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How to have a very kosher Christmas

If you don’t want to be left out of all the, er, winter festivities, you can eat and drink well without compromising your kashrut.

December 23, 2008 11:32
Xmas and Chanucah

ByBernard Josephs, Bernard Josephs

2 min read

It’s that time of year again, a season that raises the perennial question: what are we to do about Christmas? While our non-Jewish neighbours, despite the credit crunch, are busily stocking their freezers with all manner of exotic goodies, buying up crates of wine and beer and donning Santa outfits, should we restrict ourselves to dull, everyday menus brightened only by re-runs of Morecambe and Wise?

Ok, we don’t buy into the religious significance of December 25 (although many non-Jews these days see Christmas as little more than an opportunity for conspicuous consumption and pagan-style revelry). But surely, especially when Christmas coincides with Chanucah as it does this year, we too should indulge in a little ho-ho-ho.

Maybe a fir tree festooned with lights in the lounge is a no-no (you can call it a Chanucah bush of you like, but we all know what it really is) and perhaps mistletoe and paper-chain decorations are not called for.

But when it comes to eating, what is wrong with mince pies, roast turkey and plum pudding along with the doughnuts and latkes to mark our own festival of lights and miracles? If there is no way of escaping the epicurian traditions of a British Yuletide, should we not embrace them?