British Christmas vs. American Christmas | holiday traditions, food, music differences (UK vs. USA)
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- Äas pĆidĂĄn 26. 06. 2024
- Happy Christmas! Today we're comparing the differences between British Christmas traditions and American Christmas traditions! From Christmas pudding to where we hang our stockings, we're exploring dozens of UK vs USA Christmas traditions.
It would be impossible to capture such a large holiday in a single video, so which American or British Christmas traditions did we miss?
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Our favorite aspect of doing CZcams is interacting with you in the comments, so make sure you stop by and say hi! đ It would be impossible to capture such a large holiday in a single video, so which American or British Christmas traditions did we miss? đ
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The trick with children's stockings is that you buy two of each that way you can just swap the empty one for the full one instead of having to fill them in situ or remove it and replace it later.
Also yes we did advent calenders, I'm old enough to remember them not having a chocolate in them just a picture behind each door, and I have a 7 foot blue christmas tree Coz I'm a whovian my mam has a 8.5 foot traditional tree that she honestly spends about 20 hours decorating like a boss, one thing we both have is jars of aged mincemeat for mince pies, I started mine in 2002 and every year I just top up the jar with extra raisins and suet and shots of spirits, since I began I've used brandy, rum, spiced rum, Jack Daniels, amaretto, vodka, whisky, Thai whisky, cherry gin and ouzo, (donated by friends because I don't drink)
@WanderingRavens this is an old one but watch jim Davidson & Charlie Drake in cindrella. Its adult panto but so funny đ€Ł.
On topic now. In brit panto, males act as female and vice versa
Boxing day is a remnant from the Catholic St Stephen's day. Britain is a mainly Protestant country so many of the Catholic feasts and such were rebranded at the time of the Reformation.
Hi I want ask you do you maybe be in Poland or you know somebody from Poland ?
You know you're British when you run to the window to see the drama :D
đđ
I was thinking the same too lol
@@EaterOfBaconSandwiches The neighbourhood drunk going home late at night.
Curtain twitchers
Depends what the Drama sounds like. If its two guys you don't look so you can't be called as a witness lol
I can't believe Pigs In Blankets weren't mentioned in the Christmas dinner, it just not Christmas without Pigs In Blankets.
You can get them all year round now. Iâm like YES!
@@amandalewis3898 it is a great time to be alive!!
Not so long ago there was no such thing as "pigs in blankets". When I was growing up sausages and bacon were served separately. Chipolata sausages were used and streaky bacon "pressed out" with back of a knife then rolled up into rolls were the way they were served. When I started cheffing after I left school in 1984 sausages and bacon rolls were still served separately for Christmas Dinner in restaurants and other catering establishments,as well as in 99% of people's homes. During the late 80's people caught on about wrapping the sausages in the bacon instead of serving them separately until the now called "pigs in blankets" just became more popular in the early 90's, and now 99% of people serve them this way. In my house I always serve them the old fashioned way as you get more bacon and the sausage is browned all over not just the ends. It's interesting that younger people think that pigs in blankets were always a thing!
@@amandalewis3898 technically they have always been available all year round if you've got chipolatas and streaky bacon. Which they sell in the supermarkets all year round!
@@OblivionGate no o no pigs in blankets every year since the 1970's in our house, perhaps its a northern thing as we were in manchester
I'm 25 years old and my parents still get me an advent calendar đ
For me it's not Christmas until Noddy Holder says so.
Yep Iâm 21 and my mum always sends me an advent calendar in the post to have at uni đ
Iâm 34 and bought myself one!
Me and a mate once got caught stealing an Advent calendar. We got 6 months each.
@@bodsnvimto Did you get that one from a Christmas cracker? đ
@@jaysmith2858 No, it was from a Sunday Morning BBC Greater Manchester radio programme which doesn't even attempt not to be corny.
Other favourites of mine include-
Phil Spector's brother used to work as Head of Quality Control at Walkers. His name is Crispin.
My friend fell into the upholstery machine at IKEA. He's fully recovered.
I asked my local butcher if it is safe to keep a turkey in the freezer for six weeks, and he said it was. I put it in then came down next morning, and it was already dead.
I think seeing a glimpse of a christmas tree and some warm lighting through someones window makes me feel more of the christmas spirit than a big blow up snowman.
Me too!!
A beautifully lit up Xmas tree through a window is Xmas to me. But most people where I am compete and itâs like Blackpool illuminations but still I do like it and so do the grandkids.
Slade, Wizard, The Pogues + Kristy MacColl, Cliff Richard, David Essex, Jona Lewie, Greg Lake, Chris Deburgh, Shakin Stevenâs, Paul McCartney! Theses are the singers of our Favourite Christmas tunes!
