Kronia Polla, Kali Kronia
All the best for 2022
Stay healthy, enjoy life
I've been wishing everyone a happy 2020. Elderly moment!
Hell, we don't want to do that one again
Kronia Polla, Kali Kronia
All the best for 2022
Stay healthy, enjoy life
I've been wishing everyone a happy 2020. Elderly moment!
Hell, we don't want to do that one again
As usual there are a bunch of traditions, most of which we still observe. They're all to bring good luck in the coming year. This are what we do in our family and local area. They differ all over the country.
1. Breaking a pomegranite at the front door. If we can find a pomegranite at this time of the year. We break ours at our front gate so the seeds and mess are outside on the road. Our daughter breaks hers at the front door. Nice mess to clean up on New Years morning.
2. Vasilopita. A St Basil's cake or a loaf of bread with a lucky coin. We have a cake on New Years Eve, bread at New Years lunch and then another family cake later on. These cakes or sweet breads are cut at every school, club and work place and the actual ceremony of cutting the cake and handing it around might not take place till February.
The lucky coin used to be put under the icons on the wall and used to buy incense. Probably still is in small villages. That died out in our family when m-in-law passed away.
The first slice of cake is for the Virgin Mary, the second for the house and land or the crops, the next for the oldest in the family and so on down the line. Everyone digs through their slice looking for the lucky coin and if we haven't found it by the time we've got through all the family members then we'll cut a piece for distant relatives too, or the dog.
3. Playing cards, making bets and buying a lottery ticket. Lucky games are fine, as long as you win! We all played cards around Yiayias big kitchen table with the kids. She had a bulging purse with low value coins with which we all placed bets . Usually it was the card game '21'.
Meanwhile down the road on an empty plot serious bet-ters would gather to throw coins, heads or tails, and huge amounts of money were won or lost. Men would gather from all over the island. I think that tradition has died out too, in that place anyway. We usually buy a national lottery ticket just before New Year. We're still waiting for a win.
One year down in Crete we played Gin Rummy with Navy friends till dawn. It was the only time I ever won. The money wasn't much but the thrill was .
4. Fireworks? With a big question mark. They have been banned this year so crowds don't gather but I can't see why our Mayor doesn't give us a show. They are set off from one of the car ferries in the bay and we all 'oooh and ahhh' from our balconies. He hasn't put on a show for several years.
Church bells used to peal joyously at midnight, and boats blasted their hooters but we haven't heard either in the last two years. Last year it was quiet and dark in our old neighbourhood where we go to our daughter's to see in the New Year. The only celebrations were on TV and from young Jamie who entered the house with an old key and banged us all on the head.
5. First Footing. Just before midnight the luckiest in the family goes outside and is the first person to enter the house bringing luck for the New Year, right foot first. It's usually the youngest. And he/she is armed with that big key though why he has to bang us all on the head I'm not sure.
6. New Years carolling. Once again on New Years eve the kids go from house to house singing the one traditional carol. As at Xmas they bring good luck to the house and expect a small coin in return or a much larger amount if they are kin or close neighbours or friends.
Kali Kronia
Happy New Year
Some of the traditions our Greek family have have carried on over the years at Christmas
1. Caroling. On Christmas Eve in the morning bands of children will bang on your door and ask 'can we sing to you'. To which you always answer yes unless you're a nasty grinch. The children enter and sing the carol, the one carol, that is sung on Xmas Eve. To which you answer with a 'and here's to next year' and a coin or two. If they're godchildren, next door neighbours or your own cherub then it will be far more than just a few coins.
My traditional person always looks eagerly for these kids because he says it brings good luck to the house in the coming year. In our present house up in the hills there are no neighbourhood children and we have to bribe a now teenage grandchild to come and bring us good luck.
2. Decorating a ship instead of a tree. Most households now put up the western tree but it is far more greek to decorate a small boat or kaikï (fishing boat). Downtown the Mayor usually does both but I haven't noticed either this year. Maybe there is something covered in lights which only show up at night. The harbour wasn't at all festive when I went down to the chemist this morning.
3. Christopsomo. The Christ bread which is cut on Christmas day. This is a large loaf of, often, homemade bread with a braid of dough on top forming a cross and a walnut in the middle. Ours is cut before the family Christmas day lunch. The traditional head of our household draws the sign of the cross over the bread with the big knife and then cuts big slices and hands them round the table. At New Years the bread will have a lucky coin in it.
4. Presents should be opened on New Years Day and not on Christmas day. Here it is Saint Basil, whose feast is on January 1st, who brings the gifts and not Saint Nick. My kids, being cross cultural thought they should have presents from both. Mother (ie me) decided that St Nick was the bringer of toys and that was that.
6. You must bake piles and piles of Christmas cookies, so says my traditional person who has taken over the baking. After 40 years of a foreigner baking his biscuits he has decided that only he can make them the way his mother did. Go for it says me.
The cookies (biscuits) are melomakarouna, made with honey and oil, orange juice and walnuts and kourabiethes made with lots of preferably (but not preferably for me) sheeps butter and almonds.
We make piles of them every year so anyone entering the house can be offered one or two on a plate with a glass of raki or whisky. Then we give packets of them away to friends and neighbours and also to anyone who has had a loss in the family. During the first year of mourning you are not supposed to make, or offer, sweet biscuits and you are not allowed to dye red eggs at easter.
So, folks that's some of the traditions which we carry on here. Of course in the cities things have changed and traditions are not followed to the letter. The younger generation looks on it all a bit differently too and they are more likely to follow the western traditions. But, in our house we follow the greek rules.
Some goodies I've made for the festive season. Not traditional and some won't be made again
The family that runs together stays together .
Porosea is an annual, mostly, multi sporting event. My grandchildren have all run, swum and biked in years gone by.
This October one part of our extended family took part, mother, father and daughters. Son was studying in Athens.
Xmas cards are written. The tree and boxes of decorations have come down from the store room.
Where is that 'stuff' that was removed from K's shed to make way for the wine?