pulling our christmas crackers until after our lunch, which was a stuffed roast turkey with vegetables (carrots, sprouts, mashed potatoes, roast potatoes, roasted parsnips and honey roasted carrots) and gravy, cranberry sauce and stuffing and of course pigs in blankets (sausages wrapped in streaky bacon (American style bacon)). Then we had our dessert of Christmas pudding and custard whilst we pulled our christmas crackers. Oh boy did we feel full after that meal or what! After lunch whch we normally had at around 1:00 p.m. we lounge out around the tv watching a special christmas soap episode followed by the Queen's speech (now of course the King"s speech) at 3:00 pm to 3: 15 pm followed by a film usually a James Bond or a musical depending what channel you was watching. Then we started on our christmas chocolates ( mmm mmm mmm). That basically is my christmas day here in my little part of South Wales. I would now like to take this opportunity of wishing you, Lindsay and Sophia a very Merry Christmas and a Happy 2024.
The royal Christmas message was originally started by the Queen's grandfather, her father carried it on this was on radio but the Queen was the first to be televised. King Charles has continued as will Prince William when he is King.
Happy Christmas Steve, Lyndsey and Sophia. Our family tradition is to open gifts just before lunch. We have scrambled eggs and smoked salmon for breakfast with a Buck’s Fizz, late lunch, in between open the gifts. We always remember the loved ones no longer with us, we toast them before the meal.
A proper Christmas pudding is very rich, sticky and dense. The best way I like it is to eat is a very small piece at a time, with a lot of custard or brandy sauce.
Just a comment about weather’s effect on traditions you follow. In Australia we have most of the British traditions as part of our Christmas traditions( with some special additions that are just Australian- which really only started to appear in the late 1980’s eg. Prawns).
We left sherry and a mince pie for Santa Claus and a carrot for the reindeer. Our letters went up the chimney on the hot air from the fire, you had to time it just right.
I lived in NZ for a few years, and we always had a midwinter Christmas in June because it was more festive than in the December summer. Definitely prefer our British Christmas traditions.
We used to post our letters UP the chimney- by throwing them into the updraught from the fire, where they would get whisked up the chimney....not throw them into the flames! Because obviously, Father Christmas woud read them up on the roof prior to his coming down the chimney on Christmas Eve! Stockings- these tend to be full of small gifts and sweets, not big presents- which end up under the tree, of course. In our family, the 'stockings' were always one of Dad's big walking socks, and so the trick (make sure Sophia isn't reading this!) is that you give the child one sock to take to bed, then stuff the other one of the pair with the gifts, so all you have to do is creep in to swap the stockings over once they are asleep. Cunning eh? Boxing Day- I'm not sure why she is confused as to its origins. It was traditionally the day when churches and wealthy landowners opened up their 'Poor Boxes' where money had been collected during the year, and distributed it amongst the local poor. These days it's sort of a Bank Holiday (most people get the day off work, but those working in retail and service industries often don't.) In recent years there has been an increase in stores deciding to remain closed on Boxing Day to allow their staff a day off after the very busy run up to Christmas. It is traditionally when the 'January Sales' start - when stores are of course selling off stuff they didn't shift over Christmas. One of the differences she didn't mention is the TV 'Christmas Special'. Whilst US TV will have episodes of regular comedy or drama shows that take place at Chritmas, in the UK lots of shows will produce a 'Christmas Special' in which you see your usual characters very specifically celebrating Christmas. It is considered an honour for shows to be asked to produce a Christmas Special - and the most popular/ biggest shows will be scheduled to be shown on Christmas Day itself, with other less 'big ticket' shows being broadcast in the run-up to Christmas. I hope you al have the best time over Christmas- and do share photos of you in your paper hats after you've done the crackers!
Love to hear about all of this! It's really interesting to us, the differences. :) Especially the part about television shows having 'Christmas Specials' where they're celebrating Christmas.
We have never thrown our santa letters in the fire. Pudding is nothing like cake which we also have. Black friday happens in november, boxing day has always happened only just recently the sales start on that day. We also sometimes call it crimble. She doesnt know what shes talking about😆. Hope you had a great day with best wishes from the UK
When putting out mince pies and brandy for Father Christmas, don't forget to put a carrot out for his reindeer too. This was an essential addition in our house!
Oh yes Rudolph always got a carrot in our house too
When I was a kid it was always a carrot for the reindeer and a glass of milk for Sannta. It was only later I figured out that the milk was because my dad doesn't drink alcohol. 😄
one time i ate the carrot the day after because i wanted to know what it was like to be a reindeer and i got so ill we never did it again lmao. i was throwing up the entire day 😂
We always left out a bucket of water and carrots for the reindeers. One of my tasks on the way home from Midnight Mass was to tip out some of the water and nibble on the carrots to make it look as thought they've been. Then indoors to fill all the stockings and sacks
i thought the brandy was there for the kids to sneak and try then it knocks them out so easier for the parents to sort the santa sack... i used to drink a bit anyway lol
2:40 - BURNING LETTERS? - I'm 60 years of age, I was born in the UK and this is the first time I've heard of burning letters to Santa.
Same here. I don't know where this lady gets some of her ideas from.
Yep, never heard of that in my 53 years in the UK
I'm 63 - born in the UK and as children we always burnt our letters to Santa. Started the tip burning and then 'sent' them up the chimney (with strict parental guidance!) x
@@lorrainecole8608 Thanks for sharing your knowledge of this practice actually taking place. The other commenter and I must have been born on the cusp of this practice disappearing. Perhaps we were at the start of the gas fire generation. 😄
Didn't know about this until right now. Not many people have open fires now, so I can see it wouldn't be common now.
Although since the price of a first-class postage stamp is increasing from £1.35 to £1.65 tomorrow, I can see this tradition making a return.