Check out God Ye Merry Gentlemen by Annie Lennox
Dont forget Johnny Mathis!
Chris Deburgh - Lady in Red?
@@stephenflynn7600 A spaceman came travelling but yes that Chris De Burgh
@@craigkitching4883 There are many more, Nat King Cole, Ertha Kitt and Brenda Lee etc that some people play but I feel the one I mentioned originally are the mainstay. Not saying they are better but not as popular as they once were!
Your phrase, "Have you ever put your candle in an orange", would certainly pass muster as pantomime innuendo, ^oo^
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âOh no it wouldnâtâ
@@Masq09 Oh yes it would!, ^oo^
@@Masq09 OH NO IT WOULDN'T!
@@catherinerobilliard7662 It's behind you !
Eric: Props to you mums and dads for being able to fill your kid's stockings while they're sleeping.
Err... You what mate? Santa does it!
Was wondering if someone was going to comment on that! đ
I knew my son was growing up when I'd just filled his stocking one year and was creeping out of his bedroom. As I was softly easing his door shut, he said, "Night, Dad".
@@Otacatapetl That's so cute!
@@Otacatapetl d'oh đ
Yeah thats honestly so cuteâ€ïž wasnât it the same for you? Btw if youâre interested I also have a channel with vlogs from London if you want to check it out âșïžâ€ïž
Itâs kind of a default that all children in the UK get an advent calendar
@@EaterOfBaconSandwiches thatâs mad, shows how different things can be in the same country, I donât really know anybody who celebrates Christmas who didnât
And adults....
Some Spankwangle will probably decide this practice is racist sexist homophobic. And ban it.
@@EaterOfBaconSandwiches do you live under a rock
Bob Smith not only do my kids get advent calendars my 2 dogs get dog ones too. Every child i know gets an advent calendar.
you have got a pantomime in the states it's called the government
The USA gets a Pantomime government, we get a Whitehall Farce.
Now we HAVE to see a pantomime, so that we can understand the joke! đđ
I would pay good money to see Trump play the pantomime Dame, however, I suspect that he would be the Demon King.
Little American girl: Where is the president?
Crowd: HE'S BEHIND YOU......
@@jamespasifull3424 stick up your arse much? Politics affects all facets of life and if therefore fair game. Chill out
"Have you ever put your candle in an orange?" I thought this was family friendly... LOL * ;-)*
I'm having nightmares about Trump now!
đđ
@@speleokeir Only now? I started having them four years ago.
They are pronounced
Borballs đ
Christmas songs no ads
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May you all be blessed and joyful during the end of this year. Amen
A lot of people round where I live have lights on the front of their house. Usually around their porch or in their front window. There is one house near me where the man who lives there completely covers his house in lights for charity and we love going to see it đ„°
NOBODY in the UK has "bobbles" on their tree, they are called "baubles"
Sorry! đ
@@WanderingRavens Tiz the season for forgiveness đ
Normally the easiest way to say it is ball balls
It is pronounced bore-bulls âș
When I was very young, my family referred to them as wassail cups. From the Anglo-Saxon custom of wassailing (kind of "eat, drink and be merry" - ing) particularly around Christmas time.
Due to Covid a lot of theatres are doing their Pantomimes online! The Belgrade Theatre in Coventry is doing Jack and the Beanstalk and you can buy tickets and support the arts from your own home đ„°
Hanging chocolate decorations on your Xmas tree? You can eat them whenever. Then even when you take it down you might find a one hidden away round the back.
My son was quite the expert in removing the chocolate from said foil wrapped chocolates leaving a perfectly shaped empty chocolate decoration. :o
my mom wouldnt let us eat them untill christmas day. but i would sneak them from the back.
4:10 they sit there shocked and I'm just thinking sounds like a normal day in the UK
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As a child On Christmas Eve Iâd lay in bed unable to sleep, excited. Around 2am my dad would âsneakâ into my bedroom to leave my presents. When I say âsneakâ I mean drunkenly stagger in with a black bin bag of presents, usually stumble and swear, before leaving the sack by the side of my bed and backing out to the sound of my mother chastising him for âmaking a racketâ and that he better not wake up the girls. Then Iâd lay there awake all night waiting for the first light of morning to wake the house and start the family tradition of opening up the presents together. We got very little in those days so what we got at Christmas was very special. I can still remember my sisters shaking with excitement at the opening of each present.
