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Holidays

Dallasites from Across the World Dish on the Foods That Make Their Holidays

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By D Home |
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Set the Table: All dinnerware, table linens, candlesticks, and vases are from Blue Print. Their knowledgeable team can help curate a tablescape from their vast tabletop collection to suit the style of your home or event. Elizabeth Lavin

As anyone who has spent the holidays with friends, neighbors, or a family besides their own knows, no two celebrations look exactly alike. (One man’s Christmas tamales is another’s Friendsgiving tofurkey, as it were.) Regardless of what and how we celebrate, though, the ingredients for any meaningful holiday gathering are the same: togetherness, tradition, and, of course, food.  

But rarely is holiday food simply sustenance; more often, it carries deep significance and offers a glimpse into who we are and from where we’ve come. Whether we’re lovingly preparing old family recipes from memory, whipping up dishes that remind us of a specific place or time, or diving into time-honored seasonal delights, the way to our holiday hearts is—unsurprisingly and always—through our stomachs.  

We asked eight Dallasites—each from different cultures and backgrounds—to share with us the recipes and stories that capture the meaning and memories of the holidays.


Nardos Imam

As the founder of Nardos Design, Nardos Imam spends busy days creating custom gowns for style-savvy women ranging from debutantes to mothers of the bride. But come Christmastime, the on-the-go mom of two slows the pace and turns her full attention to all things family. Imam’s holiday begins with a Christmas Eve church service (“The birth of Christ means so much to us as a Christian family,” she says) and continues on Christmas Day, when she wakes up early and makes breakfast to provide fuel for the frenzy of present-opening that awaits. As morning turns to afternoon and the guest list grows to up to 20 people, Imam, her mother, and her sister start preparing the next meal. Among the many dishes the women serve is kulwa sga, a savory beef entree popular in Eritrea, their native East African country. “We run around the kitchen the whole Christmas,” Imam says. “It’s fun, but it’s a lot of dishes to wash!”


Tina Jeppesen

A traditional Danish Christmas Eve fête isn’t for the faint of heart. First there’s an elaborate dinner consisting of roasted pork and duck, red cabbage, potatoes, and gravy. Then comes the risalamande: a rice pudding dessert mixed with almonds, whipped heavy cream, and cherry sauce. Hiding in the dish is a single whole almond, and dessert isn’t finished until someone finds it and gets a prize. “We sit at the table for a very long time,” says Tina Jeppesen, a Denmark native and showroom manager at The Luxury Bed Collection. “We can eat for hours!” After dinner, the real fun (and calorie-burning) begins when the celebrants join hands and sing songs while dancing around the (real, not plastic) Christmas tree adorned with (also real!) candles. The big finale comes when it’s time to open presents, which, depending on the number of guests, can carry on through Christmas Day. Also lasting through December 25: the leftover risalamande, which, Jeppesen says, can be even better the next day.


Mai Lyn Ngo

“My mom worked so hard and loves us so much. When I make her egg roll recipe, it’s my way of passing that love to the friends we invite.”

Mai Lyn Ngo, Wellness Content Creator & Events Producer  

Even though Mai Lyn Ngo counts herself as “one of the very last” born-and-raised Dallasites, she had no idea that kids were getting gifts every December 25 until she started kindergarten. “I’m Chinese American—my mom came over in the ’80s—so my two brothers and I didn’t have Christmas,” explains the content creator and events producer (@mailynngo). “When I went to college, I connected with other holiday orphans, and we created our own ‘Friendsgiving.’ ” Ngo’s mother eventually adopted the celebration, too, and together they began hosting gatherings where “Mom’s egg rolls” became a main attraction. “People don’t realize how labor-intensive egg rolls are, but it takes so much love to make them,” Ngo says. “I like adopting things I never had growing up, like turkey, and serving them with dishes from my culture. My mom worked so hard and loves us so much. When I make her egg roll recipe, it’s my way of passing that love to the friends we invite.”