Royal Mail has a guide on their website on what address to use, and unsurprisingly specifically says "Don't forget your stamp!"
And who still pulls the wish bone of the turkey with there pinky , maybe an older tradition but we still do it .😊
Crimbo, was a slang term for Christmas in the 1980s - I've not heard it for years.
Same with a chicken
Yup me..
Every one does
Still pull the wishbone, make your wish but don’t tell anyone, or wish for money.
4. We don't usually call the "chipolatas", they are usually called "cocktail sausages", but we usually use regular sausages wrapped in bacon, and they are called "pigs in blankets"
Best part of xmas dinner.
Santa magically comes down the chimney, so the letters magically find their way to Santa through the same chimney, total logic, how he gets down after 60 million cookies and alcoholic drinks is still a mystery, no wonder he only works one night a year
Never heard of throwing Santa's letters in the fire....mostly because these days there aren't many open fires !!!! I'm 70 , and we've never heard of it !!
The letters float up the chimney or burn and the smoke drifts to the North Pole
We didn’t have a fireplace when my children were small but e did have an old fashioned cast iron boiler with a flue. The children wrote their notes on light weight paper then we opened the vent an up the chimney it flew. Things are too sophisticated nowadays to do this without wrecking the boiler.
Yes it always made perfect sense to me 😂
It's a good job Santa flies. If he drove down the street with that much booze in his system, he'd be behind bars for months. Lol
@@roseoconnor5938 Same, 76 here and we did have an open fire for some years. I remember we left a mince pie and a glass of brandy out on the fireplace. As kids if we got too excited about Father Christmas before bedtime, one of my parents used to surreptitiously ring a little brass bell and say 'Sleighbells! He's on his way so you'd better go to sleep!'. A pillow case was put over a drawer in the dresser for presents (which had been sent/collected from relatives during the previous couple of weeks); invariably we'd wake up about 2 o-clock in the morning and see a pillowcase transformed, now bulging with pressies, run into our parents' room, jump on the bed shouting 'he's beeeen, he's beeen!!'. Our poor parents didn't get much sleep those couple of days ☺ Have a wonderful Christmas all 🎄🦌🎅🎁
Boxing day.This is mentioned in Samuel Pepys' diary entry for 19 December 1663. This custom is linked to an older British tradition where the servants of the wealthy were allowed the next day to visit their families since they would have had to serve their masters on Christmas Day.
Correct. It was called Boxing Day, because they were generally sent home with a small box of gifts, usually food, often clothes, and a Christmas bonus usually an extra days pay, because they worked Christmas Day, hence tradition of double time wages if working Christmas in hospitality.
That was a very misleading description of Boxing Day. It's really not just a 'Black Friday' type event. It's a public holiday which to some extent serves as an extension of Christmas Day; people continue to eat and drink and celebrate (or suffer) with extended family. Yes, some go shopping but it's also traditionally a time to talk a walk, go to watch a football match and basically just get out of the house for some fresh air.
Oh, and the Christmas Pudding is not a cake. It's extremely rich and dense - you won't want a large portion. It's traditionally served with a cream infused with brandy called brandy butter.
Yes, Boxing Day is just a second Christmas Day for everyone I know - it's used to visit family you didn't manage to see on the day itself.
My family were greedy we had three Christmases, the day, Boxing Day for visiting relatives, and the 27th which was my parents wedding anniversary.
@@JuneSivell, we always had turkey and ham on Xmas day and roast pork with stuffing and apple sauce on Boxing day.
None of our family have ever had to work over Xmas, so it's basically Christmas week that ends on the 1st January with another big family dinner - usually roast beef.
@@gillianrimmer7733 Turkey butties and milky coffee sat in front of the open fire listening to the footy results on the wireless (no T.V. until years later) Cosy, comforting, sat with parents and siblings. Bliss.
That sounds like brandy cream, not brandy butter. Not sure if that's a regional/class distinction, but I hadn't even heard of brandy cream until a couple of years ago when, for some reason, brandy butter just wasn't in the supermarkets at all.
With my children we put a pillowcase with presents in it at the end of their beds.
It always contained a satsuma. In the past getting an orange in a stocking was a real treat because they were expensive ( my dad who was born in 1927 told me it was often the only time he had an orange all year)
Panto is an amazing tradition. As said it's usually a 2 hour theatre production around a children's fairytale. It has men dressed as women and women dressed as men. A lot of audience participation. Singing and jokes aplenty aimed at kids but some more adult humour is usually slipped in. Each town usually has it's own panto and local news is often scripted into the panto.
it's full of slapstick, double entenres, bad jokes, ropy songs, dancers, men as women, women as men, moments of glorious f***uppery (prop fails, lighting issues, people forgetting lines, dancers exiting on the wrong side of the stage, slips, trips and wardrobe malfunctions) and worth going to see one for all that and more 😁
grew up doing panto and yeah, I was that uncoordinated tap dancer in the lineup.
Oh no it isn't. 🤣
@@MyOutdoorsUKOH YES IT IS!
@@audiocoffee HE'S BEHIND YOU!!
@@alisonrodger3360 I would've gotten away with it,
if it wasn't for those darn kids...
Sorry wrong show. 😁
When I was small we had a coal fire, my letters to Father Christmas were thrown up the chimney not into the flames, the heat carried the letters up the chimney to the north pole 😊, stockings were put at the end of the bed and usually contained a small toy, a mandarin orange & chocolate coins. My children had stocking right up until the left home, with the same sort of contents plus a comic, it kept them busy while my husband lit our coal fire before we had gas central heating, my children carry on the same tradition with our grandchildren.
Merry Christmas & Happy New Year from Yorkshire, England 🇬🇧
Thanks for the explanation! Makes a little more sense when put that way 😅 Merry Christmas to you and yours, too.