I work in a supermarket in the UK. And yes, itâs the same 10 songs remixed and repeated over and over đ
Yeah, forgot about the multiple different versions of the same song đ© 20 hours listening to them 5 Christmas straight in a toy store an people wonder why I hated Christmas for the last 16 years. Only just started not to make breakout in a cold sweat when September roles around! đł
10 different songs? You're living in luxury - my local one just plays a muzak version of 'Mistletoe and wine' on repeat! ^oo^
I feel for you bro. I hate even stepping foot in a supermarket this time of year.
Although honestly I haven't heard much this year!
Also, does it really usually start in September? That's absurd. That's long before Hallowe'en even. Nobody should even be thinking about Christmas til December!
As people who used to work in a restaurant, we feel your pain!!
'Pigs in blankets' (small sausages wrapped in smokey bacon) are also often found on British Christmas Dinner tables
Had fish and chips last night with what they called XXL pigs in blankets on the side. When it arrived it was a foot long sausage, wrapped in bacon, battered and deep fried. Its now 8am and I'm being visited by the ghost of takeaways past.
How did we almost forget pigs in blankets!
We have pigs in duvets.
Ysss!! Thank you for that đ Btw if youâre interested I also have a channel with vlogs from London if you want to check it out âșïžâ€ïž
Selection Boxes
Have ya seen how small the bars of chocolate have gotten in the boxes and the tins of roses, quality street etc
Baubles is pronounced bor-balls đ
We put coloured led lights and tinsel on our tree but our decorations have no uniformity whatsoever! We use ornaments that weâve collected over the years and they usually have sentimental value to them (e.g. decorations we made as kids, decorations with names on them, decorations given to us by loved ones etc.). And to top it all off, we always have an angel-making competition beforehand and the winner gets to take pride of place at the top of the tree âșïž
Chris Rea ~ Driving Home For Christmas, love this song.
I hear Dominic Cummings is releasing a cover version.
@@EdDueim đ€Łđđ€Łđ
We'll look it up!
@Janie Reeton The Ian Duncan Smiths Dominique Cummings cover has been let out for Christmas.
Chris Rea born and bred from Boro like me! (Middlesbrough in the north of England)
When I was young, it was traditional for the entire school to travel to the Empire Theatre in Liverpool to see whatever pantomime was showing that particular year.
Thanxs for that memory Steve âș i loved going to the Empire for the panto. Our head teacher would warn us all we had our uniform on and we are representing the school so be good
Thank you Wandering Ravens for your lovely videos helping to keep us going throughout this year. We wish you both a very Merry Christmas.
Enjoyed this, thank you. One of my favourite things to do at Christmas is go to a candlelit carol service at Canterbury Cathedral (over 1400 years old).The acoustics and choir are amazing. Perhaps in less restrictive times you could attend an ancient cathedral near you. It's like stepping back in time.
We didn't have stockings, we used pillow cases. As a parent this made life simpler as a pillow case would be filled away from the bedroom and simply exchanged for the empty one, not so much noise. It made for a tiring Christmas day, having to wait until the children were in a deep sleep!
Pantomime humour works on an adult and a more childish level using slap stick, many innuendos and topical themes; an acquired taste possibly.
We used to have (pre-decimalisation) threepenny bits or sixpences wrapped in greaseproof paper inside the Christmas pudding. It was served with rum sauce. We would also have sherry trifle and a brandy soaked Christmas cake...difficult to avoid alcohol! Merry Christmas:-)
14:47 most christmas puds are made months in advance to properly infused the alcohol.
Good to know!
But most people still pour some on at the table too
@@ImMamba I know I was saying it's a little late to start making it
No it's not make it for next year instead.
@@nat3007 I meant for this year
Someone got a car horn for christmas.
And they are LOVING it! đđ
We had to do christingle at school when I was younger. It's a Clementine with a candle with tinfoil stuck into it. ribbon wrapped around the orange with cloves stamped into it
Then we told the birth of Christ whilst sitting on a cold wooden floor in assembly
I had to do it in a church, very boring!
When I did it as a child it also had sweets on cocktail sticks on it too.
Beth H same here, I remember really enjoying poking the little cocktail sticks into the orange for some reason
Such a shame American Christmas music stopped in the 60's. You missed the whole 'Glam Rock Christmas' era!
Wham still made it through! haha
@@WanderingRavens and ptx
@@WanderingRavens
Last year, I gave you my heart, and the very next day, you gave it away. This year, I'm giving you a pair of novelty socks.
Inaflap last Xmas I gave you my fart, I actually sing that when the song comes on đ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł
It ainât Christmas without home alone! đșđžđŹđ§
or The Great Escape
National Lampoons Christmas vacation is a absolute must in our house!
@@beckydoherty3336 ......totally, we watch it every year . Over 20 years now đhave a great Christmas and stay safe đ»đ
@@beckydoherty3336 it's so bad its good.
