Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (2024)

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (1)Merry Meet friends! I can’t believe that the Solstice is just a few days away and Christmas right behind! I’m not as ready as I’d like to be. Some shopping yet to do, grocery and gifts, and lots of wrapping to do! But my cards are done, most of the shopping is done, menu is planned, some cookies have been baked and I’ll hopefully get my altar done this weekend. I need to pick up a couple more things for it. I have been pretty under the weather for too many weeks, and that is slowing me down quite a bit :(. While I’m relaxing tonight, I thought I’d post some recipes that we love to have for our holiday dinner..no matter which one you celebrate! Our weather here has been so so…pretty gloomy, quite a bit of rain, and quite warm..or really cold. I’d love to see some snow. We have had a night or two of flurries but nothing sticking yet. I’m so anxious to see a good amount of snow on the ground!

I’m sitting by the fire tonight, having a glass of wine, and dealing with some emotions from a sad day. One of my sisters…a Witch sister..suffered the loss of her dear husband yesterday. My heart is broken for her… as are the hearts of All of her circle of friends. We are sad for her, worried for her and want so badly to be there for her. Such a helpless feeling when there is distance between our homes. But there is no distance between our hearts and our love for her..and we are sending her love, comfort and strength to help her through this very sad, difficult time. Blessed Be Cheryl. I love you.

So, to move on with the recipes. I’ll start with my Winter Solstice altar recipes…I especially love these! Many of my favorite scents are during this time of year. Pine, Cedar, Orange, Cinnamon, Clove….yummy! I’ll be making these up soon to enjoy at my altar!

Winter Solstice Oil Blend

4 drops Pine

2 dropsOrange

2 drops Cedar

2 drops Juniper

2-3 lumps finely ground Frankincense

This is really a wonderful blend. Add a piece of clove or cinnamon stick or allspice berry to really spice it up. It smells so so good! I just want to take a bath in it!! LOL

Winter’s Night Yule Incense

2 parts Juniper berries

2 parts mugwort

1 part cedar

1 part pine resin

1 partevergreen leaves

1 part chopped sweetgrass

½ part rosemary

1/2 part ground cinnamon

I have altered this recipe a bit. It called for Laurel leaves which in my area are not to be found. And I just had to add the cinnamon..it’s a must 🙂 You can also add allspice, anise stars (which I love!) and cloves again. Just grind everything really well..and it will burn great and smell like gingerbread on a holiday tree! 🙂

Ok..on to the good stuff for your Santa belly!

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (2)

Rum Spiced Egg Nog

4 cups milk

5 whole cloves

1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 teaspoon ground cinnamon

12 egg yolks

1 1/2 cups sugar

2 1/2 cups light rum

4 cups light cream

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg

Directions

Combine milk, cloves, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla, and cinnamon in a saucepan, and heat over lowest setting for 5 minutes. Slowly bring milk mixture to a boil.

In a large bowl, combine egg yolks and sugar. Whisk together until fluffy. Whisk hot milk mixture slowly into the eggs. Pour mixture into saucepan. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly for 3 minutes, or until thick. Do not allow mixture to boil. Strain to remove cloves, and let cool for about an hour.

Stir in rum, cream, 2 teaspoon vanilla, and nutmeg. Refrigerate overnight before serving

*The “cooked” eggs make this a safer dish from the raw eggs version. Also…if you like…use 1/2 light rum and 1/2 spiced rum for an even better treat!

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (3)

Spiced Wassail

2 quarts apple cider

1 1/2 cups orange juice

3/4 cup pineapple juice

1 tablespoon brown sugar

1/2 teaspoon lemon juice

2 cinnamon sticks (3 inches)

1 dash ground cinnamon

1 dash ground cloves

Directions

In a large saucepan, combine all of the ingredients. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat; cover and simmer for 20-30 minutes. Discard cinnamon sticks. Serve hot in mugs.

(makes 10 cups)

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (4)

Sugar and Spice Nuts

3 egg whites

2 tablespoons water

3 cups walnut halves

2 cups pecan halves

1 cup whole unblanched almonds

2 cups sugar

2 tablespoons ground cinnamon

2 teaspoons ground ginger

2 teaspoons grated orange peel

1 teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1 teaspoon ground allspice

1/2 teaspoon ground cloves

Directions

In a mixing bowl, beat egg whites and water until frothy. Add nuts; stir gently to coat. Combine the remaining ingredients. Add to nut mixture and stir gently to coat. Spread into two greased 15-in. x 10-in. x 1-in. baking pans. Bake, uncovered, at 300 degrees F for 20-25 minutes or until lightly browned, stirring every 10 minutes. Cool. Store in an airtight container.

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (5)

Cranberry Meatballs

*A family favorite..we make them often and often double the batch!