I'm also from Yorkshire. The presents for my sister and I were put in a pillow case at the bottom of the bed. I never once woke up until the weight of the full pillow case could be felt. Big presents were kept downstairs.
We had a pillow case of gifts at the end of the bed and my parents never woke me up!!
The Queen banned Monopoly in her christmas household as it always evoked arguments.
Christmas pudding can be served with custard, double cream, brandy or rum sauce or brandy butter. Some people have the leftovers fried the next day.
You guys *SERIOUSLY* have to take Sophia to a panto, you guys will enjoy it too - lots of adult jokes that the kids won't get 😉
It would be very costly for them to come to England d just to see a panto.
There are some on UA-cam to get an idea - but it's not the same without participating
@@clairec1267 Also many of the jokes are topical and often local.
In the UK, it was traditional to put a silver sixpence coin into the mix, so some lucky person would get it with their pudding.
The pudding can be served with Custard, Cream, or Cream laced with Cognac or Baileys Irish Cream.
🎄🎀🎄
When small, we would all get a silver "Tanner" in our pudding. I could never understand why my Dad was so lucky to get a Half Crown in his?
I love soaking the pudding in brandy and sett8ng fire to it and taking it to the dinner table.
I still put a 5 pence in for each family member when I'm making them lol
There were tradition silver tokens ,which meant something to the recipient .
Apart from the money ,I can remember only a few; a tiny horseshoe , a stirrup, and often the housewife`s gold wedding ring .
None of these things were to be kept, but washed and returned to the kitchen for next year`s pudding.
Yeah I hate CHRISTMAS PUDDING and i just wanted the coin inside it 😂
The name comes from a time during Queen Victoria's reign when the rich used to box up gifts to give to the poor. Boxing Day was traditionally a day off for servants - a day when they received a special Christmas box from their masters.
Boxing Day is also known as St Stephen's Day - Stephen was the first Christian martyr, stoned to death in c34 AD. Being a saint's day, it has charitable associations. Charitable boxes - collections of money - would have been given out at the church door to the needy.
Ah, Okay! Thanks for explaining :)
In Ireland it's still called St. Stephen's day.
My Irish family call Boxing Day St.Stephen's day over there.
The paper crown tradition can be traced back to the ancient Romans, who wore festive headgear to celebrate Saturnalia, a festival that took place around the winter solstice. A lot of things we do in the UK are from pagen traditions slowly watered down over the ages. Mistletoe, for instance, was a druid ritual to bring it in the house for good luck for the household and ward off evil spirits, now used as a sign of love and friendship.
Personally, our family didn't put Santa letters in the fire. We put them up the chimney above the flames. You didn't see them burn. They were supposed to be transported by the hot air out the top of the chimney.
Aye they were sucked up the lum lol.
Yes, we did this, the letter goes up the chimney and flies to Father Christmas. X
Okay, this makes a little more sense lol
That is exactly what I did as a kid, well my dad would do it as you have to put your hand in above the fire and let the letter go so it is sucked up with the smoke.
Thing is that practically nobody had an open fire anymore, most houses don’t even have working fire places. Central heating is king now. My children didn’t grow up doing this as we didn’t have a chimney let alone fireplace. Honestly we didn’t do the letters to Father Christmas as to me having grown up with the tradition I had anything else just seemed a let down!
I have never heard of tgst custom and it is definitely something we would not have done when I was young in the 1960s: it would have risked setting the chimney on fire and having to call the fire brigade!
When I was young (back in the 60s) I remember we children sent letters to father christmas. We wrote them on tissue paper and then threw them in above the coals and watched them magically fly up the chimney. It seemed totally believable to us.
Did anyone else do this?
I was a young child in the late 70s, into the 80s, and we still sent letters up the chimney. Although we'd moved on to sheets of lined or plain paper by then.
The biggest difference that jumps out for me is that you call it ‘The holidays’, we tend not to use that frase, here it’s just Christmas time. .Have a wonderful Christmas, don’t forget the mince pies..
USA is a cultural melting pot, so there's not just Christmas, but Hanukkah and probably other holidays too, all clustered around the winter solstice.
@@colinmorrison5119So are most cities in Britain, but we all know people are talking about Christmas.
@@nicolad8822 Agreed. Other festivals are celebrated, but in general conversation it is Christmas or some times Xmas.
I think one reason 'holidays' is used, at least for me, is because we tend to lump Christmas and New Year's together
I think one of tne reasons the yanks call it 'the holidays' is because it's possibly the only holiday they get all year, whereas in the UK we take holidays lots of different times during the year. There is no *THE* Holidays, but lots of different ones. Summer holidays, seaside holidays, foreign holidays, sunshine holidays, city break holidays, activity holidays, relaxing-at-home holidays ... you get the idea. That can only happen when _everyone_ gets ample paid time off from their job.
Oh my word, filling a stocking and getting them into our children's bedroom without waking them up was an annual event... but when they ran into to our bedroom on Christmas morning showing what had been left by Father Christmas was priceless ...
I'm from the UK & our stockings were always around the fireplace. The letters were left in the chimney when the fire was out & not thrown in the flames.
Our stocking was allways at the fire and we always lit the cornor of the letter and it whooshed up the fire. We had 4 fireplaces in our house growing up and 3 of the 4 were always lit before we did anything on Crimbo day. Father Christmas always left a new daecoration we would have to find. We also had a fry up breakfast before we opened any gift.
My stocking would be put on the outside of the bedroom door or hung from the door catch. Normally the stocking would be a pillow case.
That's just greed.@@wildadventure5101
I think the fireplace is THE tradition, but it's complicated with concept of bedrooms and heating. some families will have all slept in the same room others may or may not have had children's bedrooms with or without fireplaces. Then there's the tradition that you had to be asleep or Santa wouldn't come, which makes more sense if the prezzies are left by your bed.