Great Escape.
Where Eagles Dare.
The Wooden Horse.
The Sound of Music.
Every sodding year !
The Horror of it all đ„
I am English but been in the states for almost 3 years. Last Christmas I put on an English Christmas for my American husband and mother in law. It was hysterical to see their reaction to pulling xmas crackers and wearing the paper crown during dinner. Sadly this is my first year without an advent calendar or a tree so far, but with everything going on in the world I am just grateful to be here. Be careful with that pudding when you light it up đ
Was taken to a pantomime in Swansea in 1989, and having been raised in Australia it went unappreciated by my 16 year-old self. It starred the late John Inman, and I wish I had appreciated back then as I would now.
Without even watching the video yet I can say with 100% certainty that Christmas is better in the UK.
Awww, I also think so! Christmas Here is one my favorite things ever. Btw if youâre interested I also have a channel with vlogs from London if you want to check it out âșïžâ€ïž
đŻđŻđŻđŻ
Iâm from Leeds and Iâm gonna be honest I think Christmas in the USA sounds fun. But British Christmas is better as a permanent thing.
Americans talk about Christmas
Brits talk about the Christmas week
@@edwardrushfirth6216 another from Leeds! Eyup! Also, I respectfully disagree (about American Christmas being better) đđ
non-alcohol christmas??? but how do the family start fighting??
đđ
Non alcohol Christmas is a fairy story isn't it... I've never heard of that. I mean even if you're not a drinker surely you have a glass of sherry, port or liquor with a mince pie or a glass of wine with Christmas Dinner!
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"Happy Christmas and a Very Merry New Year" - That got me cracking đ€Łđ€Łđ€Ł Merry Christmas y'all đđđ
Me and my family have always loved when people decorate the outside of their houses for christmas. South Manchester where I grew up and still live, has a growing number of people decorating the outside of their houses at christmas. In fact majority of the road I live has some sort of decoration outside their house or in their window. I love christmas time
Deeley Bobbers are a form of novelty "head wear" consisting of an Alice band with springs attached to them with ornaments placed on top. The ornaments are usually themed for the occasion, say Christmas decorations, Halloween motifs, etc.
A christmas pudding always contained a sixpence (when I was little.)
I lived on steamed suet puddings when I was young.
Silver three penny bits.... another loss to decimalisation... never liked xmas pudding with them in...
Really like watching your videos! Keep up the great work đ
"Snow is falling, all around us, children playing having fun"- shakin steven"s.This soo reminds me of xmas back in 1990 when all my friends were singing this as the snow was falling on Christmas Eve! BRING BACK THOSE INNOCENT DAYS! HALLELUJAH!
Pantomime is marvelous. You really must experience it. Love them all
OK, classic British Christmas songs for you to react to! This would be so interesting.
1. Jona Lewie - Stop The Calvary
2. Band Aid 1984 - Do They Know it's Christmas
3. Wham - Last Christmas
4. The Pogues - Faiytale New York
5. Wizzard - I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day
6. Cliff Richard - Mistletoe & Wine
7. Shakin' Stevens - Merry Christmas Everyone
8. Slade - Merry Christmas Everybody (this is the BANGER)
9. The Waitresses- Christmas Wrapping
10. Johnny Mathis - When a Child is Born.
Re 9 The Waitresses were British?
Guys, really loving and enjoying your content. I would like to wish you a very Happy Christmas, cannot wait to see your next adventure
It's two weeks before Easter when I am reading this. Can't believe no one has mentioned the Nativity play. In normal years many schools and churches perform these plays which tell the "Christmas Story". Characters include the Innkeeper, the Angel Gabriel appearing to the Shepherds, the three wise men or Kings and of course Mary and Joseph. There is also a host of Angels and various animals, sheep, cattle and a donkey.
Totally loved this video guys! Thanks for the shout out! I just wish coronavirus wasnât a thing. If this has been a normal year, not only would I have told you all these Christmas facts, Iâd probably have offered to make you a British Christmas dinner to try!
Also Slade and Wizard are the best Christmas songs!
Greg Lake and Chris de Burgh.
Use to leave a card with a like a tenner in it, for the milkman when we still had one
I am new to your videos, but loving them, and already subscribed! I will happily watch anything Christmas related. Making British Christmas pudding, or other items sounds like a great video!
Welcome! And we made one! czcams.com/video/9i5YgTn7arw/video.html
I had a German grandmother who sent us an advent calendar every year. We have only two left and I kick myself that we didn't try to preserve them. I just put one of them up today, as a matter of fact. It's the paper kind with the little doors you open every day to see the image behind it. That always was magical for me as a child and it took me years to realize that the last doors were always going to be the nativity.
