Cooking Christmas dinner can be more stressful than university finals or as relaxing as a week in the Maldives.
Most of us probably find ourselves basting our turkeys somewhere in between these extremes.
Festive fun! You too can love cooking Christmas dinner if you follow Alice’s clever tips!
For me, as a mediocrity (at best) cook, Christmas dinner is one meal I thoroughly enjoy making. I love the Christmas carol accompanying the preparation, I love knowing that I’ve done too many potatoes – an absolute point of pride – and I thoroughly enjoy laboring over the extra dishes and vegetables that I’d never include alongside a normal Sunday lunch, such as red cabbage and sprouts.
Years of practice have helped shape my positive attitude. Here are my top tips for making the whole process a breeze.
1. Think of it as a large Sunday roast.
This is how I get around the stress of knowing that I am feeding large numbers of people, some of whom are better cooks than me. I also include: ‘Who cares if you get it wrong, everyone will have a glass of Champagne by the time they sit down,’ in my personal Christmas Day pep talk to himself at 7am as I get out the peeler.
2. Save on washing up and have canapés instead of plated starters.
I always do smoked salmon on brown bread, and then invest in shop bought mini quiches (life’s too short) that I heat up and pass around with a glass of something before hand.
3. Do too many potatoes.
Do way more potatoes than you think the assembled masses of your family could possibly eat. Then do some more. It’s impossible to over-estimate the quantity. Besides, they are excellent when heated up and eaten on Boxing Day. Just remember to make sure you have an enormous pan or two available for par-boiling before roasting. Ninja® ZEROSTICK® Cookware has some fabulously large pots and pans for family-size catering.
The most wonderful time of the year… but only if you’ve got organized in advance!
4. Write everything down, working backwards.
Do a 24 hour countdown, from prepping on the previous day to the final, triumphant carving of the turkey.
If you do this on Christmas Eve morning, it’s a great prompt for realizing that you’ve forgotten a vital ingredient and popping out to the supermarket while it’s still open Or send someone else out; you are already doing plenty of work.
5. Are your non-stick saucepans now actually…rather sticky?
Investing in new cookware is something we do so rarely, but the right pots and pans make an enormous difference to the end result.
I know that the right cookware gives me more confidence in the outcome of any meal, including this – the most important meal of the year.
Rather than non-stick, go non-stress with Ninja® ZEROSTICK® Cookware. Perhaps a little pre-Christmas gift to yourself is in order – just to make life easier.
6. Directly related to the above….Do you have enough pans?
If you’re more used to cooking for a couple, or a family of four, then you might wish to invest in a couple of larger items. Here, Ninja® ZEROSTICK® Cookware is perfect. Their cookware is incredibly versatile, so a pan that you might use for carrots for 15 will be just as useful for January family meals. The nine in one PossiblePan will steam, simmer, roast, braise, bake, sauté, sear, boil and fry.
7. Roast potatoes in advance.
This is a top tip from an older relative, who was horrified when I started peeling potatoes one Christmas morning. ‘Haven’t you done them already?’ she gasped. The advice stuck.
You can also make red cabbage, gravy and mashed potatoes in advance, as well as peeling the vegetables and leaving them in pans of cold water overnight. I found an online tip recommending that you make your cranberry sauce in advance, but that’s next level cooking. It’s jars all the way in our house.
Rope in other people to help you prepare for Christmas lunch – mayb
8. Make space and clean the fridge.
This is the time to ditch old condiments that are a couple of years out of date, plus any aging veg lingering at the bottom of a drawer.
Create as much shelf space as you can. On many occasions I’ve had the Christmas food delivery arrive and had to clear out the fridge while unpacking. Or I’ve tried to stuff leftovers into an already brimming fridge on Christmas afternoon. Not fun.
9. Don’t forget the foil!
Don’t forget to buy more foil than you think you’ll need, and perhaps an extra potato peeler or two, if you think you can rope in a few helpers.
And make sure you’re very clear, right from the