We put a letter in the the postbox addressed Father Christmas and always receive a letter back …….Thank you Royal Mail ❤️🇬🇧
When I was a kid in what feels like "Victorian Times" now, we used to give all the people who delivered things to our doorstep a "Christmas Box" tip. In the week before Christmas. When we had daily/weekly visits from the milkman, bread man, paper boy, rent collector, loan collector, insurance man, Football Pools man, and garbage collector etc.
The insurance man and the pools man! That’s a blast from the past! I was a Saturday boy in the local butchers shop in the early to mid 90s. Christmas was definitely the best. Delivering to the local people, helping the oldies with their shopping. Being given a ‘Christmas box’ of a pound coin or a bag of sweets. Happy, happy memories.
Santa found a bottle of scotch one year in our house, after that he found the fridge, ate a whole christmas pudding, threw up in the bathtub, and went to sleep on the lounge floor where the kids found him on christmas day, where somebody had been sick on him. He has been strictly excused alcohol on christmas eve for the last 34 years and has behaved himself ever since.
ROFLMAO best keep an eye on that bottle in my cupboard tonight
WISHING YOU A WONDERFUL CHRISTMAS
Priceless..😂😂
😂😂😂
@moonshinepz 😆
If it wasn,t for the kids ,we wouldn,t bother!!!
The letters don't burn in the fire. They go up the chimney with the heat of the fire and the draw of the fire. It really looks magical as they fly off to Father Christmas 🎅
The Queen was the first monarch to have a televised Christmas message, before television the King sent the Christmas message by the radio.
Myself and my family don't go shopping on Boxing Day - the video is a bit tongue in cheek here. It is a Bank Holiday so most people don't go to work. In fact, many people have the whole period from Christmas Day to New Year's Day off, sometimes as part of your annual paid leave allowance . Boxing Day is often a day for meeting up with friends and family you didn't see on Christmas Day, and a day for eating up Christmas leftovers and bringing out generally lighter food. We traditionally have cold meats and chutneys, with bubble and squeak and baked beans.....
Regarding the Christmas pudding ,it is placed on a plate after cooking then you warm some brandy pour over the pudding and then light it,we usually have the lights turned off at this point everyone cheers.She didn't mention the Christmas cake,a rich fruit cake covered in white icing (not frosting) decorated with a snow scene .Merry Christmas to you all
after eating my wife's Christmas cake- you do not smoke or drive for at least an hour
Re. Christmas cake , I just think of the dreaded , by me anyway , marzipan 🤮
Hubby and I are complete opposite with Xmas cake. I eat the cake, he eats the marzipan and icing.
The marzipan is one of the best things in a Christmas cake.
Boxing Day in our family has always been a huge family lunch with cold meats, pickles, bubble and squeak (mashed potatoes and Brussels mixed up, and fried into patties). Christmas pudding again with custard or/and cream. Then later a big buffet with an evening of games. Physical games like musical hats, guess the playdough item, and paper games, guess the celebrity, flags of the world, etc, etc. Great fun
Christmas pudding is not really like a cake - it's incredibly dense and you only need a tablespoonful or so in a dish and then smothered in custard, cream or brandy sauce.
Leftover Christmas pudding is also lovely sliced, fried in butter and eaten with cream or ice cream.
You can also crumble Christmas pudding into crumbs and stir it through a decent quality vanilla ice cream, then return to the freezer to firm up.
Yeah it's disgusting urghhh🤢🤢🤮🤮
In my house it was sherry rather than brandy. Monopoly kills family gatherings through people throwing a strop (Trivial Pursuit can have a similar result) - better off sticking to Game of Life or Cluedo (Scrabble lies somewhere in-between).
Most kids in the UK, will pretend to be asleep when our folks sneak in to fill our Christmas stockings. Christmas pudding is very filling, so you don't need much to fill you up.
In our house, we use the left over christmas pudding. In a big fry up, on boxing day morning. Its delicious sliced and fried with sausages, bacon and eggs.
@@emeraldgirl7374 The boxing day fry up lovely but we cook the left overs from the chistmas dinner not adding the christmas pudding we just eat the christmas pudding all year round lol we always buy far too much of it
@@emeraldgirl7374wow never heard of that but I’m going to give it a go. Sounds delicious
And she forgot the family punch ups 😂
I don't know why I'm watching this in June, but I am, and I do think you two are lovely. So open minded and up for trying stuff. ♥
I grew up in Scotlad so Santa had Whisky also a carrot for the Raindeer. Parsnips are wonderful. Our gravy is diffrent to yours and i love bread sause. The white on the xmas cake is brandy sause which is butter icing sugar and brandy all mushed together. I have never gone shopping on boxing day.
UK Christmas is more important than in the US as we don't have Thanksgiving. The sauce on the pudding will be Brandy cream or brandy sauce.
As a child, I remember waking up early on Christmas Day and feeling the weight of the presents on my bed. It was so exciting. We also leave carrots for Fr Christmas’ reindeer.
And yes as parents we do indeed sneak into our children's bedrooms at night to fill stocking. It does vary from family to family as to if Father Christmas or parents leave the stocking presents or 'main' bigger presents under the tree. Each family does it different
How does Darth Vader know what you're getting for Christmas before you do?
I live in the North East of England we always leave milk a mince pie and some carrot sticks no alcohol
Just thought it needs to be made clear that you pull crackers between two people (usually everyone around the table pulls together with those on either side) and the person that gets the biggest part gets the prize inside. Mentioning as I recently saw (in a film) Americans attempting this tradition but pulling it like this woman did.
Okay, thank you! Yeah, we wouldn't have done it that way haha
@@reactingtomyroots In my family you cross hands and pull with both neighbours in a big circle! That way everyone should get one.
