Bon Sant Esteve! Happy 26th of December!
Today in Catalonia we celebrate the holiday of Sant Esteve (Saint Stephen's Day), in some areas also called Second Christmas.
On Christmas (25th December), we meet with half the family (for example, maternal side) to have a large lunch together and getting presents from the Christmas Log (Tió de Nadal). On the next day, we celebrate Saint Stephen's Day with the other half of the family (like the paternal side, or viceversa).
Both Christmas and Saint Stephen's Day meals start with a bunch of little starters on the table as shared little dishes that everyone can pick from (pica-pica), the most common ones being crisps, olives, almonds, mussels, cockles, shrimp, Iberian ham...
Then, the first course is, again for both days, the delicious escudella i carn d'olla: broth soup with galets pasta, and on the table we place different kinds of vegetables and meat that each person can add as they like to their soup dish. The most characteristic meat is pilota, a kind of meatball made of minced meat with parsley and garlic. In some seaside areas of Catalonia, on one of the two holidays they might eat fish and seafood soup instead.
For second course, the two holidays start to diverge. Christmas can have any of the most festive dishes of Catalan cuisine, typically either roasted chicken cooked with prunes and pine nuts, or tall rodó (thin slices of beef) cooked in a rich sauce with prunes and pine nuts and sometimes dried apricot. However, for Saint Stephen, the most common dish —and the true icon of this holiday— is cannelloni with bechamel and melted au gratin cheese on top. Traditionally, the cannelloni are made with the leftover food from Christmas day (the meat on the side of the escudella or the roasted chicken). However, some families might cook both cannelloni and another of the two dishes and eat a bit of both or give each family member the choice between them.
And for dessert, again same as for Christmas, the iconic Christmas desserts: neules (thin and crunchy rolled waffles, as you can see in the last photo) to dip in cava (Catalan champagne) and torrons (different kinds of nougats, second-to-last photo). In some areas, they also have special local Christmas desserts on top of this, for example borraines amb mel in Terres de l'Ebre, sweet pastries stuffed with sweet potato in the Valencian Country, potato cake and coca de torró in the Balearic Islands, and more.
After the meal, it's traditional for the kids of the family to stand on their chair and recite a Christmas-themed poem, and receive some money from their relatives in exchange.
As always with holidays, the sobretaula (the long conversations while sitting at the table after a meal) can last for hours, until we say goodbye until we'll see each other again on Three Wise Men Day (6th of January) to exchange presents.
Have a happy Sant Esteve!
Photo sources: Caprabo, Unsplash, Mançanes i no pomes, Receptes.cat, and DeNadal.cat.













