A Celebratory Christmas Menu for Six or More
- Cocktails and Appetizers: Golden Ginger Cocktails, Nut Mix, Assorted Chocolates, Goat Cheese Christmas Tree
- Soup: Swiss Cheese and Onion Soup with Homemade Croutons
- Main: Lasanga, Wreath Salad, Hard Rolls with Soft Butter
- Dessert: Spiced Rum Sours, Chocolate Tart, Gingerbread Cookies
Weeks in Advance
Buy anything non-perishable that you might need for service: cocktail glasses, soup bowls, serving dishes, etc. Don’t underestimate this. You’re probably planning to serve more people than you usually do, and although you think that running out of soup bowls is something that never happens to you, it can when you’re serving a crowd … and you’d hate to realize it on Christmas afternoon. Think everything through. If you’re going to need something that you’re pretty sure is in a box in the basement, go and verify that you can find it. Do this now, when there’s no stress attached to the results.
Buy items with long shelf lives: liquor, chocolates, dried herbs, and lasagna noodles, for instance. My go-to for chocolates is The Fudge Pot in Old Town (Chicago), and just a few doors down is my favorite spice shop. (They both ship.)
Although I love to make rolls, I rarely do so if I have a big dinner to put together. Typically, they’re best if made same-day, and I usually feel too rushed to have to wait on rising bread dough when I’ve got so much else to juggle. My second line of roll defense is to buy frozen rolls. They’re remarkably good and so easy to heat up. I’m not the only one who knows this, so it’s important to buy them weeks in advance, or you may risk not being able to find any in the store.
Make the cocktail syrups. Keep refrigerated.
Make the cookies and freeze them. They freeze perfectly.
Days in Advance
The soup can be made a few days in advance and reheated. The tart can also be made a day or two ahead of time. I’d recommend keeping it in an airtight cake tote, in the fridge. The lasagna can be assembled the day before.
Buy items with mid-range shelf lives, like cheese, onions, olives, and cream. The crouton bread is better if it’s dried out a bit, so don’t wait on buying it.
Last-Minute Items
This menu requires some items that can’t easily be purchased too far in advance: fresh herbs, meat, fresh veg and fruits. I always feel that this puts me in competition with other shoppers – not usually, but during the Christmas season, yes. It’s best to know what stores stock what kinds of items, and have back-up plans if things don’t go your way. Of course, you can buy some of these items in advance and freeze them.
Day Of
The schedule I’m laying out assumes that you’ll have a helper throughout the day.
- 11 AM: do as much prep as you can: set the table, prep the tree appetizer and the wreath salad, set out the chocolates and nuts. Take care of last-minute touches, like decorating the tart.
- Noon: pre-heat the oven.
- 12:15 PM: put the lasagna – which you assembled in advanced and kept in the fridge overnight – in the oven. Remove the cookies from the freezer and arrange them on a plate. Place butter in a server and let it come to room temperature.
- 1:30 PM: clean yourself up and change out your sweats for something presentable.
- 2:30 PM: put the soup into an Instant Pot. Set the Instant Pot to SAUTÉ, less, 15 minutes. Stir constantly until the soup is hot. Be careful, because it could easily scorch. If you feel things are getting out of hand, breifly CANCEL the sauté and then reactivate it once things are back under control. Once the soup is hot, CANCEL the sauté. Screw on the lid. Activate the KEEP WARM function.
- 3:00 PM: guests arrive. Have your helper make and serve the Golden Ginger Cocktails.
- 3:30 PM: remove the foil from the lasagna. Reheat the extra sauce.
- 4:00 PM: take the lasagna out of the oven and heat the rolls. Once the rolls are ready, turn off the oven and leave the door open as you wrap the rolls in a towel and place them in a basket. Turn the oven to it’s “warm” (or lowest) setting. Put the wrapped rolls in it, return the lasagna to it, and place the extra sauce in there, too. Serve the soup. At this point, you’re home free: the main course and desserts are ready whenever you are. You can make the rum sours as you like.
Christmas Menu 2024
Credit for images on this page: Make It Like a Man! unless otherwise credited. This content was not solicited by anyone, nor was it written in exchange for anything. Thank you, Kesor. Make It Like a Man! is ranked by Feedspot as #15 in the Top 30 Men’s Cooking Blogs.
Keep up with us on Bloglovin’
You are very organized young man! And. A very delicious menu.
Thank you, Mimi!
I like the idea of a dish like lasagna for Christmas day with guests. Made in advance and heated on the day to minimise time in the kitchen and maximise time with guests.
Exactly! It makes such a difference!
I really enjoyed reading this. It is important to think out the timing and all of the details ahead of any party or holiday. It makes things so much smoother and less stressful. I love your menu and thank you for sharing your favorite chocolate shop and herb shop. I’m off to check them out. I hope you have a very Merry Christmas!!
Thank you, Lori. Merry Christmas to you, too!
I like the way you do things — planning well in advance and paying attention to details. And the menu you assembled is terrific.
Thank you!
This sounds like a wonderful Christmas menu! I hope you enjoy the day to its fullest
Thank you, Anne!
Am definitely not Scrooge but have never been much interested in the current era Yule festivities either . . . yet am reading your menu and wondering what I can copy! Love the sound of both the soup and the main . . . and your timing instructions making the approach of relatives and friends at the door pretty painless . . . ! Happy cooking!
The main beef I have with Christmas festivities is the way they’ve crept all the way into October. I don’t mind the Christmas season being longer, but I wish it had crept in the other direction. October already has soo much interest to it, and so does November. January and February are so blah. I wish Christmas sprung out of nowhere on Christmas Eve, and all the lights and ornaments stayed in place for at least a month and a half.
*Laughing* I SO agree! In Australia the first Yule ads appear end of August!!! I was born in northern Europe aways before you . . . the Christmas tree was brought in and ‘festivities’ began around St Lucia’s Day on the 6th of December methinks and ended on the 6th January. After that it was impolite to wish anyone ‘A happy New Year’! And the tree had probably ‘had had it’ by then and the ornaments were packed away . . . Nice and neat! And far more special!
I love that! The worst part about Christmas creep for me is the music. Once through my Christmas playlist, and I’ve kind of had it for the year. You can hear those songs only so many times.
I definitely appreciate the schedule to keep everything in line – I do the exact same thing here! Also, I must call out the extra appreciation for the holiday lasagna. We always do Italian on Christmas here, too – homemade ravioli and meatballs for us. Cheers, my friend!
Ravioli and meatballs sound fantastic!
You’re so organized! I also prefer those recipes that can be made in advance. Well, except for desserts – in our house it’s risky to make them early because they will disappear way before the celebration starts lol. And this cheese and onion soup? Need to make some!
Thanks, Ben!