Deeley Boppers are plastic headbands with two springs on top, and they are topped with a glittery star or heart, but there are other designs, you should definitely wear them lol
Thank you!
Norwegians like the reindeer antler boppers....đâđ
parents don't put gifts into stockings at the end of the bed, Santa does đ
My mother always had us hang it on our doorknobs on the outside so "Santa" didn't disturb us.
Ah, right! Sorry 'bout that!
Or Father Christmas does.
.........and we as kids used to have pillowcases at the end of the beds....totally spoilt!
@@tommywulfric9768 We had pillowcases hung on the edge of the mantelpiece!
We have a day where the family puts up the tree, we all eat popcorn and sew it onto long lengths of string which we wrap around the tree. The white corn twisting up the tree goes really beautifully with the baubles and candles.
Prosecco should only ever be served as a prank... it simply MUST be champagne
Awesome video Wandering Ravens. I also like Grace's hair.
Thank you! đ€
There are certain towns / Villages where every house will have christmas lights and decorations on.
And people will go visit them to see them.
I always went to see Mousehole Christmas lights.
yeah we have that in our village too, we make a christmas light walk for little kids but itâs always funny to see the roads not included in the walk because itâs always completely barren of christmas lights đ
The lights in Mousehole last year was so good!!!
My grandma makes our Christmas pudding every year and gives it to us to enjoy on Christmas Day đ„°
Its officially Christmas for me when I first hear Slade's famous "IT'S CHRISTMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAS!"
It's a shame you're in the UK during COVID, I'd highly recommend seeing a Pantomime if you ever get the chance. I think a lot of the Playhouses are doing online Pantos this year. I know we're hoping for Easter Pantos next year though :D
pantos are great part of some peoples tradition
Not sure if Pantomimes will be going ahead this year but ITV have recorded a few over the years and usually show them around Christmas ...... watch out for them on TV!
I live in Essex and 90% of houses near me have Christmas lights up
We have a chocolate advent calendar and we light a an advent wreath candle each Sunday in the four-week run-up to Christmas :)
Hi Grace and Eric.. Deelie Boppers, are like a hairband, with two boiny springs on them sticking up with either reindeers, stars, snowflakes.. whatever Christmassy things on it, you can think of... Which then boing about on your head as you move about.. I have many.. :D :D
Pantomime started in Shakespeareâs time because only men were allowed to be on stage so men had to play both the menâs and womenâs parts. Nowadays, the men dress up as women and the women dress up as men.
Not exactly Xmassy Check out the Mummers which date back to Medieval times tinyurl.com/UKMummers
The US have them too but they are processions in places like New Orleans/Philadelphia
I must be a child then, as I always have an Advent Calendar... gotta get that choco-high somehow!
Yeah I have an advent calendar too. My husband is taking up an unnecessarily large space in the fridge with his cheese advent calendar. Lol
The coin used in Christmas puddings used to be a silver sixpence before decimalisation (1971). The 5p is used now because it is also a small silver coin. It was added to the pudding mix and then each member of the family gave it a stir. When it was served up the one who got it in their portion was meant to have wealth and good luck for the following year. They wouldn't choke on it or break a tooth, because all ate it in the knowledge that a sixpence was lurking in the pudding and so chewed each mouthful hoping that they would be the one to find it.
Boxing day is 'leftover day'. What's left of the turkey, pigs in blankets (tiny sausages rapped in bacon), Gammon (ham) etc, etc, is put out to graze over that day. Our family put the whole lot in a big casserole and heat it up for lunch. It's all the good bits of Christmas day lunch without all the cooking; just relaxing and continuing to eat the food that's leftover.
Fairytale of New York. Best Xmas song ever.
Defo
Shame the BBC year again ruined something for woke culture
If seen many Americans who don't get this song đđđ
NO...itâs absolutely appalling !!!
@@eugenegilleno9344 u dont know what u are talking about
Very pleased to see you. I like your hair do, Grace. We always had an advent calender when I was little.
Oh thank you! x
A tradition in our house is to listen to a recording of Christmas carols sung by choristers from the chapel at Kings College in Cambridge called âCarols from Kingsâ on Christmas Eve on BBC1 and do the last food/table preparation whilst listening to the carols....itâs just lovely! Another big difference is a large section of the U.K. use Father Christmas rather than Santa. We also have mince pies, Christmas cake and quite often a mince pie and some kind of alcohol is put out for Father Christmas on Christmas Eve. Boxing Day is a relaxed repeat of Christmas Day eating leftovers and sometimes a trifle. Pantomimes are wonderful and great fun! We have tons of great tunes from the 70âs and 80âs which we love but you probably wonât have ever heard! Oh yes, and we have Christmas crackers to pull as we are about to eat our Christmas dinner! Bit too difficult to explain those đđ....
