FAQs
To show off their money, the rich would offer pies in various shapes, such as crescents and hearts, to show off their wealth. They became a popular treat around the festive period thanks to a tradition from the middle ages, which saw people eat a mince pie for 12 days from Christmas day to Twelfth Night.
What should be eaten on the 12 days of Christmas for good luck? ›
There is a tradition of eating one mince pie each day over the 12 days of Christmas from Christmas Eve to 5 January. This was believed to bring good luck and happiness for the next 12 months.
How many mince pies are eaten each Christmas? ›
How many mince pies should you eat on the 12 days of Christmas? Back in the day it was thought lucky to eat one mince pie on each of the twelve days of Christmas. How many mince pies are eaten in the UK every Christmas? According to Good Housekeeping nearly 800 million mince pies are eaten in the UK each year.
What were you supposed to do when you took your first bite of a mince pie? ›
According to tradition, you must always make a wish on the first mince pie you eat during the Christmas season.
Why are mince pies lucky? ›
Symbolism and Tradition
In England, it is believed that eating mince pies on each of the twelve days of Christmas brings good luck for the coming year. During the English Civil War in the 17th century, mince pies were briefly banned by Puritans who considered them a symbol of Catholicism.
What were mince pies originally made to symbolize? ›
The original mince pies were oblong crib shapes decorated with a baby Jesus on top. The contents represent the gifts of the Magi to the Christ child, spices and plump middle eastern fruits. In the 1640's in England, Scotland and Ireland, the Puritans banned Christmas and everything related to the holiday.
Why do we leave mince pies at Christmas? ›
During medieval times it was common to mix sweet and savoury ingredients. Honey and dried fruits were pricey and hard to come by so using them in your meals was a sign of wealth. This made spiced pies a special treat reserved for important occasions like Easter or Christmas.
Why is it called mincemeat? ›
The "mince" in mincemeat comes from the Middle English mincen, and the Old French mincier both traceable to the Vulgar Latin minutiare, meaning chop finely. The word mincemeat is an adaptation of an earlier term minced meat, meaning finely chopped meat. Meat was also a term for food in general, not only animal flesh.
What is the most eaten pie at Christmas? ›
Pumpkin pie is America's favorite holiday pie.
Why can't you eat mince pies on Christmas Day? ›
It has been claimed that eating the snack is illegal in England if done so on Christmas Day. The tradition comes from the time of Oliver Cromwell in the 1650s, when mince pies were banned at Christmas, along with other tasty treats. Cromwell wanted to tackle gluttony in England.
One superstition from the middle ages suggests that if you eat a mince pie every day from Christmas day to Twelfth Night (evening of the 5th January) you will be guaranteed happiness for the next 12 months mmmm!
Do Americans eat mince pies for Christmas? ›
In the US, there are no laws regulating what foods fictional characters can consume, transport or distribute. Mince pies are not commonly consumed in the US outside of the New England region. Perhaps if more Americans were familiar with them they would be banned. Or perhaps not, who can know.
Why do they call it mincemeat? ›
Mincemeat is a combination of chopped dried fruits, spices, sugar, nuts, distilled spirits, a fat of some type and sometimes meat. The name is a carryover from 15th century England when mincemeat did indeed have meat in the mix; in fact, the whole point of mincemeat was to preserve meat with sugar and alcohol.
Are mince pies religious? ›
Soon dough effigies of the baby Jesus were placed on top of the pies to reinforce the religious connection. It's a myth that Christmas and mince pies were banned by Oliver Cromwell and reinstated at the Restoration, but some seventeenth century Puritans did frown on any such 'idolatrous' depictions of sacred figures.