KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
All chefs will agree that a good meal is as pleasing to the eye as it
is to the palate. The world’s best cooking schools include classes on
table settings, food presentation, garnishes and napkin folding. Each of
these elements, along with beautifully prepared food, is an important
part of our holiday dining experience. When you set the table, you set
the mood for the meal.
The centerpiece for your table can be simple or elaborate. The
important thing is to have one. A simple version can include tall candles
surrounded by evergreens. Add a few gold and silver balls for more
ornamentation or go all out and bring in white orchids, miniature white
poinsettias and fake snow, and place a small snow globe at each place
setting.
If you’re having a large gathering, name cards can be made out of
glossy holly leaves using a metallic pen and secured in a small pine
cone. Bake sugar cookies in the shape of a snowman and use frosting for
the names, or buy some inexpensive glass ball ornaments and write the
name with a permanent marker.
Set your table a few days ahead of time if you can. That way you will
have time to fill in any gaps. One of my favorite table-setting tricks is
to use folded napkins. It’s an easy way to make a little look like a lot.
Even Louis XIV had a napkin-folding fetish. He gave his pastry chef and
napkin folder the title of officer of the household and gave him a
special uniform to wear. (No, it was not a straight jacket.) The cook
created such elaborate sculptural shapes out of napkins that it was
considered a breach of etiquette for a guest to unfold one of his
creations.
I don’t go quite that far but adding a fancy fold to the table is a
conversation starter. Sailboats, candles and artichoke replicas are all
easy to make and add an extra something to the table. A friend showed me
how to make the “dinner jacket” fold. She added the bow tie with the name
of the event and the date -- it was a sweet keepsake for the kids’ winter
formal party.
Now for the food: You don’t have to be Emeril Lagasse to treat your
family and friends to a beautiful meal. (In fact, no one will know you
didn’t cook if you hide the takeout containers.)
Every family has its own holiday meal that is steeped in tradition,
and though many families pull the turkey pan out of the cupboard twice in
one month, many others use Christmas as an opportunity to connect with
their roots. Over the years, we have seen friends and neighbors celebrate
the season with very nontraditional foods, at least from an American
perspective, and have been treated to some very interesting meals.
Our family is one of the mavericks. We eat chicken curry as our
Christmas meal. This tradition started with my paternal grandparents when
they lived in South Africa for several years. The actual curry sauce and
rice are the least of the meal; the real fun comes with the wide array of
condiments that are offered as toppings. The condiments make the kids
happy, sometimes they forego the curry altogether and just eat the fun
stuff.
My sister-in-law, Tina, is from Finland, and she fixes a sort of
pickled herring and rice dish. For several years, we had a neighbor from
Germany who is a wonderful cook. Sigrid’s Christmas Eve celebration
includes bratwurst, hot potato salad and red cabbage. English friends of
ours prefer a beef Wellington for Christmas, complete with a trifle for
dessert.
As you prepare for your holiday meals, don’t stop with the food. No
matter what your family traditions may be, serving your holiday meal with
flair is a gift in itself.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
FYI
Holiday Tip of the Week
* Keep your centerpiece fresh by changing the water and trimming the
stems on your flowers daily.
* Give your evergreens a mist of water occasionally to help rehydrate
them.
* Let your poinsettias spend the night outside. It will help keep them
fresher longer.
* If your Christmas tree is near a heating duct, close the duct
temporarily to prevent the tree from drying out too quickly.
PO Adding cleverly folded napkins to the table is a nice surprise.
CUTLINE INFORMATION: (holiday tables or napkins--I can’t remember what
Sean wrote down. It’s the dinner jacket napkin.)
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