I loved this! You should defo do a part 2! Theres still much more to talk about!
Christmas crackers
Mince pies
Christmas cake
Queens speech
Boxing day
Christmas eve traditions, for example we leave either milk and carrots out, or some people leave brandy and mince pies out for father christmas.
Some people do a christmas eve box which it usually a box off Christmas eve goodies, like hot chocolate, pajamas, a christmas film
Theres also elf on a shelf where parents will take a picture of a toy elf getting up to mischief every day through december.
Theres soo many! You should defo do a part 2! I would love to see it!
You've missed Steak and Kidney Pudding. Which is basically a steamed pie using suet pastry. We love our puddings here in England.
Kate & Sidney Pud was a traditional meal for New Year's Day in our house. Again, the Silver Thruppenny bit was included, to bring good fortune for the coming year.
I absolutely loved the "church peoples voice" đ€Ł
I'm glad you approve đđ
My mum and i call our Christmas lunch a bread sauce delivery system - as we see it primarily as a way of spreading bread sauce on everything. Bread sauce is made from infusing an onion in milk with cloves, peppercorns and bay leaves. You then add breadcrumbs and butter and stir until a thick creamy sauce.
I have been to Minnesota a couple of times at Christmas and the outside decorations on houses there were beautiful, especially with the snow, not tacky at all, it was magical
For my family Boxing Day is the day we eat the leftover cold meats from Christmas Day. Usually with mashed potato and pickles đ
Turkey sandwiches are amazing!! We used to go to my aunts and uncles, eat left overs, plays board games and watch boxing day tv, and play with the toys we got xmas day
Love the hair Grace!
Thank you!! :D
Here in Canada, I have seen our Costco putting out their first Christmas stuff on August 1st!
We have always had advent calendars , with chocolates!
Pantomime, really filthy lines that go over the kids heads, hopefully ! Took the kids to one here.
In the UK, all my Christmas presents were at the foot of the bed!
I'm thinking that only really fancy people would pour rum or brandy over their Christmas pud and set it on fire! We put Birds Custard over ours. I'm so old, we used to put thrupenny bits in ours! (Love Eric's pronunciation of 'SUET'!
I was really surprised when I moved from the UK to Canada to find that nobody went to the pub on Christmas Eve! nor at lunch time on Christmas Day- I don't think that's as common there any more!
Good video guys!
Another great video! bringing the Christmas spirit đKeep it up đȘ
Ps would love to watch you guys making a British christmas meal vid
Went to a pantomime in York a few years ago, one of the best i've seen, fun for whole family with a great atmosphere & loads of silly humour & audience involvement.
The one in York is the archetypal pantomime. It had the same person writing, directing _and_ starring in it for 40 years, and most of the cast were regulars who did it year after year. The best pantos are those that have a regular crew with a local connection, so always try to look out for one of those rather than ones touting z-list "celebrities" desperately trying to rekindle a failed career in soap operas or reality TV. Pantomime is an art form in itself, and you want people who specialise in it.
Deely poppers are a headband with antennae on with balls or windmills on. They were very popular with all ages in the 80âs.
Here is what you'll see www.amazon.co.uk/deely-boppers/s?k=deely+boppers
Thank you!
The reason youâve never heard of Deely Bobbers is not because youâre not British , itâs because youâre too young. According to their Wikipedia entry, they were invented _in America_ in 1981 and inspired by Killer Bee costumes on Saturday Night Live. They were sold by - get this - Ace Novelties, of Bellevue, Washington. Hey, havenât I seen a couple of Washingtonians on CZcams from time to time?
Also, there is no actual mime in pantomime, although there is a fair bit of dancing, slapstick humour, cross-dressing and rude jokes that the kids are supposed to be too young to understand (but they do, they do.)
And âsuetâ which is either the hardened fat found around the kidneys of sheep and cattle or a vegetable-based substitute, is pronounced âsooetteâ, not âsoo-eyâ
And a flaming Christmas pudding burns with a delicate pale blue flame, until all the alcohol burns off and it goes out. Quite a touching sight, really. Certainly not a terrifying blazing nightmare, as you might have unwittingly suggested.
I've spent my whole life calling them dinghy boppers... haha learn something new everyday!
@@WanderingRavens Couldn't believe you don't have those in 'murca - they must have a different name?
Christingle services are my absolute favourite. Unfortunately missed the past couple of years as my Christmases have changed. But the service I go to we'd go to church, get our oranges and sweets with a candle, song hymns and carols. There's a christingle song that you sing when you light the christingle.
