Christmas is a time for traditions, and we like to embrace as many as we can.
One of our favourites is Stir-up Sunday, where families get together in the kitchen on the Sunday before the season of advent, which this year is on November 24, to make a Christmas pudding.
Victorian
It is a quintessentially British Christmas tradition and is said to have been introduced to the Victorians by Prince Albert, who loved everything to do with the festivities.
Every member of the family gives the pudding mixture a stir and makes a wish, and traditionally, a silver sixpence was stirred into the mix to bring the finder wealth, health, and happiness for the coming year.
Twelfth Night Cake
The tradition dates to the ‘Twelfth Night Cake’, which was eaten during Twelfth Night festivities. Originally a dried pea or bean was baked in the cake and whoever the lucky person was who found it, became ‘king or queen’ for the night. There are records of this going back to the early 1300s.
Coins
The first coins used were a Silver Farthing or penny. After World War One, it became a threepenny bit and then a sixpence.
Today we use a five pence piece, but it’s courteous to warn people it’s in there before they tuck in, or they may break a tooth!