Also “British Tradition” is very subjective. I had never even heard of bread sauce till having a meal in the south of England. I truly was surprised by it and admit that it looked so bad (like wallpaper paste) that I didn’t bother to taste more than a finger tip dip’s worth. I don’t know ANYONE who has ever watched the queen’s speech or even cared about, it and care even less about one by Charles. We never refer to Father Christmas, but always Santa or Santa Claus, sometimes even Auld Nick and our Santa drinks Whisky and eats shortbread and mince pies. Traditionally the bird we ate was goose but the cheaper big Turkey bird to feed lots of people has replaced the traditional goose to the extent that many people think that Turkey is traditional, and I suppose it is the modern / current tradition.
@@kitchfacepalm I think that a lot of 'traditions' came out of the Victorian era and the turkey one was almost entirely the result of Dickens character Scrooge giving a turkey to the Cratchits. Turkey, at that time, was exotic and expensive whereas many people were able to keep a goose, so turkey was aspired to. Funny how it's now the other way round.
I'm surprised about the bread sauce. My Nanna was from Newcastle and she always made it (as did the other Grandma from Dorset). Is it just because it's a bit old fashioned (for a start it has to be white bread)?
When I was young in the before I knew days My dad would sneak the presents into our room and then go stand at the other side of the house and shake some bells to make it sound like Santas sleigh bells and we would wake up to find the presents in a sack at the end of our bed. I did the same with our son except I put a red bulb at the end of a stick rang the bells and then slowly pulled the bulb away from the window. Was so awesome seeing his face when he burst in to tell his mum.
As a Brit, I've never heard of putting the letters to Santa on the fire. We always "posted" them to the North Pole !
I seem to remember that in a Christmas film. Something about Swedish tradition,or something.
It's probably a generational thing....us older people when growing up practically every house had an open fire. When you threw the letter on the fire if you were lucky the updraft would take it up the chimney!! Magic!! LOL
You'd have to be pretty old to remember putting letters up chimeys and eating bread sauce (which is disgusting). TJ Max is TK Max in UK.
@@lisap6584I’m in my 30s and we did it, remember there being so many more fireplaces in houses even then
Yeah the royal mail used to have a department to deal with letters to Santa.
Playing Monopoly with family at Christmas is the perfect way to end up having a massive argument, resulting in at least 1 person going for a walk 😂
Always the tradition in our family too 😂
Hi both…..we don’t generally call Christmas time “ the holidays”, it’s just Christmas. Chrimbo is just a shortened version of the word Christmas 🤷♀️….us Brits do love a shortened word haha! Christmas pudding is lush if you like lots of fruit but it’s very rich so go steady! Crackers are fun and the hat never fits me lol!
I’m just heading off to spend Christmas in Cornwall with my family….its where I come from. Happy Christmas to you both and Sophia 🎄🎅🏻⛄️❤️
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you, Julie! :) Safe travels
I had COVID for Christmas too guys. Get well soon. ❤️
The British tradtion was always Sherry and Mince Pies for Santa, which you will discover if you Google it. Not sure why she said Brandy, perhaps because Sherry is not as popular as it once was, so people have started substituting it with Brandy. Most likely as they get to drink it after the kids have gone to bed! 😁
Brandy sauce is traditionally served with Christmas pudding, but custard is a good substitute. The alcohol is cooked out.
Christmas Pudding with
Custard
Cream
Brandy Sauce
Heated up brandy in a ladel lit and poured over hot pudding
This not done much now. It was a spectacle bringing into a darkened room
Spooned into bowls
Used to put sixpence in pudding ( coin) and lucky to find
rum sauce please! x
Pantomimes start from around October til about Feb. Sorry for the overload messages. Also i have never heard of the Xmas tree coming down after 12 days , it is usually down before New Years
Letters don’t go on the fire they get ‘posted’ up the chimney where they fly to Father Christmas….
Boxing day is a repeat of Christmas Day. Family, parties, left overs etc. Some people go shopping but many people just hunker down for another day of fun and celebration
I would note that the Xmas Pud is indeed portioned up in bowls after being set on fire. It can be served with custard, double cream or brandy butter.
Or white brandy sauce 😋. And pouring brandy over it then setting on fire, burns off the alcohol leaving pure brandy flavour. Don't forget the sixpence!
Or all 3 together
Americans call double cream Heavy Cream 🙂
Also referred to as plum pudding from the time where plum was slang for dried fruit.
We always put a £1 coin in ours too lol just have to warn people
The stockings....best way to sneak in and "fill" them...DUPLICATE STOCKING!! put the empty one on their bed, when they're asleep, remove the empty one and replace with the full one. That way u spend no more than a few seconds in the room and voilà
We used a pillowcase as a sack for some toys left at the bottom of your bed. Larger presents under the tree.
Mince pie & milk for Santa and a carrot for Rudolph.
Yes, same, we had a pillowcase too 👍
It was a glass of Sherry in our house to go with the mince pie.
Christmas crackers are a traditional Christmas favourite in the UK. They were first made in about 1845-1850 by a London sweet maker called Tom Smith. He had seen the French 'bon bon' sweets (almonds wrapped in pretty paper) on a visit to Paris in 1840. He came back to London and tried selling sweets like that in England and also included a small motto or riddle in with the sweet. But they didn't sell very well.
In 1861 Tom Smith launched his new range of what he called 'Bangs of Expectation'!
Legend says that, one night, while he was sitting in front of his log fire, he became very interested by the sparks and cracks coming from the fire. Suddenly, he thought what a fun idea it would be, if his sweets and toys could be opened with a crack when their fancy wrappers were pulled in half.
