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Christmas - who are they kidding?

(66 Posts)
DaphneBroon Sat 03-Dec-16 10:20:58

An article in today's Telegraph about a fuss-free Christmas is full of expensive useful advice on how to reduce your stress levels this Christmas. I liked Giles Brandreth's one of getting all the faddy eaters to bring their own meal and reheat it in his microwave, but otherwise the article mostly seemed to be telling you how to outsource all the jobs for a not inconsiderable amount of money.
Then I got to this about table decorations and felt like snarling à la Sheriff of Nottingham " This year, Christmas is cancelled" !
See if you get where I am coming from

Add interest to place-settings with pretty napkin designs; tie each napkin with a length of twine (gardening or cooking twine is fine) and loop through a brown paper luggage label for your guests names; tuck in a green sprig of foliage; rosemary and eucalyptus look particularly stylish and give off a lovely aroma. Finish by resting a miniature treat on top; miniature meringues, macaroons or star shaped shortbreads work well, too

I rest my case, am I alone in thinking
life is too short??

Legs55 Sun 04-Dec-16 17:14:39

I'm so glad I don't have to do all the "Christmas" thing now - tree is up & decorated. Christmas Day over to DD's earlyish so DGS can open his presents & show me what he's got. Nice Lunch prepared by DD & her OH - "thrown out" at 3 so they can have a relaxed rest of the day.

Drinks Party at neighbours, invite for other meals over Christmas if I want, so no fancy table decs. etc for me. I love my Christmas - the days of hosting are long gone (thank goodness!!!!) tchgrin

marionk Sun 04-Dec-16 17:35:42

Dinner party with Kirsty and Giles, wonderful, all hand made place settings and microwave meals, lots of wine of course and some great conversation

Whitehair123 Sun 04-Dec-16 20:37:29

It's the people that count, not the pretentious table setting or anything else materialistic.

Enjoy it, whatever that means to you and forget the mind blowing faffing!

EmilyHarburn Sun 04-Dec-16 20:39:11

I get in a nice sherry as the aperitif and some port for after dinner. clean plates, napkins, wine and good wholesome food and a cracker each is all that is needed.

ginny Sun 04-Dec-16 20:48:16

Whitehair123 I agree that the people are the most important thing. But there are those of us who enjoy the 'faffing' as you call it. We do it together as a family and enjoy the planning and the fun we have together.

JackyB Mon 05-Dec-16 06:59:57

Dim the lights and light lots of candles, would be my way of fuss-free Christmas preparations. You can even leave out the dusting.

However, I do enjoy fiddling about with bits of twine and dangling things from every possible hook, bannister and door frame. I prefer to take a couple of days off work before Christmas to do a bit of shopping, pre-cooking and decorating, and then work between Christmas and New Year, when things are quieter anyway, work isn't so stressful, and I can leave earlier.

This year will be an exception because my eldest is over from America only for the Christmas period, and I want to spend time with him.

absent Mon 05-Dec-16 07:10:22

One of my most enjoyable Christmases when I still lived in England involved inviting some Danish friends who were temporarily living nearby and some of their relatives, who were visiting, for drinks and nibbles on Christmas morning. One of out closest friends from London was staying with us for a few days and the plan was for me to cook a goose and do all the festive meal bit in the evening. However, we all drank and ate so much throughout the morning – and then the afternoon – that none of us could face roast goose in the evening. We ate it on Boxing Day and all agree that it was one of the best Christmases we have ever had.

Nannanoo Mon 05-Dec-16 09:45:12

I would be appalled if I had to set about this table laying and food preparation. Why don't you insist that your staff and housekeeper do it all?
Haha - back to the real world with a crash! I only do decorations and trimmings that please the little ones. The rest, as everyone seems to agree, is about love and happiness and a nice meal with those dear to us. smile

fiorinda Mon 05-Dec-16 10:53:17

I love doing Christmas dinner for my family (we have it on Boxing day because my daughter, her partner and their 2 boys prefer to stay at home on Christmas day, and she is very much NOT a hostess!!). This year there are 8 of us (me, my husband, my daughter, her partner, my son, my mother and the 2 little boys). Place names? People sit where they want (as long as my mother gets first choice and I'm nearest the kitchen!). I love laying the dinner table and making it look pretty, and there will probably be holly from our garden. I don't serve the dinner, I plonk all the dishes of food on the table and tell everyone to dig in. There isn't room for fancy centre pieces amongst the 2 types of meat and the veggie pie and the roast potatoes, parsnips, onions and carrots, the green veg and the 2 types of stuffing and 2 types of gravy and pigs in blankets (meat and veggie) and bread sauce and every type of condiment you can think of, not to mention red and white and sparkling wine and beer and pop and water. We have cheap crackers with bits of plastic tat in them, because no-one wants the stuff inside crackers anyway even if you get those 'luxury' ones with nail clippers and stuff in, they just like the pulling and the bang and the paper hats and awful jokes! Crackers go on the plates, and paper napkins go in the glasses. And who needs a little chocolate on their dinner plate?! We've probably all been eating chocolate since dawn anyway!! The table is wrecked witihn 5 minutes anyway isn't it?

Yorkshiregel Mon 05-Dec-16 11:23:51

Life is too short Daphne! :-) Much as I appreciate the effort some people will go to there is so much preparation to be done I would suggest that you do not go overboard unless you enjoy being stressed out.

Yorkshiregel Mon 05-Dec-16 11:25:39

I have 12 people coming here this Christmas and also on Boxing Day. I do not have time to fiddle about with decorating things that do not need to be decorated. The whole thing is about 'family' not decorations and table settings.

Louizalass Mon 05-Dec-16 12:46:19

Faff, faff and more faff! Our kids have moved to foreign climes so now there's just the two of us and we live too far away (thank God!)from other family to either visit or be visited! Bah humbug!

But when my kids were at home, I used to have the Christmas dinner timed to perfection. Turkey & trifle. The turkey stuffing was an old family recipe so that was a faff but worth it then the trifle, just sponge, fruit, jelly & custard. Everyone enjoyed it. We got out the best china (ma-in-laws handed down) but that was it.

Christmas was for enjoying being together and having fun or quiet depending on the day/time.

When I was a child we got dragged off to rich Aunty Pam's for Christmas dinner. Rich Aunty Pam couldn't cook so got all the aunties & grans to get stuck in doing their different 'specials' in the kitchen. Too much sherry resulted in tired and emotional aunties & grannies fighting over space in the kitche. It was a nightmare and put me off having a faffy Christmas when it came time to do my own.

Those newspaper/magazine articles for How to Have a Stress-free Christmas are just dreamed up by 'journalists' asked to fill a column. I bet if you asked them, they just slump down with a drink in front of the tele on Christmas Day and don't lift a finger - or go out to eat!!grin

Jalima Mon 05-Dec-16 13:06:19

Rich Aunty Pam couldn't cook

that's the way to do it!!

Nannanoo Mon 05-Dec-16 16:19:06

Rich Auntie Pam sounds like a clever sort! grin

M0nica Mon 05-Dec-16 17:01:21

If one person in 100, no, 1000, takes any notice of what these articles say I would be amazed.

Most people of any age spend Christmas the way they want to, a few do not want to know, a few think money solves the problem and the rest of us just go on enjoying it in our own accustomed fashion.