Nazin Hormozi

Springtime is the season of celebration for many Persians, but even as a first-generation American, Nazin Hormozi still spent Decembers decking the halls and writing letters to Santa. “My parents emigrated from Iran in 1980, after the revolution happened,” she says. “My grandmother lived with us, so to make American holidays feel more familiar, she would cook Persian dishes and serve them with turkey.” These days, the busy real estate agent says it’s important to hold on to her rich Iranian history, even as she creates new traditions with husband Nicholas and son Luca. “If you ask a bunch of Persians what they serve at Christmas, it’s always going to be a different answer. It’s not our holiday, so we cook whatever we want,” she says. “Our family always has baghali polo with roasted chicken. We spend the day slowing down, connecting, and really looking back on the past and appreciating how far we’ve come in the year. We also tell my son the stories of where we came from and how it shapes who we are.”


Eugenio Reyes Retana

When Eugenio Reyes Retana moved to Dallas from Mexico 11 years ago, he brought with him a little piece of home for the holidays. Every year, in the week leading up to Christmas Eve, Reyes Retana and his husband, Jesse Neargarder—both co-owners of hospitality design firm Foxcroft Studio—host a posada at their Oak Cliff casa. The couple’s nonreligious version of the Mexican Christmas tradition—typically a celebration of the Nativity story—involves sparklers, a piñata, and someone on the piano playing classic Christmas music. But no posada is complete without a generous spread of festive food and drink, including tamales, a seasonal drink (Reyes Retana prefers a tequila-based cocktail to the traditional champurrado, a thick Mexican hot chocolate), and Reyes Retana’s favorite sweet treat: buñuelos. “They’re crispy, sticky, and sugary, and, like all the other food, very comforting,” he says of the cinnamon-sprinkled fritters. Fried to a golden brown and often served with honey or syrup, the tortilla-shaped desserts make for a delightful finish to a heartwarming evening with friends and family.


Heidi Coretz

“My favorite part is thinking about the meaning of the holiday symbolized through the rituals we do. Hanukkah is here to tell us that it’s good to have your own religious and cultural identity and be proud of it.”

— Rabbi Heidi Coretz, Jewish Chaplain at SMU

If one of the eight days of Hanukkah falls during the school year, Rabbi Heidi Coretz, assistant chaplain for Jewish Life and director of Hillel at SMU, observes the Festival of Lights with her students on campus. If not, she celebrates with family and friends. However she marks the occasion, Coretz’s celebration includes saying the blessing while kindling the Hanukkiah, or Hanukkah menorah; playing dreidel; and enjoying a Hanukkah dinner. The dishes change—brisket and sufganiyot (jelly doughnuts) are often on the menu—but there’s one staple Coretz always keeps in the mix: potato latkes adapted from a recipe handed down by her parents. Yet as tasty and sentimental as the potato pancakes are, they aren’t her most cherished tradition. “My favorite part is thinking about the meaning of the holiday symbolized through the rituals we do,” she says. “Hanukkah is here to tell us that it’s good to have your own religious and cultural identity and be proud of it.”


Manny Rodriguez

Nochebuena was the reason for the season back when Manny Rodriguez was growing up in Miami. “We always had parties on Christmas Eve with extended family, neighbors, whoever was open—hundreds of people came,” the Cuban-born photographer says. “My mom was a huge cook, and there was always lechón, black beans and rice, and fried plantains.” Then he turned 12, and Nochebuena was no more. “Mom became a Jehovah’s Witness, and that was the end of Christmas,” he explains. Or so was the case until Rodriguez grew up, moved to Dallas, and began serving up rice and black beans at night-before-Christmas bashes with his wife and kids. “This dish makes me so proud and brings back memories of my mom in the kitchen. She had so much passion and was such a strong influence on me,” he says. “I’d love to pass the recipes on to my kids, even though none of them cook now. But there’s still time!”


Brandon Waller

Don’t ask Brandon Waller to pick between Thanksgiving and Christmas. “For me, the ‘holidays’ are one big thing that blends together. Somehow, when you look at it like that, it gives you more freedom,” he explains. It’s just as hard for him to pick a favorite Yuletide dish from his childhood spent in Thibodaux, Louisiana. “My auntie made a sweet-potato casserole with mashed sweet potatoes, butter, sugar, allspice, and a pecan-oat mix. It was heaven,” Waller says. “But my mom made these amazing sweet-potato pies that you could freeze and take out six months later and still get the same high.” After becoming a vegetarian as a college athlete and later a vegan chef and owner of Bam’s Vegan, those old-school dishes inspired a new “sweet-potato bussin’ biscuit” recipe that even his meat-eating family members can’t resist. “If you try something, you’ll know if you like it or not. If it’s not for you, it’s not for you,” he says. “I tell people, ‘Don’t let a label scare you.’ ”

Local News

Leading Off (12/20/22)

Tim Rogers
By |

Aaron Dean Jurors Sequestered. The ex Fort Worth cop was convicted of manslaughter in the killing of Atatiana Jefferson, which leaves the punishment phase of the trial. After seven hours of deliberation, the jurors were sequestered last night and will resume their work today.

