My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

From present ideas to party food, find all your Christmas inspiration here.

Christmas

I don’t want to cook but I’m hosting. What’s the best pre-made?

56 replies

broceaulys · 15/11/2019 22:48

No option to eat out because I’ve baby twins and a toddler. Hosting for the kids, me & DH, my parents and my sis. I would love to do the works from scratch and I did when I only had DD but with baby twins it’s just out of the question. Do I go all M&S? Or all Waitrose? Is there anything where shop bought just isn’t as good?

OP posts:
Report
MistressMind · 17/11/2019 16:39

I'm sure M&S or Waitrose would be fine.

It's a roast dinner with bought packs of ready made pigs in blankets, stuffing balls and fresh gravy. Use frozen roast potatoes and parsnips if you like. It doesn't need to be any more complicated than that.

Other ways to simplify - cooking the meat the previous day and reheating ready-sliced in gravy is quick and gives excellent texture and flavour. Like a PP we also use a steamer for the veg. It's very forgiving on the timings.

I would go for a simple roast dinner with a few bought extras, and focus your spending on lots of ready made stuff for your evening meal - cheese, mince pies, dips etc.

Report
Pepperwand · 17/11/2019 16:21

You can mix packet stuffing with sausage meat (just squeeze the meat out of some nice sausages) then roll into balls and freeze. Cook in oven straight from frozen, they're great and taste lovely but are super easy.

Report
LadyMonicaBaddingham · 16/11/2019 17:52

Make and freeze:

Cranberry Sauce to defrost
Sausagemeat Stuffing (divide what you're putting in the bird and cooking separately) defrost before cooking
Parboiled potatoes coated in dripping/lard/goose fat
Parboiled Parsnips coated in grated cheese and breadcrumbs (Delia)

Peel/chop all your veggies on Christmas eve and have them all set out on bowls

You can do this, it'll take planning but you can!

Report
DookofBust · 16/11/2019 17:45

I make my own stuffing v easy to make ahead. Make some breadcrumbs, chop an onion into tiny pieces and sauté. Add breadcrumbs, lots of butter, salt, pepper and herbs of choice. Add a bit of stick if it looks too dry. When it is cold add sausagemeat and an egg or two depending on how much you are making. Take it out of the fridge an hour or two before you need to cook it.

Report
rosydreams · 16/11/2019 16:46
Report
raisinseverywhere · 16/11/2019 15:33

Does anyone know the best way to do stuffing in advance? I usually do just do the paxo stuffing separately to the turkey and then slice it and put it on platter with the turkey. Can I do it the day before, refrigerate and then heat up in oven or microwave?

Report
Ohyesiam · 16/11/2019 13:50

Before we persuaded my elderly mum to stop hosting, she did a few years of M&S Christmas.
Id say it’s all good except the roast spuds. They’re acceptable, but not great.

Report
MsChatterbox · 16/11/2019 13:45

I'm not doing a roast dinner Shock. I'm doing a buffet of picky things!

Report
Elle7rose · 16/11/2019 13:39

M&S Christmas Food is great.

Report
isspacethefinalfrontier · 16/11/2019 11:44

You can prepare the veg the day before and sit in water
Potatoes and yorkshires can be done the day before and just heated
Ready made gravy

I dont think you can invite people and give them a ready meal.

Report
CottonSock · 16/11/2019 08:29

I'd send dh off with the other adults and cook in peace, by choice. Do get them to help though, and buy pre brought. Even supermarket stuff would be fine. I tend to get Tesco finest stuff and all good.

Report
BertrandRussell · 16/11/2019 08:26

“Tell your dh to take the kids with him when he goes visiting?“

What- on Christmas morning tKw twin babies and a toddler visit a frail elderly person while there are 3 other functioning adults in the house? Why on earth?

Report
yeahyh · 16/11/2019 08:10

Tell your dh to take the kids with him when he goes visiting?

Report
PotteringAlong · 16/11/2019 07:57

I’ve already done the stuffing and the red cabbage and it’s in the freezer. Oh, and I’ve done the pigs in blankets and they’re in the freezer too.

Jamie’s make ahead gravy is next weekend’s job!

Report
70isaLimitNotaTarget · 16/11/2019 07:52

I like cooking Christmas Dinner , I like the kitchen to myself ( our kitchen/dining room/family room are open plan so I can set the table , watch TV and cook . Multi-tasking , me Xmas Grin )


You need your list (I do mine on a wall blackboard in the kitchen)
Everything you are serving. Work out the cooking times .
Work out when you want to serve up.
Make a note of when each item has to go on to cook.


Get someone to take the DC out to the park or for a walk ( have you got a buggy board or a pushchair for the toddler ,)?

