Jump to content

Recommended Posts

My husband and I have never really done Christmas at home but now with the kiddies and the mother in law due the time has come...

I was thinking about a Smoked Salmon starter maybe with cream cheese and chives? Any better ideas? We are not the best cooks in the world but not bad either!

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/14838-ideas-for-christmas-starter/
Share on other sites

Simple canapes to enjoy with some champagne in the sitting room, so you can all sit at the table with it looking perfect for the main course?


You can get ready made blinis and dress them with smoked salmon, creme fraiche and a little chopped dill, or some caviar, etc etc.


You can even buy ready made nibbles / canapes I think if you want to be really lazy.


I always think it is nicer to skip a full on starter as we all end up feeling so full anyway by the end of the meal!

My husband's family always has prawn cocktail!


We had some friends round last weekend for a pre-Christmas roast goose and made brussel sprouts soup... It was made with caramelised onions, and we sprinkled pancetta and stir-fried chesnuts in. Really yummy but it was a bit of an experiment.

Two amazing starters that are delicious and easy and would be great for Christmas


This is by the founder of the food store Leon - its the most lovely creamy fennel soup, just incredibly tasty

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2010/nov/15/fennel-soup-anchovy-croutons


The second one builds on your salmon idea but people will be enormously impressed - basically you get a side of salmon and then cure it yourself in the fridge with beetroot and vodka. The vodka cures it and the beetroot gives it a great bright pink colour. Then you slice and serve with salad or brown bread. Really easy just leave in the fridge in cling-film for 3 days

http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/2725/dazzling-beetrootcured-salmon

I checked the Good Food one and funnily enough it doesn't seem to cure with vodka but I am sure that I used this recipe and I am sure that I used vodka (maybe I just drank it myself!)

Anyway, I found you another beetroot cured salmon recipe that does have vokda - not that you can taste it or anything obviously

http://www.houseandgarden.com.au/vodka-beetroot-cured-salmon.htm

It really is brilliant. Moxons will do you a side of salmon and I think take out any little bones that there might be and your in-laws will be dead impressed :-)

I think I'm going to make sweet potato soup with honey, and then serve it in little coffee cups we have, as a sort of canape/starter thing. Then poss crostini (sp?) or blinis with smoked salmon, doesn't feel like christmas without smoked salmon, and parmesan crisps.

Belle that sounds lovely! Num num nums as Seb would say! Husband's family always has prawn cocktail which I used to be repulsed by but it's grown on me over the past few years.

I once made a savoury smoked salmon cheesecake. It was fab but way too filling!

God I haven't heard of half a grapefruit for a starter since the 80's. Wonderfully nostalgic.


Thought prawn cocktail was retro...don't get me wrong, i love a prawn cocktail especially in half an avocado, but half a grapefuit I'd expect to be followed by a full English!

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Was that the Hare Krishna place? I can't remember exactly where it was (or maybe still is) but it was somewhere around Oxford Street.
    • The "for sale" section on this forum lets people offer things for free or cheaply. And the "wanted" section let's people ask for things they want or need, for free or cheaply. There are also existing schemes like Freecycle, and also local  food banks. And there is (or was) a local scheme where you can bring things to be repaired free. I think it is/was based in Nunhead. Isn't that simpler than having a barter system? You might have something to give away, but the person who wants it might not have anything you want. Or have I misunderstood how it works? I can see that offering services free might not fit into existing schemes, but depending on what they were, what would happen if things went horribly wrong eg someone wrecked your house? Sorry if the above sounds very negative. 
    • I'm wondering why they would do that? Because surely positive reviews could only help them, and if they thought they might get negative reviews, shouldn't they have been addressing the reasons that might be (unless someone had an unwarranted grudge against them)? But in any case, how could they have stopped people posting reviews on here? PS I have corrected your typo! 😃
    • Agreed. Just stating as a historic fact they tried to stiffle reviews.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...