Problems Found in Dallas County Election. A state audit found that there were “large problems” with the 2020 presidential election in Dallas County. At least 188 voters were affected by problems with electronic poll books. There was no evidence of fraud, though, and the head of the state’s forensic audit division said we should have a “very high level of confidence in the accuracy of the outcome of Texas elections.” And the audit found that Collin County runs a tight ship and should serve as an example for the rest of the state of how to conduct an election. Nice work!

Governor Orders Investigation Into Two Dallas Murders. After two parolees wearing ankle monitors were accused of murder within two weeks, Gov. Greg Abbott ordered two state agencies to figure out whether lapses occurred. He wants answers by January 4.

Mavs Lose Game, Tempers. Both Luka Doncic and Jason Kidd were ejected in the third quarter on back-to-back double-technical fouls, and the Mavs lost to the Timberwolves 116-106. The two teams play each other again tomorrow. Look for things to get spicy.

Homebuilders Hold Up. New data show that in October, North Texas homebuilders took out 33 percent fewer permits than they did the same month a year ago, marking the sixth consecutive month of declines in building permits. The October drop was the steepest decline since the Great Recession in 2009.

Soccer

Seven Years Ago, a Dallas Guy Predicted World Cup History to the Day

Mike Piellucci
By |
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Even Lionel Messi couldn't say for certain he'd win the World Cup yesterday. But one fan of his could. Yukihito Taguchi-USA TODAY Sports

How often do you make predictions? I do so very rarely. I tend to guess wrong, and since I don’t enjoy being wrong when I can avoid it, I mostly steer clear of the endeavor.

On the other end of the spectrum is Jose Miguel Polanco, who I’m led to believe enjoys them. I gather this because of a Twitter post you’re about to read from March 20, 2015. You don’t make predictions 92 months ahead of time unless you dig the whole prognostication business. And you definitely don’t end them with “Check back with me in 7 years” unless you have a proclivity for this sort of thing.

Per Jose’s Twitter bio, he’s a Dallas guy who has also made stops in–deep breath–Buenos Aires, Sao Paulo, Oklahoma, Bogota, Lima, and Rotterdam. (One of these things is definitely not like the other … and it ain’t Dallas.) Why he predicted Messi to finally win the World Cup in 2022 instead of the 2018 edition in Russia is beyond me, but then again, I’m no oracle.

Jose? He just might be.

A new article in The Atlantic says research shows that the simplest answer to homelessness is a home.

 Obviously, the longer answer has more nuance. There are many reasons why someone may remain homeless, but the article reminded me of (and even mentions) the premise some researchers use: musical chairs.

The children playing might not make it to a chair. Maybe one kid gets anxious. Maybe some are smaller than others. Maybe one injures himself before he can get to a chair. You can say that all of them don’t get a chair because of that, but the main reason is that there aren’t enough chairs.

There’s a great deal of debate about whether so-called Housing First policies ignore what made people homeless in the first place—things like substance abuse or unemployment or underemployment.

But Joli Angel Robinson, CEO of Housing Forward (formerly Metro Dallas Homeless Alliance), says there are misconceptions about the approach of these programs, which prioritize getting people in a home and then provide wraparound services.

“The really short phrasing we use is that Housing First does not mean ‘housing only,’” she said. “Most people that are not for Housing First are trying to skew the idea to mean it’s housing only. People need a variety of resources, and Housing First meets those needs and  doesn’t create barriers for individuals.”

