However, as your stomach is probably still recovering from, most holiday food - nowadays - is not so healthy. Okay, not at all healthy. My parents were a little ambivalent about having a month focusing on holiday food, seeing as we're trying to eat healthier. I continually assured them that the point of having a holiday food month was to discover healthier versions of the foods we're used to. And I think we did a very fine job.
Some things we've discovered:
Chocolate is absolutely necessary. (I read recently that eating a square of dark chocolate in the morning provides you with just enough caffeine to get a kick-start but not too much to cause a crash later, along with antioxidants. I am definitely taking advantage of that. I also discovered that some chocolate (and coffee) really helps my ailing shoulder. Oh yeah.) Okay, that was really just my discovery.
Baked potato latkes can be better than fried ones, because they get cooked all the way through and, if left in the oven long enough, get crispy around the edges. Greek yogurt is also a perfect replacement for sour cream to have with the latkes.
Candle wax is fun to play with. (I know, not food related. Shush.)
An alternative to our usual cinnamon roll Christmas breakfast is a mango, pineapple, and banana fruit salad with mango cream dressing (made with Greek yogurt!) with shredded pineapple and raisins on top. (The recipe can be found in the cookbook The Green Way to Healthy Living, and a picture of it can be seen in my last post, "Happy Bean Day! and Some Pictures.")
If you like peppermint, adding some to a drink or some brownies is a great way to really holiday-ize your food and make it a little more exciting without adding a ton of whipped cream or ice cream to it.
I came away from the break feeling full but healthily so, and with lots of excitement for what next year's holiday season can bring in the way of food!