Our Christmas Traditions by Ruth Ryan

Merry Christmas, everyone!

This is Ruth Ryan and I’ve asked Nolan for some space on his blog during the Christmas season to answer some questions about our family’s holiday food traditions.

When I think of true traditions, I think about growing up in East Texas. Every Christmas, my mom and dad, Ingrid and Larry Holdorff, celebrated their Scandinavian heritage with food. They invited their relatives, neighbors and fellow church members to our house for snacks and conversation. Their snacks were a smorgasbord of their native foods including smoked herring, pickled beef and Swedish breads.

It wasn’t exactly the menu a young girl growing up in Texas would have chosen. But looking back, it is so wonderful that my parents carried on centuries-old traditions of their ancestors. Another of my family’s traditions took place every Christmas morning. My dad would make Swedish pancakes using cooking techniques that he learned from his Norwegian grandmother. He’d serve them complete with imported lingonberry jelly.

Nolan’s side of the family also had great traditions. His mother, Martha Ryan, was renowned in their home of Alvin, Texas, for the pies she prepared during the holidays. People came from far and wide for a visit and a slice of pecan and pumpkin pie.

Once Nolan and I started our family, we established our family dinner on Christmas eve. Every year, I’ll prepare a beef tenderloin, but sometimes we’ll also serve ham or turkey with all the fixings. For dessert, we enjoy the same pumpkin and pecan recipes that my mother-in-law’s made.

Now that our children have families of their own, the ones who live in the area return to their homes to celebrate Christmas morning. Then everyone comes back to our house later Christmas day. I’m so grateful that several years before my father passed away, our son Reese took the time to learn the Swedish pancakes recipe from his grandfather. Reese makes sure a plate of our traditional breakfast treat still greets family members as they arrive for the Christmas day family brunch.

So what we celebrate today is a blend of what Nolan and I experienced growing up with some additions of our own. We are so fortunate to our children want to carry on in that same spirit. I'll add additional posts this month so tune in for more Ryan family traditions.