Local News

Leading Off (12/19/22)

Zac Crain
By |

South Oak Cliff Wins Back-to-Back State Titles. The team started the season 0-3, then won 12 straight to make it back to the championship game at AT&T Stadium. Then they went down 17-5 in the first half before rallying to become the first DISD team to ever win consecutive titles. Congratulations to Coach Jason Todd and his Golden Bears.

Cowboys Lose. [low whistle] Well, that was terrible. A 27-10 third-quarter lead that had the announcers talking about it being a good tune-up game for the Christmas Eve matchup against the division-leading Eagles somehow turned into a 40-34 overtime loss. The final kick in the jeans was a Dak Prescott pick-six. The Cowboys could have clinched a playoff spot with a win, but they got one anyway, thanks to losses by Washington and Seattle. Mike will have more on StrongSide directly.

Jury Should Start Deliberating Aaron Dean’s Sentence Today. The former Fort Worth police officer was found guilty of manslaughter in the 2019 killing of Atatiana Jefferson. He faces two to 20 years in prison.

It’s Going to Be Cold This Week. We are talking lows in the low teens by Friday. ERCOT says the grid is ready, but I’m gonna go ahead and take a “let’s see” approach. Anyway, let’s all hope for no precipitation because I have a flight to catch.

Football

The Golden Bears Head to Arlington Tonight to Attempt a Repeat

Bethany Erickson
By |
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South Oak Cliff High celebrated a state semifinal win against Argyle Saturday. Tonight they play for a state title. Courtesy South Oak Cliff High School/Dallas ISD

Forget the Cowboys for a minute. Pretend that there are no college bowl games coming up. Because here is my hot sports opinion: high school football is better than both of those things.

This weekend, teams all over the state converge on AT&T Stadium for state title matchups. And in North Texas, there’s an embarrassment of riches: South Oak Cliff High School, DeSoto, and Duncanville will play tonight and Saturday night.

Local News

Leading Off (12/16/22)

Matt Goodman
By |

Aaron Dean Guilty of Manslaughter. The Fort Worth officer who shot and killed Atatiana Jefferson while she babysat her nephew faces between two and 20 years in prison. The jury deliberated for nearly 13 hours, likely choosing between manslaughter and murder. The Fort Worth Report explores why the reaction to the jury’s decision is mixed. Some, like Mayor Mattie Parker, says it “provides a measure of justice.” Others, like Councilman Chris Nettles says the “verdict is a slap in the face to the Black communities in Fort Worth and across the country.” Sentencing begins at 8:30 a.m. today.

Look for Mark Cuban’s Gambling Lobby. The Mavericks owner wants a casino arena for the Mavericks, should the state of Texas legalize gambling. He told the Dallas Morning News that he plans to partner with the Las Vegas Sands to build a casino and resort with an arena in the center. Cuban is part of the Sports Betting Alliance, which includes “every major sports franchise” in the state. And he owns a sizable chunk of land in the Cedars. Look out.

Dallas Is State Championship Central. Duncanville, DeSoto, and South Oak Cliff are all playing for state titles this weekend. And South Oak Cliff is gunning to make history as the first Dallas ISD school to win it back to back since Booker T. Washington from 1956 to 1958. Bethany will have more on this later today.

Cold Weekend Ahead. It’s beginning to feel a lot like December, finally. The high today won’t top 50 and we’ll be in the 30s in the morning and evening. It’ll basically be like that the rest of the weekend, with a healthy bit of sunshine.

Local News

Biden Administration Releases Almost 13,000 More JFK Assassination Documents

Bethany Erickson
By |
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Lee Harvey Oswald and two Dallas policemen taken after Oswald's arrest following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. National Archives and Records Administration/Warren Commission photo

Just a few weeks after the 59th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas, the National Archives and Records Administration released more documents related to the investigation today.

Until about 2:20 this afternoon, nobody outside of NARA and the federal agencies that negotiated what would be released this year knew for sure which never-before-seen records would be uncovered. In 1992, Congress passed the President John F. Kennedy Assassination Records Collection Act, which set up a timetable for releasing all the documents related to the assassination by October 2017, unless a case could be made that some documents contain elements that are still important to national security. 

Today’s jaunt takes us way up Greenville Avenue, north of Park Lane. The famously walkable Lower Greenville might as well be in a different city: we are in the land of strip malls and storage centers and AutoZones and Presby hospital. This is also home to one of the largest concentrations of apartments in the city, in Vickery Meadow, and the infrastructure doesn’t reflect that.