However, looking into the history of the Tom Smith company, it's thought that Tom actually bought the recipe for the small cracks and bangs in crackers from a fireworks company called Brock’s Fireworks. The story of him sitting by the fire was probably added to help sell his new items.
Crackers were also nicknamed called 'cosaques' and were thought to be named after the 'Cossack' soldiers who had a reputation for riding on their horses and firing guns into the air.
When Tom died, his expanding cracker business was taken over by his three sons, Tom, Walter and Henry. Walter introduced the hats into crackers and he also travelled around the world looking for new ideas for gifts to put in the crackers. The crowns might have been inspired from Epiphany cakes from Europe which are often decorated with a paper crown on the top.
We didn't burn our letters to Father Christmas - they went straight up the chimney by the force of the hot air from the fire. My mum would hold them above the flames and let go, and they would 'magically' fly up the chimney straight to the North Pole.
Have you ever witnessed a chimney fire. Put the letters in the fire, the smoke goes strait to Father Christmas. Children have a great imagination and love to play along, like pretending to be asleep when the stockings are taken to fill and being thrilled to see mince pie crumbs and an empty brandy glass. Long live imagination - oh yes it is!
Okay! THAT makes sense lol
We usually finish work on Christmas Eve and don't return to work until the 2nd or 3rd of January because most work places close between Christmas and New Year (depending on which industry that you work in)
One thing she kinda breezed past is how huge a deal television is on Christmas Day in the UK. Many tv shows air special Christmas themed episodes that air on Christmas. Particularly comedy shows and soaps. Here in America Christmas themed episodes air earlier in the month and not on the actual day itself.
If you write your letter to Father Christmas, a little earlier, not only did the parents have time to buy the gifts, but if you posted it with the address included, the children get a card from the Royal Mail, from Santa and some letters make it all the way to the North Pole & the letter comes back, with a story.
Those cards and letters are treasured forever.
Father Christmas must get pretty drunk drinking all the alcohol, and rudolph gets a lot of carrots :) if the house didn't have an open fire? Father Christmas has a "magic key" of course!! 😂
My parents used to leave the bathroom window open for Father Christmas to get in
We were told that Santa doesn't drink all the sherry/brandy. We were told it helps Rudolph's nose stay bright red because, as anyone who has drunk alcohol knows, the consumption of alcohol causes the drinker to get a red 'glow' about the cheeks. The same effect helps Rudolph guide the sleigh!
I think it depends on the family.
We NEVER had stockings in the bedroom. Always in the living room.
If we didn’t have a fire place, they would be on the floor of the living room
The best thing about stockings left on kids beds is the extra half hour or so asleep they can buy you! My kids always used to have a few small toys, some chocolate, a drink and satsuma just to keep them occupied for a bit!
Also, about traditions being lost, try starting your own with your kids. When mine were born we were poor as church mice our first few xmas', and we made many of the tree decorations. Now fastforward to my kids all being grown and i still had those old decorations we used to use, so i split them between them for their own trees. Its only a little thing but always sparks memories when they come out.
That's pretty genius, actually, in regards to the stockings in the bedrooms 😂
It doesn't always work, when my son was about 6 he came into my room shouting Father Christmas had been half hour after I'd gone to bed at about 1am
@@flo6956 Yeah its not 100%, but back then i would take what i could - i used to work retail selling fruit and veg, xmas week was always brutal especially xmas eve, so any extra rest was worth it!
She forgot Christmas Cake! A rich fruit cake, baked months in advance, and regularly dosed with Brandy afterwards. Finally covered with marzipan, royal icing and decorative icing. Eaten on it's own in the South and with cheese in the North (Wensleydale is best or Cheshire).
I remember one year, when my mother somehow forgot the marzipan! My father had to use a saw to cut the cake. The icing was like candy - you couldn't bite into it, so we sucked on it! She was mortified, but we all thought it was great. LOL
LMAO "Sending the letters to Hell" Satan must so confused and annoyed that he's getting all this post and everyone's spelling his name wrong!!
We always put out pillow cases on the end of the bed for presents and yes parents sneak in.
Our Christmas stockings had an apple, orange, nuts and usually a colouring book and crayons in them.
Good Lord. Don’t start saying crimbo. Says this British person.🤣
During the six yrs we lived in VA, we certainly celebrated Christmas as we always had. Many of our neighbours had a lesser event. I think this may be because only Christmas Day itself is a holiday for many Americans, whereas in the UK (Canada, Australia, etc) and in much of Europe, the days off work run from midday on the 24th to January 3rd.
Also in the US it gets diluted by Thanksgiving - another holiday where you eat turkey just before Christmas, where you sit and eat turkey
Hi, hope this isn’t too impertinent - love to watch you and your wife exploring the UK 👍👍👍🏴🏴🏴🇬🇧🇬🇧
Letters to Santa used to go in the fire as the smoke took the message to Santa. Now letters are posted and the wonderful post office deal with them. Santa fills the stocking used to be with nuts and oranges as they were expensive and were a treat.
I took my American friend to a pantomime when she visited and it was the funniest thing ever!!! I tutored her into the responses before we went. There are a lot of phrases used which everyone knows and knows how to respond to “He’s behind you!!!”
My partner and I spend Christmas just the two of us - but we still go the whole hog! You can never have too many leftovers! My fave tradition is making the kilties though (that's what we call the bacon wrapped sausages in Scotland!). It was the great Christmas job I started doing to help my Mum when I was a "big" girl, and 30 years later, hundreds of miles away ot still takes me home to the memory of all that love and laughter. The little traditions matter so much!
Love that! Definitely agree with traditions (big or small) being incredibly important
You hit the nail on the head!! UK Christmas dinner is very close the US Thanks Giving dinner!
