Warning: Illegal string offset 'instance' in /home/fllawn5/public_html/wp-content/plugins/theme-my-login/includes/class-theme-my-login.php on line 1072

Warning: Illegal string offset 'instance' in /home/fllawn5/public_html/wp-content/plugins/theme-my-login/includes/class-theme-my-login.php on line 1076
Backyard Food Solutions » happy new year https://backyardfoodsolutions.com Sat, 14 Dec 2019 11:33:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.3.26 Happy New Year – Foods that bring good or bad luck! https://backyardfoodsolutions.com/happy-new-year/ https://backyardfoodsolutions.com/happy-new-year/#comments Sun, 29 Dec 2013 20:16:49 +0000 http://backyardfoodsolutions.com/?p=1245   Every New Year people around the world tuck into foods which they believe will bring good fortune in the year ahead.  While the dishes may be different they all have connotations of prosperity and health. Here’s 10 foods that … Continue reading

The post Happy New Year – Foods that bring good or bad luck! appeared first on Backyard Food Solutions.

]]>
Happy_New_Year_2014_HD_Wallpapersdb9883

 

Every New Year people around the world tuck into foods which they believe will bring good fortune in the year ahead.  While the dishes may be different they all have connotations of prosperity and health.

Here’s 10 foods that may (or may not!) bring you good fortune in the year ahead.

1. Leafy greens like cabbage and kale are commonly eaten on New Year’s day because they resemble money. Belief has it, the more you eat the more prosperous you’ll be.

2. Like greens, beans are also eaten because they resemble money - but coins in this case.

In the Southern states of the US it’s traditional to eat a dish called Hoppin’ John made from black-eyed peas. It’s though that eating black-eyed peas shows humility and therefore invites good fortune.

3. Lentils are yet another food stuff with financial connotations. They are commonly served in Italy and Brazil where they are believed to symbolise wealth. It is thought lentils have been eaten for luck since Roman times.

4. Fish are lucky in three ways: their scales resemble coins, they travel in schools, which represents prosperity, and they swim forward, symbolising progress. In China it’s important for the fish to be served with the head and tail intact to ensure a good year, from start to finish.

In Germany, Poland and Scandinavia however, it's believed that eating herring at the stroke of midnight will ensure a year of bounty—as herring are in abundance throughout Western Europe. Also, their silvery colour resembles that of coins, a good omen for future fortune.

5. In Spain and Portugal revellers eat 12 grapes at midnight - one on each stroke of the clock.

Each grape is said to represent a month. A sweet grape represents a good month, while a sour grape could signal something bad.

6. In Greece, a pomegranate in smashed on the floor in front of the door at midnight to break it open and reveal seeds symbolising prosperity and good fortune. The more seeds, the more luck you can expect in the coming year.

It is also believed that their red colour, which represents the human heart, denotes life and fertility

7. Noodles are a symbol of long life. One of Japan's most beloved foods, soba, or buckwheat noodles, are customarily eaten at midnight on December 31, when they are called toshi-koshi ("from one year to another") soba. The noodles symbolise longevity, which is lucky, so the longer they are, the better. To benefit from the luck they must be eaten without breaking however.

8. Many people consider pork to be the luckiest of all foods to eat on New Year’s Day for two reasons.

Firstly, pigs are rotund, which represents prosperity. They also “root forward” with their noses, which is supposed to symbolise progress.

9. Ring-shaped foods are a symbol of coming full circle so dig into doughnuts and bagels on New Year’s Day. Ring-shaped cakes are sometimes baked with trinkets or coins inside and the person who finds the trinket is said to have good luck.

10. Cornbread is a favourite new year’s treat in the US because it’s colour represents gold. Some people add extra corn kernels which are emblematic of golden nuggets.
Have a Happy and Safe New Year from the Backyard Food Solution's Team!!!

The post Happy New Year – Foods that bring good or bad luck! appeared first on Backyard Food Solutions.

]]>
https://backyardfoodsolutions.com/happy-new-year/feed/ 0