An alert FrontBurnervian brings us the above photo, from the 7500 block of Greenville. The sidewalk dead-ends and disappears right into a utility pole. We know that Dallas is missing 2,000 miles of sidewalk across the city. We also know that Dallas doesn’t have enough money to fill in 2,000 miles of sidewalk, which naturally leads to sometimes difficult conversations of where the money it does have can have the most impact.

But some things just seem way too easy to fix. Or ignore, I guess.

Jury Continues Deliberations in Dean Trial. Closing arguments were given Wednesday morning in the murder trial of former Fort Worth police officer Aaron Dean, who is accused in the shooting death of Atatiana Jefferson in 2019. The jury deliberated until 7 p.m. and then was sequestered in a hotel overnight. Deliberations are expected to continue this morning.

Tuesday’s Storms Spawned At Least 14 Tornadoes. The National Weather Service has confirmed 14 tornadoes so far from Tuesday’s storm and said as many as 16 may have touched down. Six of those twisters touched down in Tarrant County, including Grapevine, where five people were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries.

Paxton’s Office Sought List of Possible Transgender Residents. Attorney General Ken Paxton’s office reportedly asked employees at the Texas Department of Public Safety to provide a list of people who changed their gender on state documents in the past two years, the Washington Post reported. A DPS spokesman said the request was verbal, but that after more than 16,000 such instances were found, officials determined that a manual search would be required to find the reason for the requested changes. No list was turned over, he said.

HomeVestors Not a Fan of HGTV Show. Dallas company HomeVestors of America (the “we buy ugly houses” company) is suing HGTV parent company Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. The company says that the network’s show Ugliest House in America infringes on its trademarked annual contest for “The Ugliest House of the Year.”

Check Your Pockets. If you bought a Mega Millions ticket in Plano or Prairie View in July, you may want to go find it. The Texas Lottery Commission says that two tickets were purchased in those towns that matched five of the numbers drawn, which means they’re worth $1 million each. The deadline to claim the cash is Jan. 25 at 5 p.m.

The city of Dallas faces a host of serious problems: lack of affordable housing, a shaky pension fund for cops and firefighters, a line of inequity drawn roughly along I-30, a permitting office that runs on TRS-80s, an inefficient public transportation system that was built on outmoded ideas, climate change, and Zeke Elliott’s insane contract. But you know what’s more important than all those concerns? Christmas Sweater Day at City Council.

Every year at the last Council meeting before the holiday break, (most of) our elected city officials engage in a sartorial scuffle to determine who has the most Yuletide style. Hanukkah chutzpah and Kwanzaa drip, too. No one was brave enough to cover this event until I came along in 2017 and started dropping bunker-busting fruitcake truth bombs on 1500 Marilla. I am here to serve.

With that preamble, let’s get to everyone’s favorite annual tradition: the big reveal of the Wick Allison Memorial Most Christmasy Christmas Sweater Worn on Dallas City Council Christmas Sweater Day AwardTM.

In October, the Dallas City Council voted 14-1 to adopt an ordinance that makes standing in the median a $500 fine. Wednesday, two homeless individuals, along with two other plaintiffs, filed a lawsuit against the city, Dallas police Chief Eddie Garcia, and interim Dallas City Marshal David Pughes alleging that the new rule violates the First Amendment.

The city presented the ordinance as a matter of public safety, but the suit alleges that the ordinance seeks to criminalize homelessness. The Texas Civil Rights Project filed the lawsuit along with the SMU First Amendment Law Clinic and Dallas law firm Waters Kraus & Paul on behalf of four people — Alton Waggoner, Teri Heishman, Hannah Lebovits, and Kawana Scott.

Cities can’t ban panhandling outright because of a Supreme Court ruling that declared the act protected speech under the First Amendment. When the plan to ban people standing or walking in medians less than 6 feet wide was first introduced months ago, the measure was offered as a workaround to the SCOTUS ruling.

In October, 14 council members voted in favor of the ban, all citing public safety concerns. The lone no vote was from Councilman Adam Bazaldua, who said he believed the ordinance’s intent was to target the homeless and criminalize poverty. 

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