Saint Patrick's Day

Recipe: Copycat Shamrock Shakes

Copycat McDonald’s Shamrock Shakes

2 Cups of Vanilla Ice cream (or your dairy free alternative)

1 ½ Cups of Milk (or your dairy free alternative)

¼ tsp peppermint extract (or a shot of some leftover peppermint alcohol from Christmas)

Green food colouring

Whipped cream (or topping alternative)

Cherries and sprinkles for garnish

1.       Blend the ice cream, milk and extract in a blender until smooth;

2.       Add food colouring and pulse until it’s mixed in;

3.       Pour into your glass of choice;

4.       Top with the whipped cream, sprinkles and cherry.

5.       Enjoy!

 

Few additional tip:

-          When choosing your ice cream, choose a brand that specifically calls itself ICE CREAM. If it is not called ice cream, the ingredient list is going to be LONG, hard to pronounce and may not have ANY cream in it. (This tip does not apply clearly if you are using a dairy alternative)

-          Gradually add the food colouring in until you are happy with the colour.

-          Use real cherries not the maraschino ones- my chef instructor in college HATED maraschino cherries with an undying passion and that’s always stuck with me. Plus now it’s healthy!

St. Patrick's Day Traditions

St. Patrick’s Day Traditions

I’m sure this is going to come as no surprise but modern day St. Patrick’s Day traditions are vastly different from what they were when the holiday was created.

The first St. Patrick’s Day was celebrated in 1631 when the church established a feast honoring the late St. Patrick.

St. Patrick had been a Patron Saint of Ireland, there is not a lot of definitive history on him but a few things we do know is:

-          He was a roman citizen and was enslaved and taken to Ireland at approximately age 16;

-          He was either released or escaped from his imprisonment;

-          He then became a priest and returned to Ireland and had great luck in converting the Druid culture into Christians.

-          Legend has it he was born named Maewyn Succat and changed his name to Patricius (or as we know him- Patrick) which means “father figure” in Latin.

-          His supposed luck with converting people to Christianity is where the “luck” comes into play with modern St. Patrick’s Day traditions.

-          He used the three leafed shamrock ☘ to explain the holy trinity to the Irish Pagans.

-          He died on March 17th Year 432.

I decided to compile an assortment of traditions for this list as traditional and modern traditions vary quite drastically.

More Traditional:

-          Attend church in the morning; and

-          Celebrate in the afternoon! (Christian Lent rules were waived and people would eat and drink to their hearts content.);

-          Wear blue;

-          Enjoy some corned beef, cabbage and bacon; and

-          Wear a shamrock.

More Modern:

-          Attend a St. Patrick’s Day parade;

-          Enjoy a breakfast beer at your favorite Irish pub (Many pubs open at 7am on March 17th)

-          Wear green;

-          “Drown” a shamrock. (Pop a shamrock into your last drink of the night for good luck.. and hopes of an easy hangover in the morning);

-          Take in some Irish step dancing.

Info sourced from:

https://time.com/4261456/st-patrick-day-2016-history-real-saint/

https://www.history.com/topics/st-patricks-day/history-of-st-patricks-day 

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Saint-Patricks-Day

https://parade.com/1173388/jessicasager/st-patricks-day-traditions/