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AIBU?

To consider not cooking the full works for Christmas Day?

79 replies

SouthernNorthernGirl · 10/11/2016 23:41

I love a Christmas dinner, I'm just not sure I want to do it this year.
I'm thinking about putting out delicious food, buffet style. Pigs in blanket, Yorkshire pudding with smoked mackerel pate, cheese board, nuts, twiglet's, matchmakers etc etc, and being done with it.
DH is horrified at this Hmm
AIBU?

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Maverickismywingman · 10/11/2016 23:42

Definitely not BU

if DH wants to cook it though .....

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user1477282676 · 10/11/2016 23:42

Why doesn't he cook it then?

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wobblywonderwoman · 10/11/2016 23:43

Totally up to dh....

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lastqueenofscotland · 10/11/2016 23:45

Leave DH to cook it

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AnnaForbes · 10/11/2016 23:46

I tried that once. I cooked a traditional Xmas dinner on the 24th assuming noone would miss it in the 25th because they would all be stuffed full of quality Street. I was sadly mistaken and everyone felt cheated, I'm angling for a pub lunch on Xmas day this year but meeting much resistance. My family love a traditional Xmas dinner it seems. Pity I'm the only one who can actually cook it. Hmm

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QueenMortificado · 10/11/2016 23:46

Nothing wrong with buffet items at all but those things don't go together. Sounds more like something drunk students would eat at the end of term when they've run out of money.

It would be a very sad Christmas to have a Yorkshire pudding filled with mackerel pate and topped with twiglets!

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Tangfastics · 10/11/2016 23:48

God no. Go out instead.

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littlesallyracket · 10/11/2016 23:48

If you're the one preparing the meal, you're the one who chooses what that that meal is. If your husband is 'horrified' then tell him either to cook it himself.

Is it just you, the husband and kids or will there be guests? If it's just you two and the kids is it possible you could stretch to going out for Christmas lunch, as a compromise, so you can have all the trimmings without you having to bust your butt cooking it all? (I do completely understand if the extortionate Christmas day prices put you off though - I've never eaten out on Christmas Day but I regularly find myself gasping at the prices when I see menus advertised.)

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WorraLiberty · 10/11/2016 23:48

We have that sort of buffet on Christmas Eve.

We both love Christmas dinner and DH is happy to cook it. If he wasn't, then I'd cook it.

Can he not manage or could you do it together?

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JellyBelli · 10/11/2016 23:49

We do that on Xmas Eve and Boxing Day. On Xmas day we have a roast and all the trimmings.
Sort out now how much spud bashing and washing up DP will do. Work out a timetable like you do for a cooking exam; it might make him realise how much work it takes.

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Costacoffeeplease · 10/11/2016 23:49

I was wondering about the Yorkshire puddings with smoked mackerel pate too - is that a delicacy somewhere?

I don't think I'd be keen op

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AndNowItsSeven · 10/11/2016 23:50

Yabu sounds awful tbh.

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Graphista · 10/11/2016 23:52

Do a cheats version? Ready made everything?

However yes if husband complaining he can do it!

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SouthernNorthernGirl · 10/11/2016 23:52

Just us and the DC. Grin at drunk students. I actually meant smoked trout, and it a JO recipe. They are just examples anyway.

littlesally If we could afford it, I still probably wouldn't. Totally agree with you re prices. It's extortionate!

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SouthernNorthernGirl · 10/11/2016 23:58
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QueenMortificado · 11/11/2016 00:09

Oh no. No no no. No no no no no no no no no. That yorkie and fish recipe is wrong. Very wrong. Please please step away. That is very very bad.

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SouthernNorthernGirl · 11/11/2016 00:12

Fair enough, reading my OP back it doesn't even come across how I meant it.
Everything would be HM, and I would have put sliced meats, pickles, breads out too. More to graze on throughout the day really.

I see I'm BU though, and will be doing my usual dinner now.

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QueenMortificado · 11/11/2016 00:16

I don't think it either needs to be full Christmas dinner or weird meze board of cashew shells, one mouldy orange and half a fish pie defrosted ( ;) ), could you do quiche / lasagne / mozzarella, Parma ham, breads, olives etc etc etc / Thai salad - ie something in the middle of full roast and snacky board?

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SouthernNorthernGirl · 11/11/2016 00:20

I normally do the whole works. plan, prep it all, timetable it etc.
Just wondered about changing it up due to the DC and making it more relaxed.
Am open to ideas, though can just as happily do the turkey.

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bumsexatthebingo · 11/11/2016 00:33

By the tie you've home made a load of snacks you might as well just do the dinner!

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bumsexatthebingo · 11/11/2016 00:33

*time, obviously!

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AndNowItsSeven · 11/11/2016 00:44

Do the dinner and save the buffet for Boxing Day.

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shadowfax07 · 11/11/2016 00:44

Please step away from the Yorkshire pudding and fish idea, and get yourself to M&S to order what you need. DH can pay, if he's that horrified about not having a Christmas dinner.

Shit, I've just realised I sound like Margot Leadbetter... Confused

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oldlaundbooth · 11/11/2016 00:45

We are thinking of having a Potluck this year actually, sod all that turkey shenanigans...

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PomBearWithAnOFRS · 11/11/2016 01:37

We do a massive Xmas dinner and then just pick at the leftovers all day and have a fry up on Boxing day.
We prepare almost everything in advance so it just needs reheating and cook the meat (turkey crown, gammon and beef) overnight on the lowest oven setting on Xmas Eve.

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