Roast potatoes are essential and no bought ones will ever match ones you make yourself . Make loads . Use Maris Piper or King Edwards .
Peel, boil or steam 10 minutes . Drain, Cover with a teatowel. Shake a bit to roughen up. I let mine go cold . Into hot oil in a heavy baking tin (none of this foil tray Nigella crap,) . Baste and turn every so often.


Get all your veg cut and peeled the day before if you are doing your own.
Buy a turkey crown (I have no idea about turkey , I am vegetarian)
Buy some cauliflower cheese ( Sainsbury is nice)
Red cabbage
Stuffing ( I bought some good sausagemeat and added Paxo then baked in a loaf tin to slice)

If you do carrots, sprouts and roast parsnips you can prep these the day before .
I put pre-pack chestnuts (Teddy Bears Noses Xmas Grin ) in the sprouts .

Get someone else to set the table .

Get the turkey cooked and rested in advance .

If you go to Waitrose for anything , check the use-by dates they tend to be short .


And most of all - enjoy . It's Christmas Xmas Grin

Report
trumpisaflump · 16/11/2019 07:52

Oh god don't even think about doing any of this in advance! Marks and Spencer is awesome for Christmas dinner. We do it every year and there's only ever 5 of us every Christmas. Just means everyone can relax and enjoy it and no-one is stuck in the kitchen. The food is absolutely gorgeous. My MIL books her pick up slot and gets it up on Christmas Eve morning.
We don't do starters but buy lots of party food instead and start nibbling on this and drinking champagne mid afternoon. Then have turkey then dessert later on. I love it!

Report
Span1elsRock · 16/11/2019 07:41

Get a veg steamer, I love mine at Christmas - you can throw in 3 layers of veg and it all cooks together. Get a turkey crown, cover in butter, wrap in foil then let brown for the last 20 mins. Get ready made pigs in blankets, stuffing, yorkshire puddings and roast potatoes from Waitrose, and ready made bread/cranberry sauce. Easy as. It's just a case of using a timer then!

Report
PullingMySocksUp · 16/11/2019 07:36

*candles

Report
PullingMySocksUp · 16/11/2019 07:35

We had three under four and barely noticed what we were eating each year so decided to not do turkey. Instead it’s

Slow cooked gammon with brown sugar and a tsp grain mustard to make sauce

Bought potatoes dauphinois. Sainsbury’s and m and s are both indistinguishable from my own.
Green veg medley in a packet.

Xmas pudding
Yule log
Lots of cream

Put some effort into dressing the table, we have a tablecloth and we make a centrepiece with church candies and Xmas tree bits and ribbon round the candies.

Done.

Report
stridesy · 16/11/2019 07:34

I think the easiest thing to do is to prepare everything the night before. You have four on tap babysitters. Put turkey in and veg and leave. Ask for help to check on things if your busy with kids. Ask someone to help lay table. Ask someone else to carve turkey and make gravy while you serve. Get oh to do Xmas pudding.

Report
DookofBust · 16/11/2019 07:29

I think you have to be careful with what you buy from Cook tbh. I can walk to a shop with their range in 5 mins but find a lot of it a bit sloppy, not necessarily things you would buy for Christmas.

Their lemon cheesecake is v good though!

I agree, buy semi prepared and just right the timings down.

Report
GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 16/11/2019 07:25

If you can afford it, I'd just get everything ready made from M&S.

When paying for my turkey plus a few bits one year, I was behind a woman at the checkout who'd done that - absolutely everything. Her bill was eye-watering but she did look as if she could afford it!

Or, what you could do is ask your various guests to bring this or that from your ready-made list. But I'd be very specific or else people will bring the wrong thing or stuff you don't want or need.

Personally I wouldn't want sundry random helpers in the kitchen - except for someone (dh?) who knows where everything is etc. They can be more of a pain than a help, not to mention getting under your feet, constantly in your way at the sink or the cupboard you need to get to.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Whattodowithaminute · 16/11/2019 07:00

Lots of places are doing very good quality pre made options for Xmas and in your situation I’d do that; M and S are good. Cook looks great, Waitrose, Ocado, Lidl... whatever your budget there’s good options.they normally add something a bit extra than I would ever bother with at home too-so carrots aren’t just carrots they have been soaked in a a Christmassy concoction and taste lovely. I’m sure all of your family will appreciate this is a difficult time with such young children a don will just be glad to be fed at some point!

Report
PickAChew · 16/11/2019 00:30

If you're lumbered, do what is easiest for you. If you get a load of markses food to order and people don't like, tough shit for them.

Report
ClapHandsAndSaveTheFairies · 16/11/2019 00:28

I'm a Cook convert. Unfortunate, because we don't have the income to buy from there but we grabbed some bits which were reduced which I don't mind not being at their prime just because they've been frozen a little longer. If I was hosting a dinner party, that would be where I'd go. The quality is unbeatable, it certainly tastes what it costs.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.