Sun 30 Dec 2007
New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve Traditions
Posted by admin under Black-Eyed Peas , Black-Eyed Peas recipes , Carnival of the Recipes , Carnivals , Chicken , Cooking , Famous Recipes , Food , Healthy Recipes , Holiday Recipes , Low-Fat Recipes , Mexican Recipes , New Year's Eve , Recipe , Recipes , Slow Cooker Recipes , Thai Cooking , Thai Food , Thai Recipes[8] Comments
Carnival of the Recipes #175
New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve Traditions
Cooking for New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve tends to be a random affair punctuated by comfort food and easy to prepare meals to be eaten at parties and in front of the television.
One of the most well-known traditions is that Black-eyed peas are traditionally eaten on New Year’s Day, often with collard greens or mustard greens. The tradition indicates that the eating of black eyed peas will bring good luck and fortune.
With that in mind, we have a couple of Black Eyed Peas Recipes submitted by various members of the Carnival of the Recipes.
Shawn Lea presents her Recipe for good luck in the new year with … Stewed Black-Eyed Peas posted at Everything And Nothing.

Famous Recipes presents new year’s eve recipes – New Year’s Eve Black-Eyed Peas Recipe | World Famous Recipes posted at Famous Recipes.
And here are a couple of more Black Eyed Pea Recipes for good measure:
Black-Eyed Peas with Garlic and Kale Recipe
1 1/2 lbs. kale, washed and drained
1 T. olive or other vegetable oil
1 T. chopped fresh garlic, or more to taste Pinch of dried red pepper
2 C. canned or cooked black-eyed peas
1 T. cider vinegar, or to taste
Pull the kale leaves from the tough stems. Discard the stems and chop the leaves into one-inch pieces. Place about two inches of water in a large pot and heat to boiling. Add the kale, cover and cook until tender, stirring occasionally, 15 to 20 minutes.
Drain. Reserve the water for soup, if desired. In a large non-stick skillet, combine the oil and garlic. Cook the garlic over low heat, stirring, until it begins to sizzle, about two minutes. Add the peas and red pepper and cook until blended, stirring, about three minutes. Add the kale and stir to blend over low heat. Add the cider vinegar just before serving. Serve hot or at room temperature.
Serves 6.
Black Eyed Peas with Ham
Eating black eyed peas on New Year’s Eve is supposed to bring you luck, or so says Southern tradition. Why leave it to chance when you can cook up a delicious pot of black eyed peas instead?
Cooking black eyed peas at a low simmer instead of a boil will keep the skins from bursting and give the dish a better appearance. Also add salt after cooking is complete as it can make the beans tough.
3 1/2 C canned or frozen (and thawed) black-eyed peas thawed
3 C chicken stock or canned low-salt broth
4 oz finely chopped ham
1 C onion, chopped
2 T balsamic or red wine vinegar
4 garlic cloves, minced
1 bay leaf
1/2 tsp thyme
1/4 tsp (more to taste) crushed red pepper
pepper to taste
Serves 6
Bring all ingredients to boil in heavy large saucepan. Reduce heat to a low simmer and cook, stirring occasionally, until peas are tender, about 45 minutes. Season with salt and pepper.
And now for the rest of the New Year’s Eve and New Years Day Holiday Traditional Recipes
Michele presents Sausage and Cabbage Casserole posted at Meanderings.
Slow Cooker Recipes presents Slow Cooker Recipes – Crockpot Scallop Potato-Tomato Pot posted at Slow Cooker Recipes.
Bill presents Surprise Dessert posted at Recipes – World Famous Recipes.
Carl Chapman presents The Best Turkey You Ever Ate! posted at Confessions of an Executive Restaurant Recruiter.
Laura Williams presents Chocolate Extract Coffee posted at Laura Williams’ Musings.
Famous Recipes presents Vanilla Cream Frosting posted at Famous Recipes.
Diabetic Recipes presents Diabetic Recipes – Vegetable-Barley Pilaf posted at Diabetic Recipes.
Crock Pot Recipes presents Chili-Cheese Taco Dip posted at Crock Pot Recipes.
Kevin P Menard presents Midnight Meat Pie aka Tourtierre posted at technogypsy.
Martin Lindeskog presents EGO: PIZZA SLICE posted at EGO.
Kevin P Menard also presents some traditional recipes left over from last week … Holy Supper Recipes – Pirogi, Pagachi, Mushroom Barley Soup, & Bobalky posted at technogypsy.
Easter Recipes presents Blueberry Dumplin’s posted at Easter Recipes.
Thelly presents Chicken Recipes – Chicken Biryiani Recipe posted at Chicken Recipes.
Famous Recipes presents Peanut Busters posted at Famous Recipes.
Marsha Hudnall presents Healthy Recipe: Tomato Basil Squares posted at A Weight Lifted.
Pancake Recipes presents Pancake Recipes – Deli-Cakes posted at Pancake Recipes.
Sarah presents Historic recipe for homemade PB cups! posted at SARAHSPY.
Akumakann Recipes presents Amaretto Almonds posted at Akumakann Recipes.
PabloPabla presents Chinese Stewed Duck posted at Hochiak! Delicious Asian Food.
Turkey Recipes presents Turkey Tamale Pie posted at Turkey Recipes.
Thai Recipes presents Vegetarian Thai Red Curry with Eggplant posted at Thai Recipes.
Free Recipes presents Confetti Appetizers – New Year Recipe posted at Free Recipes Online.
Recipes presents Saturday Night Chicken posted at Recipes.
World Famous Recipes presents Red Velvet Cake Recipes – Velvet Flag Cake Recipe | World Famous Recipes posted at World Famous Recipes.
Famous Recipes presents Crazy Crust Apple Pie posted at Famous Recipes.
Next week The Carnival of the Recipes will be hosted at TechnoGypsy and will be dedicated to “Russian Christmas or 12th Night.”
You can send recipes or links to recipe.carnival@gmail.com by noon CST on Saturday.
For a line-up of future Carnivals, visit our Carnival of the Recipes page on Blog Carnival.
You can submit to the next Carnival of the Recipes using this form
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December 31st, 2007 at 8:43 am
[...] New Year’s Eve Black-eyed peas [...]
December 31st, 2007 at 8:43 am
[...] New Year’s Eve Black-eyed peas [...]
December 31st, 2007 at 2:53 pm
[...] New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve Traditions New Year Traditions [...]
December 31st, 2007 at 3:21 pm
[...] New Year’s Day and New Year’s Eve Traditions [...]
January 2nd, 2008 at 2:43 pm
Better Late than Never!…
This week’s (or last, I’m not sure!) carnival of the recipes feature goodies to cook on New Year’s Day. Any of these recipes would be good on any day of the year, though! One of my resolutions for this year…
January 10th, 2008 at 10:09 am
[...] you miss me too much, you can always see what I’m up to on Twitter. (And don’t miss the special New-Year’s-Traditions-and-Treats Edition of the Carnival of the [...]
January 15th, 2008 at 10:21 pm
Wow..another great collection of recipes. I always end up bookmarking so many of the recipes in these carnivals. Keep up the good work !
March 7th, 2008 at 8:05 pm
[...] Pagachi RecipesBroccoli Salad [...]