My family is pretty traditional, and basic with the food. Growing up the highlights of Christmas day were turkey and ham (cuz there was always a gob of us), the scary green jello/whip cream salad, and homemade sweet-bread rolls (nom nom nom). But what was the best on both sides of the family were the treats.
On my Dad’s side, my Grandmother always made Divinity and I learned the process from her. It was one of my favorite things to do with her each year. Another thing she made was Red Cake. Yes, it deserves the capitalization. I KNOW I have a picture of it around somewhere but I can’t find it (bah!). The recipe calls for something like 3 bottles of red food coloring–and this was back in the carcinogenic-red-food-coloring days. That thing glowed. It was covered in fluffy white frosting and she had a plastic Santa in his sleigh for the top.

Well-loved blue Fiesta cup used in making fudge by my Grandfather.
On my Mom’s side, my Grandma and great Aunt always cooked up a storm including the previously mentioned rolls, cookies galore, and candies. But the most “famous” item was actually made by my Grandfather: fudge. Now, his recipe wasn’t all that secret and I got it from him a couple years before he died, but the method was unique. See, he didn’t measure ingredients like everyone else. He used a fiesta cup. The blue one. That’s missing a handle. Had to be that one, nothing else would do.
When my Grandma passed away this summer and they were cleaning out the house, Mom grabbed the battered blue Fiesta cup and sent it to me. I have my own fudge recipe which the my family LOVES, but this year I’m thinking we’ll have two kinds. And Divinity. And perhaps even a red cake, sans glow.
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