I used to complain about the "commercialization of Christmas" that begins around Halloween and turbo-charges into hyper space once Santa closes the Macy's Thanksgiving Parade in Herald Square.
Here, there are "Christmas trees" in the malls - and by that I mean tall metal cones with lights and / or garland - and the springboks are illuminated, not the reindeer. And nothing like the massive wall-to-wall decorations that fill every shop and storefront window, drape every restaurant, church and office, adorn every public square and neighborhood all across America. In fact, the decorations here are so few and far between that you will literally miss 'em if you blink. The Rainbow Nation's color palate is not reduced to red and green either. Nobody ever complains about the commercialization of Christmas in South Africa. Especially me. It just doesn't look like Christmas in South Africa.
Festive season braai |
No chestnuts roasting on the open fire of a corner street cart. No spicy cinnamon and nutmeg aromas wafting from a gluhwein market stall. No whiffs of pine and spruce as you brush past a Christmas tree vendor on the street. It just doesn't smell like Christmas.
And speaking of gluhwein, it was 33 degrees Celsius for the Festive Season Open House we hosted for our neighbors on Sunday. That is like 92 degrees Fahrenheit. I served the gluhwein on the rocks! No one cooks their Christmas gammon or roast beast inside in the oven. Christmas feasting is essentially a summer barbeque. It certainly doesn't taste like Christmas in South Africa.
Christmas mint, not rosemary |
welcome! |
Christmas crackers in a wire baobab |
Our festive season open house menu was a combination South African braai / American barbeque. Boeries on the braai. S'mores. Our South Africa neighbor got into the spirit. He wore his Colorado cowboy hat and brought star-shaped watermelon to the party!
I introduced our guests to the s'more! I have found Hershey's chocolate bars in Joburg (Thrupps) but the graham crackers and Jet-Puffed marshmallows were imported from the USA.
This is how it's done ... |
And we toasted the marshmallows in a potjie!
Too hot for a real fire ... |
Here's another difference. They do not say "Merry Christmas" or "Happy Hanukkah", "Happy New Year," "Happy Holidays" or even "Season's Greetings" here. It is the "Festive Season" in South Africa.
We are off to the bush and the beach so have a Happy Festive Season. See you in 2015.
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