Take Your Tastebuds on a Trip: 25+ Cakes from Around the World Katie Bandurski © Taste of Home This bee sting cake (aka bienenstich) may look daunting, but it s well worth the effort. Take each step at a time, and you ll be surprised how easy it is to make. Taste of Home Test Kitchen Get Recipe
bienenstich) may look daunting, but it s well worth the effort. Take each step at a time, and you ll be surprised how easy it is to make. Taste of Home Test Kitchen © Taste of Home Nutrition Facts 1 slice: 169 calories, 9g fat (5g saturated fat), 94mg cholesterol, 95mg sodium, 17g carbohydrate (14g sugars, 0 fiber), 7g protein. Diabetic Exchanges: 2 fat, 1 starch. I come from a big Italian family where my mom cooked and baked many delicious meals and desserts from scratch. Now I like to do the same for my family. This cake is my finale to our Italian Christmas Eve dinner. Cathy Banks, Encinitas, California Get Recipe
Letter to the Editor: Sharing holiday traditions is a joy to all
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GTPulse: Christmas Around the World
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Christmas feasts around the world from Mexico to France CNN 12/24/2020 © Shutterstock Homemade tamales are a staple in Costa Rica.
Christmas is celebrated in many ways in many corners of the globe, and the cuisine that marks the holiday is as diverse as the people feasting on it.
Even when we can t travel to be together, food traditions are comforting at a time when many of us are separated from our families and have had a challenging year in the wake of Covid-19. And Christmas dishes are particularly special in many households.
The typical Christmas meal may be different by destination, but the idea of indulging in a feast, be it on the day itself or the night before, isn t.
Judging by the current contents of her apartment, Lauren Schreiber Sasaki is a woman who loves nothing more than celebrating Christmas at home.
On the mantel, a “Merry Christmas” garland hangs beneath a large collection of menorahs. An advent calendar shares a wall with several Magen David ornaments. Atop the coffee table stands the
pièce de rèsistance: a miniature Christmas tree, laden with ornaments and stationed next to a candle that smells like “Jewish Christmas.” (Buttered popcorn with notes of Chinese takeout, if you were wondering.)
In fact, this is all new for Schreiber Sasaki, 36, who runs Jewish&, a program for interfaith families at Toronto’s Miles Nadal Jewish Community Center. Since childhood, she’s felt a little resentful of the onslaught of enforced cheer that comes with Christmas. Now, as one-half of an interfaith couple and the mother of two young children, she worries that the “shiny, sparkly, sugary” nature of Christmas celebrations overshadow