How do parents sneek in answer very carefuly and quitely ( I used to have a spare stocking so the empty one was laid at the bottom by the child then swapped by "santa" ) best feeling in the world when i was a child was waking up early and feeling the stocking full of pressies with your feet 😂
My parents managed it, I must have been in deep rem sleep, as I never heard them come in during the night. 😂
I laughed till I cried when the lady in the video said "Then we eat until we can't move, and watch telly (TV) till we pass out", and "We soak everything in alcohol, and then light it on fire" 🤣. Yep, that sounds like most Christmases I remember! 😂😍❤
Letters in the fireplace ?? Never heard of that, carrot for rudolf and mince pie for santa , nothing better than your child rushing into your bedroom in the morning full of excitement shouting Santa's been it's just the best . Merry Christmas guys 😊.
I'm 60 years old and have never heard of throwing the letters on the fire. Also, most houses don't have open fires and a chimney.
I think most children leave out a glass of milk and a mince pie for Santa and a carrot for the reindeer.
Mid 50’s when I was a kid our house was heated by open fires only and yep,letters to Father Christmas magically went (I wonder if that’s where JK Rowling got the chimney travel idea from 🤷♂️). And I agree with an earlier post, “The Holidays” just sounds strange,holidays are what you go on in the summer!!
Brandy SAUCE is traditionally eaten with Xmas pudding! It’s a creamy sweet white sauce laced with brandy… yummmm. Some people like custard, or thick cream either.
A lot of what she says does not apply to all of Britain. My children and grandchildren put their letters to santa in a special santa post box, and the post office replied. Never heard of burning letters or throwing in the fireplace. Our stocking were at the bottom of our bed, or attached to the fireplace. A lot of traditions vary throughout the country and families.
I was just checking if royal mail still replied to letters to santa
Most people don’t have open fires anymore, this would have come about when every home had a coal fire.
Me and my brother used to put our letters to santa in our grandma's coal fire.
Burning letters in the fireplace is a British tradition that goes back hundreds of years. Ever since we had open fires in the house, it kind of died out when central heating was invented and houses had no need for fireplaces.
Just because you haven't heard of it, doesn't mean it wasn't/isn't a tradition.?
Ah! ,you mustn’t be old enough then, I’m 76 and YES WE DID post our letters UP the Chimney, delicate act though, Dad did it because it had to be held just right over the fire so the draft whipped it UP the chimney and not on it. 👍👍. In our stockings, we opened first ,we got Half a Crown, (22 and half P),an orange, walnuts and chocolate money. 😃
I'm a Brit and I've never heard of burning letters or taking the tree down within ten days.
Also, whipped cream on christmas pudding? No, it's brandy sauce.
Happy christmas 😃
Taken down by 12th day.😃
A blessed Christmastide to all three of you, and all whom you love. 🎄🤱 Santa doesn't visit Britain at all. His boss, Father Christmas does (leaving America to his assistant 😅). In Wales, as Father Christmas is a little large, our gifts are delivered down the chimney by Sion Corn (an elf named Chimney John). 🏴
In England, if you don't have a chimney Father Christmas has a magic door key
Now there's one to terrify the kids! "Santa ain't coming, he's sending an elf called chimney John. Lock up yer valuables." 😂
I used to call Father Christmas "Papa Noel", due to my mum being a French speaking belgian.
Santa comes to Scotland and Ireland. Father Christmas comes to England.
@@no-oneinparticular7264 My daughter-in-law, who is Spanish, called him Papá Noel too, but when I was a student in Montréal, the French kids there called him Père Noël.
my son is 7 and he writes his letter to santa. Then we send off his letter santa by Royal mail and then he gets a reply back.
The best Santa's reply was with a proper private company that we'd used last time, as they send you a far better more detailed letter back and it's in more realistic.
As Santa comes down the chimney, the idea was that route was the best way to dend letters (up with the smoke) most houses now don't have chimneys.
The King follows the tradition of the Christmas 💆 televised 3pm Christmas afternoon.(pre recorded by him some weeks before.
Boxingday is a holiday as well. Traditionally when upperclass families and royalty get outside either for the shoot, pheasants, or the fox hunt. Everyone else just goes for a walk, so as to walk off the effects of overeating,and a chance for kids to try out their new bikes . In Ireland it is St.Stephens day, when everyone goes to the horse races.
Boxing Day was also when the staff, suppliers and other tradespeople would receive their Christmas present (or ‘box’)
Gravy must be made using the water from the vegetables and poured into the meat pan with all the crunchy bits and meat juices thickened with bisto gravy granules and simmered stirring gently as it thickens .it has a wonderful thick rich meaty flavour like the taste of seared outside slice of a beef riasting joint of meat
Hello Both. One of my neighbours used to leave the veg peelings on the doorstep telling the kids that Santa’s reindeer had called by. No chimneys in my street!
Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to you all. Nadolig Llawen a Blwyddyn Newydd Dda I chi, in Welsh.
Chrimbo is just a childish version of Christmas.
Thank you! The same to you and yours :)
Growing up Santa always left our presents in my parents’ bedroom (stockings weren’t big enough). Mum would wake us up to let us know he had been. Nowadays most people just put their presents under the tree. Boxing Day is the start of the January sales and the reason is to get rid of the Christmas stock they didn’t sell. The monarch’s Christmas speech tradition that goes back King George V and the invention of radio and has been shown on TV since 1957. It’s on at 3.00 pm, about the time everyone is dozing off after a huge Christmas dinner.
People have Brandy sauce on christmas pudding or custard or cream. Its rich, I love it!
As someone from england, since when did we burn our letters to father christmas?!? Never knew this was a thing!
You put a penny (silver sixpence traditionally) in your Christmas pudding. And the lucky person why gets served the portion with the penny will have wealth and good fortune that year.