Then we'd go outside and put baby Jesus in the manger whilst singing Away In A Manger.
As a kid, we'd have the job of making all the christingles at Sunday School and occasionally pinching the dolly mixtures. Good times.
Mince pies, Christmas crackers, paper hats, Santa Special trains, the Christmas float, primary school nativity plays, high school carol concerts, Quality Street, Miniature Heroes, Cadbury Roses, posh biscuits, leaving out sherry and mince pies for Father Christmas and carrots for his reindeer, mulled wine, board games and watching traditional films (It's a Wonderful Life, for example) on the evenings of Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and Boxing Day are pretty universal in the UK. Boxing Day is just a re-run of Christmas Day without opening presents.
UK Christmas classic songs
Slade - Merry Xmas Everybody
Shakin' Stevens - Merry Christmas Everyone
Chris Rea - Driving Home For Christmas
Wizzard - I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday
Pogues & Kirsty McCall - Fairytale Of New York (Preferably the uncensored version)
Elton John - Step Into Christmas
Jona Lewie - Stop The Cavalry
Showaddywaddy - Hey Mister Christmas
Jona Lewie - Stop The Cavalry
There are others
It's not Christmas bobble it is bauble (baw_bul)
Ending up wasted on Christmas day and falling asleep in front of the telly after your huge Christmas dinner is almost compulsory
Sadly the government has spoiled Chris Rea's plans this year.
For me, the tunes of Christmas are Slade: Merry Xmas everybody, Wizzard: I wish it could be Christmas everyday, Mud: Lonely this Christmas, Jona Lewie: Stop the Cavalry, Kirsty MacColl and the Pogues: Fairytale of New York, and the Troika from Lieutenant Kije by Proikofiev. But perhaps I'm showing my age...
Iâm a Brit who recently moved back from Houston where I lived for 3 years and then thing I definitely miss most is all the lights at Christmas! Some brits do do lights here but it isnât as good as in the states were whole neighbourhoods would come together to have matching lights and almost all houses had them!
A British Military Christmas Tradition is a party with Christmas Dinner and lots of Christmas goodies. The Officers Dress in full uniform and serve the Troops/Airmen/Sailors.
Have to admit, drinking does start early. Breakfast scramble egg with smoked salmon on toast tradional Christmas dinner then on sofa with nibbles. Hope you both have a great Christmas xx
It does start early
Earliest I have started drinking was 9 am
@@Gamemyster1991 normally start with a cup of tea and something fizzy!! Down hill from there x
Christmas pudding deaths were always the highlight of Christmas Day, when I were a lad.
Would definitely spice up the Christmas evening doldrums! đ
Highlight of my xmas too !
@@russcattell955i Back when I were a lad, we got Silver Thruppenny bits in our Christmas Pud, not 5p pieces. There was a special present for the person who got the coin, which was then washed and used again the following Christmas. That Silver Thruppenny bit, now resides in Australia with my youngest sister, as I don't have a family. I still have the happy memories of the expectation of who would find it... and nobody ever broke a tooth.
As far as eastern Europe you have coins inside a Christmas bread or something like that...
I was reading an article the other day about how gingerbread houses are becoming more popular in the UK, especially with children.
The pantos at the theatre I went to last Christmas has a tradition of water pistols along with a song sometime during the performance, which all the kids in the audience seem to know about. Its was the first time for us at this theatre. Staff also joined in with large water pistols and my sister, friend and myself were soaked. Great fun
Music here is different, some firm staples are by Wizard - whish it could be christmas, Chris Rea - driving home for Christmas, The Pogues - fairytale of New york, Band Aid - Feed the world, The Darkness - Don't let the bells end
My wife got me a coffee advent calendar!
A different coffee every day!
Oh wow!! I'd love that!!
Happy Christmas to you both
My brother used to call Christingle the service where 'you set fire to oranges' which makes it sound a lot less safe! A christingle is a real orange wrapped with a red ribbon around the equator with 4 cocktail sticks with sweets and/ or fruit on stuck in the orange in-between the ribbon and the candle in a square shape, then there is a candle with a square of foil underneath to catch wax and reflect the light. All the parts of the christingle are symbolic but I can't remember entirely what about. It's a really fun service though, and so beautiful with all the candlelight!
My children are 29 and 27 and for the first time this year I forgot to buy them an advent calendar. They are now saying I'm a bad parent.đ€Ł
đ€Łđ€Ł my mum asked me if I wanted an advent calendar.....I'm 35. I didn't get one đ
My daughterâs forty and still wants one!
