All Natural. Only 15 Calories per Teaspoon!
Subscribe Now for Free Emails >  
 
Products Recipes Calendars Holidays & Parties Sweet Community Health & Nutrition Español
Valentines Easter Independence Day Halloween Thanksgiving Christmas Celebrations

Christmas with a Mexican flavor

Latin America, a continent with deep Catholic roots, has very particular ways of celebrating Christmas. Each region has its own distinct beliefs and superstitions, characters, customs, and special dishes. Still, from country to country, the Spanish Christmas season involves the glow of families reuniting, the sounds of the purest traditions, and is a time of grand celebration. How this came about is very difficult to explain.

Just like everyone else, the Latinos find it impossible to determine when they began to celebrate Christmas. They mixed their indigenous beliefs with those brought over during the Spanish Conquest. One symbol, indispensable to any Spanish home today, perfectly illustrates the merging of both cultures: the manger, a completely European tradition that came to these lands with the Spaniards. There is no way to know if the native Latinos knew about mangers. But it has been shown that in Europe, the first mangers, which did not include the Virgin Mary, existed as early as the fourth century. The Virgin and the star were included by the end of the fifth century. It took a couple of centuries for the three wise men to become part of the scene and appear as Latin America’s Christmas symbol does today.

However, this uncertainly hasn’t stopped the Latinos from celebrating. Nine full days of religious festivities announce the coming of Christmas in Latin America: There are Posadas in Mexico, midnight masses in Venezuela, Novenas in Colombia and Brazil, and Revels and Assaults (the equivalent of caroling) in Puerto Rico and other Caribbean islands. The Latinos dedicate themselves to the Christmas season with fervor, and the entire family participates in the preparations. They are not necessarily the housewife’s responsibility alone.

Christmas dinner takes place on Christmas eve, December 24 (in countries like Venezuela, Colombia and Brazil, December 25 is only a school and work holiday). From Mexico to Patagonia, families gather around delicious and lavish dinners that have many things in common, including tamales of different names and styles, exquisite birds alongside traditional pork chine, rich and colorful salads, vegetables prepared hundreds of different ways, and desserts so exquisite you’ll wish Christmas could last the whole year.

Once you try the menu that has been so carefully chosen for you here, we wouldn’t blame you for deciding you never want Christmas to end. Our hope is that these dishes will help reveal the magic of Mexican cuisine, a magic magnified year after year by the wonderful experience of having all your loved ones gathered around the table on an evening that’s full of joy, just as it must have been the very first time.

Merry Christmas and have a good meal!.

Memories & Stories

Imperial Sugar Company,
I had always wanted to learn how to cook while I was growing up but my mother did not want us in the kitchen making a mess. The first elective course I signed up to take in Jr. High here in Houston, was Home Economics. The first semester was cooking. I loved the cooking classes; first learning to make baking powder biscuits and the smoothest white sauce you have ever seen. I still make that sauce to this date. We moved on to making banana pudding from scratch and even making our own rendition of vanilla wafers. My love of cooking is still with me and most folks say I’m a pretty good cook.

Mary A. Raines

Read More Stories