Or they end up with a broken tooth, having to find a dentist for emergency treatment and get hit with a massive bill from the dentist which coming hot on the heels of Christmas can be pretty alarming.
Still, tradition right😊
We wrote Santa a letter and posted it to the North Pole. You always got a response from the royal mail
Christmas pudding does not taste of alcohol it taste off fruit and spices
& coins
The only part of crimbo I like , dinner and crimbo pud. ...yum
Then I think you're doing Christmas pudding wrong! It should be steeped in so much brandy that it should come with an explosive hazard warning!
Well you are not eating the right of Christmas Pudding lol
I have always loved the Boxing Day lunch with 'bubble and squeak', usually leftover cabbage and roast potatoes fried up together, however the leftovers after Christmas dinner include roast potatoes, parsnips, brussel sprouts, pigs in blankets, stuffing, bread sauce(with all it's spices), carrots etc. I can't wait for this year's version (never the same twice), served with left over cold meats and chutneys. Happy Christmas, y'all from the South East of England.
HI STEVE AND LINDSAY
DEBRA HERE FROM SOUTH WALES UK
Say hi to Sophia for me, I hope she is being a good girl and not getting to excited for Santa, so she stays on his good childrens list.
MY CHRISTMAS DAY
Just like you guys, Santa, (as that is what we called him as well), left my filled stocking by the fireplace, my parents (aka Santa) left stuff for me to amuse myself with whilst I waited for my parents to get up later that morning and thren open up my main gifts.
In my family we left pulling our christmas crackers until after our lunch, which was a stuffed roast turkey with vegetables (carrots, sprouts, mashed potatoes, roast potatoes, roasted parsnips and honey roasted carrots) and gravy, cranberry sauce and stuffing and of course pigs in blankets (sausages wrapped in streaky bacon (American style bacon)). Then we had our dessert of Christmas pudding and custard whilst we pulled our christmas crackers.
Oh boy did we feel full after that meal or what!
After lunch whch we normally had at around 1:00 p.m. we lounge out around the tv watching a special christmas soap episode followed by the Queen's speech (now of course the King"s speech) at 3:00 pm to 3: 15 pm followed by a film usually a James Bond or a musical depending what channel you was watching. Then we started on our christmas chocolates ( mmm mmm mmm).
That basically is my christmas day here in my little part of South Wales.
I would now like to take this opportunity of wishing you, Lindsay and Sophia a very Merry Christmas and a Happy 2024.
The royal Christmas message was originally started by the Queen's grandfather, her father carried it on this was on radio but the Queen was the first to be televised. King Charles has continued as will Prince William when he is King.
Happy Christmas Steve, Lyndsey and Sophia. Our family tradition is to open gifts just before lunch. We have scrambled eggs and smoked salmon for breakfast with a Buck’s Fizz, late lunch, in between open the gifts. We always remember the loved ones no longer with us, we toast them before the meal.
A proper Christmas pudding is very rich, sticky and dense. The best way I like it is to eat is a very small piece at a time, with a lot of custard or brandy sauce.
Hope you and your family have a great christmas and a happy new year
Just a comment about weather’s effect on traditions you follow. In Australia we have most of the British traditions as part of our Christmas traditions( with some special additions that are just Australian- which really only started to appear in the late 1980’s eg. Prawns).
Bajan traditions include prawns too - prawn cocktail or smoked salmon, prawns & avocado for starters on Christmas day 😁
We left sherry and a mince pie for Santa Claus and a carrot for the reindeer.
Our letters went up the chimney on the hot air from the fire, you had to time it just right.
I lived in NZ for a few years, and we always had a midwinter Christmas in June because it was more festive than in the December summer. Definitely prefer our British Christmas traditions.
We used to post our letters UP the chimney- by throwing them into the updraught from the fire, where they would get whisked up the chimney....not throw them into the flames! Because obviously, Father Christmas woud read them up on the roof prior to his coming down the chimney on Christmas Eve!
Stockings- these tend to be full of small gifts and sweets, not big presents- which end up under the tree, of course. In our family, the 'stockings' were always one of Dad's big walking socks, and so the trick (make sure Sophia isn't reading this!) is that you give the child one sock to take to bed, then stuff the other one of the pair with the gifts, so all you have to do is creep in to swap the stockings over once they are asleep. Cunning eh?
Boxing Day- I'm not sure why she is confused as to its origins. It was traditionally the day when churches and wealthy landowners opened up their 'Poor Boxes' where money had been collected during the year, and distributed it amongst the local poor. These days it's sort of a Bank Holiday (most people get the day off work, but those working in retail and service industries often don't.) In recent years there has been an increase in stores deciding to remain closed on Boxing Day to allow their staff a day off after the very busy run up to Christmas. It is traditionally when the 'January Sales' start - when stores are of course selling off stuff they didn't shift over Christmas.
One of the differences she didn't mention is the TV 'Christmas Special'. Whilst US TV will have episodes of regular comedy or drama shows that take place at Chritmas, in the UK lots of shows will produce a 'Christmas Special' in which you see your usual characters very specifically celebrating Christmas. It is considered an honour for shows to be asked to produce a Christmas Special - and the most popular/ biggest shows will be scheduled to be shown on Christmas Day itself, with other less 'big ticket' shows being broadcast in the run-up to Christmas.
I hope you al have the best time over Christmas- and do share photos of you in your paper hats after you've done the crackers!
Love to hear about all of this! It's really interesting to us, the differences. :) Especially the part about television shows having 'Christmas Specials' where they're celebrating Christmas.
Also, Merry Christmas to you and yours!
We have never thrown our santa letters in the fire. Pudding is nothing like cake which we also have. Black friday happens in november, boxing day has always happened only just recently the sales start on that day. We also sometimes call it crimble. She doesnt know what shes talking about😆. Hope you had a great day with best wishes from the UK