The Hog Tradition

(deactivated member)
on 12/30/08 3:05 am

Yawl makin' me want to clean my house today....LMAOOOO

I will be spending my new year with my Mama Kids and Grand daughter....*smile* I'm off to a really good start! 

~Luving Me~
on 12/30/08 3:27 am - Boston, MA
I never heard of that either.  I just got rid of one after 5 years and not letting any more walk across the doorstep for a minute. 

Maybe I could just borrow one?????

 

 

virtly
on 12/30/08 2:55 am - va
RNY on 02/11/04 with
Hey Ro,
I am from the Ham Capital of the World "Smithfield VA". We eat everything but the oink, but since I am now a semi surburban ghetto mama, I'm cooking blackeye peas, porkroast, fried chicken, cornbread, kale and baked sweet potatoes. My brother and his family will be spending the day with me so we will be wiping grease from our face all day.
(deactivated member)
on 12/30/08 3:08 am

((((((((((((((((Raven)))))))))))))))))))) oh my I just two and two together!

Smithfield hams!  

CeeDee73
on 12/30/08 3:31 am - CO
Here's some common superstitions and the reasoning  behind them:

New Year's Eve Superstitions: Out with the Old

The saying "out with the old and in with the new" is a premise that lies behind many New Year's Eve superstitions. No matter where you live, there is surely a ritual that applies to the saying. In Ireland, you'll be baking Christmas bread, then slapping it against the wall. Iranian tradition calls for making noise with pots and pans.

In Scotland, people appreciate the ritual known as first-footing. According to this superstition, the first person to cross your threshold after midnight on New Year's Eve either brings great joys or certain risks. You'll want to leave blondes and redheads, especially women, waiting until a tall, dark-haired gentleman arrives bearing certain gifts, including a lump of coal. Otherwise, you'll miss out on a full year of prosperity.

Before the clock strikes midnight, you may want to pay attention to these "out with the old and in with the new" superstitions:
  • Open the back door to allow the old year to escape, before opening the front door.
  • Pay off all your bills, so you can start with a clean slate.
  • Place a horseshoe under your pillow as a good luck charm.
The New Year's Kiss While many people simply enjoy a midnight smooch on New Year's, others believe that there's more than flirting or love behind the New Year's kiss. Some people believe you'll experience a cold shoulder for the rest of the year if you don't kiss a spouse, loved one or friend.

New Year's Day Superstitions: Starting out Right

Starting the year out right is just as critical as ending the old year properly. Hundreds of New Year's Day superstitions go with the adage that what happens on Jan. 1 will influence the remaining 364 days in the year.

In order to enjoy a fruitful year, you can try any of these rituals on New Year's Day:
  • Avoid crying on New Year's Day, as you'll shed fewer tears throughout the year if you keep your eyes dry on New Year's Day.
  • Don't let anything break, or you'll experience larger damage of some sort.
  • Find a tree and dance in a circle around it to experience new love and no illness.
  • If you must work, be sure to accomplish one task exceptionally well, as this is an indication that you'll complete more successful projects during the year. At the very least, you won't be fired.
  • If you want to take a vacation, try this approach that's popular in Latino cultures: Carry a suitcase across the street and a trip will be right around the corner.
  • Keep the fires burning until the stroke of midnight on Jan. 2, but tend only to your hearth. Don't stir up the embers in a neighbor's fireplace.
  • Leave doing the dishes and the laundry for another day to avoid a death in the family.
  • Wear new clothes, especially if they're red. This will assure many months of happiness.

A few superstitions are out of your control, however. How the wind blows at sunrise on Jan. 1 may affect many aspects of your life:

  • A northern wind means plenty of bad weather ahead.
  • Southern winds decree prosperity.
  • Winds from the west will bring about the death of a well-known figure but also signal that you'll have plenty of fish and milk throughout the year.
  • Winds out of the east are the worst and are the precursors to wide-scale disaster.

New Year's Food Superstitions

Food plays an important role in superstitions, both on the eve of New Year's and on the first day of January:
  • Black-Eyed Peas: In many southern states in the United States, black-eyed peas possess a great range of powers, depending on who tells the story. For some, this food will surely bring wealth, along with a great deal of luck. Others believe that these little peas are worth only pennies, while the promise of dollars lies in consuming cabbage, spinach and other greens.
     
  • Grapes: Grapes, 12 of them to be exact, are part of established rituals in Spanish and Latin culture. The number signifies each month in the year. In order to have good luck and prosperity in the coming year, people must eat 12 grapes at midnight on New Year's Eve, one for each stroke of the clock.
     
  • Pork: Some people bring in the New Year with a meal of pork, as it is said that pigs cannot go backward while they root. Therefore, consuming ham will keep you moving forward, too.

Regardless of which New Year's superstition you choose to believe, plan on stocking the pantry before the bewitching hour. A plentiful supply of goods bodes well.

Kindness is the language, which the deaf can hear, and the blind can see. ~MarkTwain                             
 
 
 

(deactivated member)
on 12/30/08 3:43 am

(((((((((((((((((((((CeeDee))))))))))))))))))) good to see you lady

But why did I just read this and think to myself I HAVE to try a couple of these...LMAOOO the pressure is on. and to think I was *****in' about ****lins LOL 

CeeDee73
on 12/30/08 3:51 am - CO
It's good to see you posting, too.

I'm stressin' over the part of keeping a redhead, female out of the house until a tall, dark male enters bearing certain gifts!  I'm a redhead!!!  Damn. 

So, do the peas have to be cooked on New Year's eve or can the be prepared already?  I have some I made for Christmas in the fridge.  Can't get w/ all the pig pieces and parts though.

Kindness is the language, which the deaf can hear, and the blind can see. ~MarkTwain                             
 
 
 

(deactivated member)
on 12/30/08 3:58 am

Sounds like someone needs to get to dying their hair bwahhhhhhhhh

Don't matter when the peas are prepared as long as you eat them on New Years day 

Honestly I am going to do the back door thingee though LOL 

Stacee Y.
on 12/30/08 3:33 am - Florissant, MO
hey lady, we do the black eyed peas too, however, i don't really eat them, but i do eat a spoonfull on new years....my mom eats the WHOLE pig...she will say she eats the pig from the rooter to the tooter...lol  and i love me some chitlin's

BEFORE        NOW

(deactivated member)
on 12/30/08 3:45 am

Not the rooter to the tooter. bwahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

Does she do the bbq pig snoot thang? Everytime my family comes that way they have to have that bullshiot! 

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