Meatballs:

2 lbs ground beef

1 cup crushed corn flakes

1/3 cup dried parsley

2 eggs

2 TB soy sauce

1/4 tsp pepper

1/2 tsp garlic powder

1/3 cup catsup

2 TB dried minced onion

Mix all ingredients well and form into meatballs..co*cktail sized. Place on a jelly roll pan or 2- 9″ x 13″ baking dishes.

Sauce:

1 – 16oz can cranberry jelly roll

1- 12oz bottle chili sauce

2 TB brown sugar

1 TB lemon juice

Blend together. Pour over meatballs. Bake at 350* for 30 mins.

* I then put these in a warm slow cooker for serving.

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (6)

Reuben Spread

*Another family favorite!

16ozs shredded swiss cheese

16ozs shredded cheddar cheese

28oz jar Saurkraut, drained

8ozs chopped corned beef (I use Buddig)

1 1/2 cups Hellmans mayo

Mix all ingredients well. Place in a greased 9″ x 13″ baking dish. Bake @350* for 45mins to an hour til brown & bubbly. Serve on rye on pumpernickel party rounds and put out a dish of Thousand Island Dressing 🙂 *This will get inhaled…I promise!! Great warmed up the next day ..if you have any leftover 🙂

This ham recipe beats the honey hams you go buy!

Tangy Honey Glazed Ham

1 (10 pound) fully-cooked, bone-in ham

1 1/4 cups packed dark brown sugar

1/3 cup pineapple juice

1/3 cup honey

1/3 large orange, juiced and zested

2 tablespoons Dijon mustard

1/4 teaspoon ground cloves

Directions

Preheat oven to 325 degrees F (165 degrees C). Place ham in a roasting pan.

In a small saucepan, combine brown sugar, pineapple juice, honey, orange juice, orange zest, Dijon mustard, and ground cloves. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer for 5 to 10 minutes. Set aside.

Bake ham in preheated oven uncovered for 2 hours. Remove ham from oven, and brush with glaze. Bake for an additional 30 to 45 minutes, brushing ham with glaze every 10 minutes.

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (7)

Cheesy Potato Casserole

*So easy and So good!

1 bag frozen shredded hash browns (slightly thawed so they will spread)

1/2 pint whipping cream

1 stick butter

2-3 cups shredded cheddar cheese

Grease a 9″ x 13″ baking dish. Layer potatoes then cheese, then potatoes and cheese again.

In a small saucepan, melt butter into whipping cream, stirring so it won’t burn and mix well. Pour over potatoes and cheese layers.

Bake at 350* for 45 mins or until cheese is melted and browning a bit.

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (8)

Apple Gingerbread Cobbler

14 oz package Gingerbread cake mix, divided

3/4 cup water

1/4 cup brown sugar, packed

1/2 cup butter, softened & divided

1/2 cup chopped pecans

2- 21oz cans apple pie filling

Mix together 2 cups gingerbread mix and water until smooth; set aside. Stir together remaining gingerbread mix and brown sugar. Cut in 1/4 cup butter until mixture is crumbly. Stir in pecans and set aside.

Combine pie filling and remaining 1/4 cup butter in a large saucepan; cook, stirring often, for 5 mins over med heat. Spoon apple mixture evenly into a greased 11″ x 17″ baking pan. Spoon gingerbread mix over apples, then sprinkle with pecan crumb mix.

Bake at 375* for 30-35 mins. Serve warm with ice cream! Yummy!!

Be sure to add lots of fresh veggies and fruits or a salad to round out all the rich, spicy foods. Finish off with a delicious coffee with Baileys!!

You won’t find that all of these recipes contain something from the list of correspondences for Yule. But many of these, as I said, are family favorites I wanted to share. At my house, we split up the dishes..everybody brings something..so it’s a lot less work for me and I have more time to enjoy the day!

One thing to remember when you are so busy cooking….is to take the time to put lots of intention into your cooking. Put love, joy, abundance, harmony, peace and goodwill into your dishes. Throw in your favorite spices to add the magickal elements you can draw from them. Put on holiday music or your favorite holiday movies. Dance, sing, talk with family, have a glass of wine or eggnog. Keep it simple and you will enjoy it too. Your family will love your efforts and everyone will enjoy the good food! Happy Cooking!!

“So the shortest day came, and the year died,
And everywhere down the centuries of the snow-white world
Came people singing, dancing,
To drive the dark away.
They lighted candles in the winter trees;
They hung their homes with evergreen;
They burned beseeching fires all night long
To keep the year alive,
And when the new year’s sunshine blazed awake
They shouted, reveling.
Through all the frosty ages you can hear them
Echoing behind us – Listen!!
All the long echoes sing the same delight,
This shortest day,
As promise wakens in the sleeping land:
They carol, fest, give thanks,
And dearly love their friends,
And hope for peace.
And so do we, here, now,
This year and every year.
Welcome Yule!!”
– Susan Cooper, The Shortest Day

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (9)

Blessed Yuletide Season, Autumn

Sources: My recipes, some from the internet. Pictures from the internet.