Mine are 32,30 and 28 and I had to get them one. My middle son also wants a stocking - he lives with his lovely girlfriend but she doesn't quite "get" our traditional stockings!
My 18 year old brought me one this year
ohh would love to see you "try" to make Christmas pudding
I will try!
Oh no đđ
Christmas pudding needs to by at least September it needs to mature before being eaten.
Our kids were always semi-awake Christmas eve, so we always very quietly placed the stockings outside their bedroom doors (on the door knobs) as late as possible, almost always after midnight. It becomes a harder exercise year on year as they get older. They are now adults, but still get Christmas stockings lol. Also the whole stocking thing isn't seen as a main event, its an opener, a sort or wakening moment to help lure you into the christmas spirit and day to come.
Another great vid guys đ - please please please attempt to make a Christmas pudding! đ (although it is getting a bit close to the big day to be making it now - should be at least a month in advance, steeped in as much alcohol as possible, and when your'e ready to light it, carefully warm the brandy / whisky / rum before pouring over the pud đ - of course, then comes the question of what to eat it with... Custard, double cream, brandy butter.... Personally i love christmas pud with double cream) Good luck!!! đđ
First year with an advent calendar. Different gin every day. Best present ever. Arranged by an American friend. Hugs. Gin soaked hugs.
Love that idea!! đ
My uncle got one from down in London last year. He doesn't like sloe gin so I was very happy!!
I saw gin baubles in morrisons yesterday.
Ooh, I would have loved one of those!
Iâve never met someone that doesnât have a calendar in December
My parents don't. It's s bit weird if you're grown up, frankly.
Me and my siblings rarely had them cos we was skint as kids and when we did we was Marvins so the got demolished there and then
I don't remember having one as a child in Bedfordshire in 1970s/80s. I think I saw them in the shops but it just wasn't part of any Christmas tradition we had. But then traditions change, especially under commercial pressures. Just look at the amount of halloween tat we now get thrust at us in October compared to how few children still go round with "penny for the Guy".
I took pictures a few times a year at Sears , some of those pics were Christmas pics. My mom would mail in in Christmas cards. The day after Thanksgiving until after the new year, my mom would play carols by Charles Brown, my favorite song is "Christmas comes but once a year", My minister would sing Nat King Cole's Christmas classic, " The Christmas Song" I grew up with a lot of Motown and other classic Christmas songs.
Sometimes my parents and I would go to local tree lots to buy a Christmas tree and sometimes I'd go with my dad to pick out a tree if my mom was @ work on the Saturday we'd go and get it ( she was a nurse ) . Breakfast on Christmas morning consisted of orange juice for me, coffee for my parents and grandparents, eggs honey baked ham ( bought from the Honey Baked Ham store) , toast and pieces of Fruit cake which to this day I love. Yes I am one of those Americans that love fruit cake. Fruit cake is like Christmas pudding's American cousin in that some people love it and some despise it. My mom would decorate the whole house and my dad would put up lights around our windows on our porch. Living in southern California, it was typically sunny âïž on Christmas day so all of the kids on 5he block would be out riding their new bikes ,skate boards ( no hoverboards, this was Christmas in the yesteryear of the 1990s), roller skates and playing with all manner of spanking brand new toys from Santa.
In one of his recent videos, Darren McGrady made a traditional Christmas pudding. He knows a thing or two about Christmas pudding since he made .more than a few in his time on the cooking staff for none other than Royal Family. You may want to check his channel out. Just a friendly suggestion đđźđâșïžđâïžđ
I've got a fabric advent calendar I got when I was five from my grandparents. Over two decades later and I still hang it up on the wall and fill up all the little pockets with sweets (usually from one of the big quality street/celebration tubs) to have my daily chocolate. Traditionally an advent calendar wasn't filled with sweets but had little flaps to open up to reveal a Christmas scene (typically the nativity). Like most British Christmas things unless you're religious it doesn't really have any religious meaning tied to it anymore. It's more about getting into the festive mood and celebrating and enjoying friends and family.
You should take the Christmas dinner mentioned with a grain of salt because every family has their version of sides and things ge swapped out or added in based on the family. The important parts are the turkey, pigs in blankets, bread sauce, roast potatoes, cauliflower cheese, Yorkshire puddings, and a selection of vegetable sides both roasted or done on the hob (plus devils on horseback which are more regional). Followed by Christmas cake or Christmas pudding. However depending on the family they may have different meats/sides/desserts or leave things out entirely. In uni I had many interesting discussions with housemates when planning what we needed for our Christmas dinner before we left for home. The important thing is that there's an over abundance of food that you will then be making into a sandwich on boxing day when you're do hungover to cook.