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New Years Eve Foods For Good LuckWhat to Eat on December 31 for Prosperity and Happiness
The United States "melting pot" enjoys many lucky foods, from black-eyed peas and ham to shortribs and sauerkraut, plus little pink pig cookies and coin-filled cakes.
Residents of the United States enjoy a wide variety of New Years Eve food traditions to ensure prosperity in the coming year. The Old World contributed many traditions to the “melting pot,” but one food item reigns: pork. Eating Black-eyed Pea "Coins" Meant WealthIn the southern United States, black-eyed peas have long been a New Years Eve staple. The shape and abundance of the legumes was compared to coins; eating the ‘coins’ symbolized gaining wealth. Southerners also considered pigs to be lucky, and usually ate ham with the peas, or hog jowls if the previous year had been unlucky. Sylvesterabend Lucky FoodsJim Boyd, a writer with the Eugene, Oregon, Register-Guard, shed some light on pigs for prosperity when he described the Austrian New Years Eve celebration. Austrians call it Sylvesterabend, after St. Sylvester whose feast day is Dec. 31. At a Sylvesterabend dinner, staples include pink pig cookies. But actual pork is also essential. Boyd wrote, “Pigs are considered lucky because they always root forward… Rarely will an Austrian eat lobster for Sylvesterabend, because crustaceans move backwards.” Italian Lucky FoodsIn nearby Italy, pork is also important, as are legumes. There, however, it is not the humble black-eyed pea that reigns on New Years Eve plates with the pork sausage; it is lentils. Like the black-eyed peas, lentils symbolize money. Plus, they are green. And the fatty pork sausage signifies, naturally, fattening wallets. Americans of Italian descent often eat these lucky foods. Americans of German or Polish descent think of another protein for New Years luck; the herring. Pickled in brine or served as rollmops—pickled and then wrapped around onions—it must be eaten at the stroke of midnight. Herring, in North Atlantic waters, are abundant. The fish are silvery, too, thereby easily signifying abundance on two counts. Not Pigs, But Cows for Baltimoreans' Good LuckPork is not the good luck food for Baltimoreans of German descent, though. They prefer sauerkraut and beef shortribs, rather than pork, as a good luck dish for New Years. And they, like most Americans who use “cabbage” as a slang term for money, will often eat some cabbage on New Years Eve. If you wanted to ensure all the good luck you possibly could for the coming year, you might plan a dinner around the lucky foods. Here’s one menu for a dinner beginning at midnight (to ensure eating the herring at the proper moment):
Two Baltimore Good Luck RecipesHere’s an easy Baltimore recipe from the late Cathy Schultz Tiley for a shortribs and sauerkraut dinner:
Here’s the Schultz family's way with Herring Salad:
Sources:Family handwritten recipes Boyd, Jim. (December 29, 2004) “A New Year’s Viennese-Style,” Eugene, OR: The Register-Guard, p. E1.
The copyright of the article New Years Eve Foods For Good Luck in Winter Recipes is owned by Laura Harrison McBride. Permission to republish New Years Eve Foods For Good Luck in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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