Winter Solstice/Yule Recipes 2011…… (2024)

FAQs

What is a traditional food for the winter solstice? ›

This festival, marking winter solstice, focuses on the planting season. It includes a variety of foods and courses: grape juice cake as an appetizer, a honey wine made with several plants and spices (Mulsum), chicken with hazelnuts and squash as the main course, and a peppered honey cake with hazelnuts for dessert.

What foods are eaten during Yule? ›

Common main courses are rich, filling, and lavish – classic main courses include roasted or baked bird, hearty beef dishes, pot roasts, and meat pies. There is nothing like a rich and hearty soup to warm you up during the winter season.

What are the 12 days of Yule pagan? ›

Gradually Yuletide was extended to span a full 12 days and nights, blending several other traditions. The 12 days between the winter solstice and the beginning of the next solar year were considered a sacred period, belonging neither to the old year nor the new year.

Are Yule and winter solstice the same? ›

Yule is one of the oldest winter solstice festivals, with origins among the ancient Norse thousands of years ago. Its roots are complicated and difficult to trace, although there are several theories about how and why the festival was celebrated.

What is the pagan feast of winter solstice? ›

Yule will be celebrated by Wiccans and many other Pagans in the Northern Hemisphere on Dec. 21, the day of the winter solstice. For Pagans, the shortest day of the year marks the end of the descent into darkness and the beginning of the return of the light as the days begin to get longer after the solstice.

What should you avoid on winter solstice? ›

- Avoid much food ...from Winter Solstice to the New Year, remember not to eat and drink too much. The Yang energy has been the weakest and can't digest that much food. - Avoid the cold ... due to the weaker immunity at this time, dress up warm when stepping out to avoid catching a cold.

What is the pagan Christmas dessert? ›

There's probably no dessert more closely associated with Christmas than the Buche de Noel, the “yule log” cake. This confection is cake (usually yellow) rolled and dressed to look something like a length of firewood.

What is the tradition of the Yule cake? ›

Yule log cake, or bûche de Noël, is a Christmas cake with a ritualistic past. Cleverly shaped and decorated to look like a 3-D log, the cake represents a melding of ancient midwinter traditions: one that celebrated the end of winter, and another honoring the Norse god Thor.

What do you bring to a Yule feast? ›

Embrace Yuletide rituals by gathering autumnal sloes and making traditional Sloe Gin to enjoy over the holidays. If you can't find sloes, various berries and fruits from local shops can be used. For instance, blackberries can be steeped in gin and served over homemade meringues to create a Yule-time dessert.

What is the oldest Yule tradition? ›

The oldest was the tradition of the Yule log which echoed with sacrificial significance. Originally it was a whole tree or a large tree trunk that was carefully chosen, felled and hauled to the long house with great ceremony.

What is the 3rd night of Yule? ›

The third night of our 12 night celebrations is the High Feast of Yule! This occasion is in honor of the gods Thor and Frey.

What is the 2nd day of Yule? ›

On the second day of Yule (the solstice typically falls on or around this day) the focus of celebrating was on saying goodbye to long dark nights and welcoming in the light of longer days ahead. This is why lights were hung and why modern cultures decorate this way still.

What is the Yule tree for winter solstice? ›

The Yule Tree

The Yule tree's brightly colored decorations and lights symbolized stellar objects, spirits of those who died, religious events and figures, and provided edible treats. Cutting a tree for the holidays on the national forest is a family affair.

Who is the winter solstice Yule goddess? ›

Frau Holle (Norse)

Frau Holle appears in many different forms in Scandinavian mythology and legend. She is associated with both the evergreen plants of the Yule season, and with snowfall, which is said to be Frau Holle shaking out her feathery mattresses.

How do you say happy Yule? ›

During the Yule, the Oak King conquers the Holly King until Midsummer. Greetings include “Happy Solstice,” “Merry Yuletide,” and “Happy Yule.”

What do you bring to a solstice party? ›

Give the Gift of Nature

We think of the holidays as a time for gift-giving, but that custom actually began with the Winter Solstice. Get back to the tradition's roots by exchanging small, earth-y gifts, like seedlings, herbal teas, or candles.

How do natives celebrate winter solstice? ›

While they symbolically place their tipis toward the rising sun in the east, they rarely hold large community religious gatherings during the winter months. Instead, they view the winter solstice as a special time for community games and dance rather than ritual.

What do people celebrate on winter solstice? ›

Astronomically, the winter solstice marks the end of fall and beginning of winter, and early pagan winter solstice traditions were created to celebrate the “birth of the sun.” The occasion is marked with sweet and traditional winter solstice rituals—from brewing mulled cider and eating winter solstice foods, to ...

Why do people eat dumplings during winter solstice? ›

But why do people eat dumplings in midwinter? It is said this custom is to commemorate the great medical sage Zhang Zhongjing. Zhang Zhongjing, who wrote treatise on exogenous febrile disease and miscellaneous disease, was from Canglang of Nanyang. Doctors of successive dynasties recognized the work to be classic.

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