Christmas in Australia…

Most people around the world associate snow and cold weather at Christmas time, well, here in Australia it’s quite the opposite as it’s summer time here.

In Australia Christmas is different… we have the option of having our Christmas breakfast, lunch or dinner’s outside in a backyard, a beach, a park for instance. Pubs are open for Christmas lunch as well and it’s something you have to book weeks in advance as they book out quickly.

Even the food we eat on Christmas Day can vary from the traditional Christmas foods to having seafood, a barbecue, or a pub meal.

In my family, we all meet for Christmas lunch at a family member’s house and we all contribute something for the meal, whether it be a part of the meal or money to help cover costs. We eat outdoors under cover. A few of the members of the family bring food they cooked so the host isn’t cooking the whole main lunch.

Bowls of chips (crisps), mixed nuts, Christmas lollies (candy) are put out on the table before lunch to tide us over until lunch is ready. Our menu usually consists of turkey (cut up turkey roll), rotisserie chicken (from a fish and chip shop which was previously ordered for the lunch), leg ham, roast potatoes (cooked in a Webber Barbecue), roasted carrots, peas, beans, potato salad, noodle salad, coleslaw and bread rolls. A couple of hours later it’s the traditional Christmas pudding or for those who don’t like Christmas puddings there’s a chocolate pudding with either custard or ice cream on top.

Our food is buffet style where you go and get your own food and put it on a plate, then go sit down and enjoy. We use paper plates and disposable knives and forks to save on washing up.

After Christmas, the young ones and a few of the adults go for a walk to a nearby park and kick either a soccer ball or a footy around.

Christmas for my family is really just another day as we no longer have kids in the family but it is still a fun day to get together with everyone and I only get to see my family one day of the year.

The weather can be mild temperatures in the mid 20’s to the early 40’s degrees Celsius. On Christmas Day in 2016, the temperature reached a scorching hot 40 degrees Celsius and our lunch was moved indoors as it was too hot to sit outside. Me personally, I’ll take the weather in the mid 20’s on Christmas Day.

However you celebrate Christmas and whoever you celebrate Christmas with, I wish you all a very Merry Christmas.

Until next time

Kaye

The Magic of Christmas…

One of my favourite times of the year is Christmas. I love everything about Christmas, the Christmas music, the Christmas decorations, the Christmas tree, the feeling of Christmas time, all of it; it’s just a magical time of the year.

During the week, I had a friend currently living in the US ask me if there were any Christmas movies made in Australia depicting what our Christmases are like and if it was weird living in Australia where it’s Summer at Christmas time and watching all the Christmas movies with snow in them.

I replied to my friend, no it wasn’t weird as snow is associated with Christmas as that is how most of the world celebrates Christmas; it’s winter and there’s snow around. Watching Christmas movies with snow is just normal for us.

Celebrating Christmas here in Australia where it’s summer has its advantages though. We can have a meal outdoors if it’s not too hot. We can go to the beach, splash in a pool, go to a playground, walk around the neighbourhood wishing people we come across a Merry Christmas, have a bbq, eat seafood, do things that people in a colder climate don’t do at Christmas time.

The one thing I don’t enjoy about Christmas and summer is when it’s too hot to do anything outside.

Regardless of where you are in the world this Christmas, whether it’s in the winter with the snow or summer with the heat, I wish you all a Merry Christmas!

Until next time

Kaye