![]() ![]() ![]() So far in December we’ve been invited to 8 potluck Christmas or Holiday gatherings. I heard myself saying aloud to the newspaper, “What universe do you live in?” I remember once reading an advice or manners column (which one is lost in the mists of time) stating that when hosting a Holiday Dinner, it is incorrect to ask the guests to bring food. Synonyms include: potluck dinner, spread, Jacob’s join, Jacob’s supper, faith supper, covered dish supper, dish party, bring and share, shared lunch, pitch-in, bring-a-plate, dish-to-pass, fuddle, and carry-in.” I always enjoy learning where words like this come from, and Wiki says: “The word pot-luck appears in the 16th century English work of Thomas Nashe, and used to mean ‘food provided for an unexpected or uninvited guest, the luck of the pot.’ The sense ‘communal meal, where guests bring their own food,’ appears to have originated in the late 19th century or early 20th century, particularly in Western North America, either by influence from potlatch or possibly by extension of traditional sense of ‘luck of the pot’.” The only rule, unless you’ve been asked to bring a particular type of dish, is to bring enough to share with several other (not necessarily all) attendees. Today’s post comes from Barbara in River TownĪccording to Wiki, a pot luck dinner is: “a gathering where each guest contributes a dish of food, often homemade, to be shared. ![]() Header photo by Luke Jones via Flickr – CC 2.0 ![]()
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