Merry Christmas- Traditional Lithuanian Christmas Eve Dinner is a photograph by Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite which was uploaded on November 29th, 2011.
Merry Christmas- Traditional Lithuanian Christmas Eve Dinner
Traditionally Lithuanians make 12 vegetarian dishes for Christmas Eve's dinner. No meat or milk is allowed. Only exception is fish, most often it is... more
Title
Merry Christmas- Traditional Lithuanian Christmas Eve Dinner
Artist
Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite
Medium
Photograph - Photo
Description
Traditionally Lithuanians make 12 vegetarian dishes for Christmas Eve's dinner. No meat or milk is allowed. Only exception is fish, most often it is herring.
Uploaded
November 29th, 2011
More from Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite
Comments (8)
Christine Burdine
Merry Lithuanian Christmas.. Merry Every Christmas! I love seeing you feast in this image! Thank you too for admin the fun group!
Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite replied:
Thank you for your greeting and nice comment, Christine. I hope you had merry Christmas too. My pleasure to be the host in one of FAA groups.
Chrisann Ellis
Ausra.. The feeling I receive viewing this.. is beautiful!.. Congrats on your work and sale!
Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite replied:
Thanks for your kind words Chrisann. I appreciate them very much.
Ausra Paulauskaite
OMG! I feel like someone just brought early Christmas to my house! Dear buyer from Northridge, CA Thank you very much for all your purchases. This picture is my favorite Christmas image. I am so glad you picked it. Hope you'll enjoy the prints. If you have any other requests feel free to e-mail me, I have more photos of Lithuanian food and food in general that are waiting to be posted on FAA.
Ketti Peeva
Very impressive Christmas Dinner! Almost like the Bulgarian Dinner. The only difference is that you serve fish. Our Christmas Dinner is strictly vegetarian. Merry Christmas!
Ausra Huntington nee Paulauskaite replied:
Yes, Ketti, I also noticed the similarity. You are more fair to fellow live creatures. Being a Catholic and just a human who loves animals I've been giving myself the same question many times. Why is it OK for Catholics to eat fish or anything from the sea during the lent while other meat is forbidden. Aren't they all animals and living creatures as we are?