Originally posted by Flay
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Thank you flay, and all ye who expressed good wishes for Christmas.
If you will indulge me I shall regale you with a few thoughts that I hope will add to this particular festive occasion. This morning I switched on the Christmas tree lights to enchant early-about neighbours. This made me feel so good that I considered opening a good bottle of port saved for a Christmas occasion. Luckily I resisted the temptation with great difficulty as one should definitely not start any alcoholic-related proceedings before 7 am: of course, I had other fish to fry, and fry them I did!
As is our wont we have Christmas morning breakfast in our house - this a long standing ' tradition' which now, after a long apprenticeship, excuses us from any further participation in the culinary festivities. After smoked-salmon scrambled eggs, with a secret recipe for garnish - No! I will not reveal the secret - champagne, and orange juice for the minors to their obvious disbelief, we then repair to the in-laws. This year the revered mother passed away in the summer and initially there were tears - sunt lacrimae rerum - half a century of loving habit is not to be easily swatted away.
The company was good, the young grand nephews and nieces were older and more charming, and the drink was not slow or lacking. Different chefs were now in charge, and I sincerely hope that
Christmas dinner is secure in new hands.
The one regret I have is that with the inevitable changes to families, the ages of children, the distances and changes of residence we no longer end up chez nous on Christmas night with singing, laughing, drinking and general idiocy. But I remember many moments of that gone time, and I hope that you, whoever is reading this, can identify with some of the sentiments I am trying to express, and that you will have your own fond memories of Christmas which come back to comfort you.
Meanwhile, I seem to have found a reason to open that bottle of port. So, I won't delay you further - I'm sure you have better things to do than read the jottings of a sentimental old Christmas
fan.
PS I wish people would not refer to 'the wife'. It's so common.
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