A belated Merry Christmas to everybody. Only 364 days to go now. I tried to post a Christmas message to our members earlier, on our Christmas morning (still Christmas Eve everywhere else), but the site was down for me.
George, I'm certain there are hundreds of YouTube videos and food blogs online giving recipes and instructions on how to prepare, season and cook a Christmas (or Thanksgiving) turkey. Your plate, and the bird in the background, looks really good to me anyway. I have cooked frozen and packaged turkey breast (just breast) that, when done as per the instructions, is moist and delicious. Perhaps, even the use of a simple oven bag or maybe a foil covering for the initial cook would have given some improvement.
Our Australian Christmas:
Many of us have long since moved away from the traditional roast Christmas lunch. Oven cooking roast birds, legs of pork and ham and root vegetables with gravy in potential 40'C days has now been replaced with cold foods and salads for many Australian families although my family still has a cold chicken on offer for those who don't like (or in the case of my son are allergic to) crustacean seafood. We haven't had a "traditional" roast for Christmas lunch in over 20 years. Of course we have a diverse multi-cultural society these days so I'm sure there are plenty of different tables on the day.
Our own Christmas day lunch table was barbecued lobster tails (w/ butter, olive oil, garlic, lemon and spice seasoning), fresh cooked tiger prawns, deep fried beer battered Blue-eyed Trevalla, fresh Sydney rock oysters, sliced cold leg ham off the bone, the cold roast chicken, garden salads and coleslaw, a potato bake and other accompaniments. No chips this year as there were no little kids attending. This is consumed (as tradition dictates) with beer, beer and beer, bubbly for the ladies. For dessert we always have my mother-in-law's home cooked Christmas pudding with custard and her trifle (jelly, custard, sponge cake, fruit and cream) and fruit platters of watermelon, mangoes, cherries, pineapple, nectarines and peaches with a Botrytis Semillon. We only had 14 there this year but it can reach 30 some years.
Of course all this is after fried leg ham and eggs for breakfast and a selection of cheeses, dips, crackers, nuts and olives, etc for pre-lunch nibbles. We don't usually get to lunch until around 2.30 - 3.00 pm and it takes a couple of hours, so we eat very little, if anything, for evening meal.
We usually do pretty much the same for our Easter lunch on Good Friday, without the ham, however this was completely missed in 2020 and was a reduced number attending this year due to imposed restrictions.
An interesting piece of trivia:
The Sydney Fish Market remained open for 36 hours straight leading up to Christmas Eve afternoon with 10s of thousands passing through over this time. This year it was reported they were expecting to sell over 400 metric tonnes of cooked prawns and 250 tonnes of fish and other seafood. Each vehicle is required to pay $5 for parking and the average price for cooked prawns is $50 / kg, some crabs and lobsters are up to $120 / kg. Fresh fish is anywhere from $25 to $80 / kg for whole fish and average of about $40 - $60 / kg for fillets (depending on species). It's a one hour drive each way (100 km) for us and we attended on 23 December at around lunchtime for our supplies and also enjoyed a seafood lunch while there.
I'm trying to decide between Pizza and Curry for dinner tonight.