[The itinerary for the menu:]
Whole roasted turkey, with "mashed potatos"(actually, steamed and peeled bloated tubers, mashed up, whipped with a little milk, and lightly salted.)
Turkey gibblet gravy
Strawberry and cremecheese danishes
Bread pudding
Saltwater taffy
Cinnamon hard candy (after careful extraction of the cinnamon he won off askak)
Steamed eggnog (warning, made with super crazy rum.)
Caveat: all the milk in the fortress is either sour by now, or has been condensed then canned, or is dehydrated. I am going to go with condensed and dehydrated.
Contemplated
"christmas tree" crochenbush, but that's just too damned labor intensive, and also highly obscure unless you live in europe. A
yule cake is straight out not happening.
(unless it's really just a really humongously big cinnamon roll instead.)
The cinnamon hard candy and the taffy are both fairly seasonal, and the taffy would be fun for the kids. (Needs to be pulled, afterall. Just make sure they wash their hands first.) The cinnamon hard candy won't be red though. No food color. Probably be a light golden color.
Chocolate is out of the question. Carob can't be made from the variety of honey locust pod collected. Needs middle eastern locust for that. No hot cocoa, no fudge, no peanut clusters.
Black Walnut divinity might be possible... need marshmallow extract, or vanilla extract to make.
Sorry about all the candies... but from waaaay back in my childhood, that's the best thing I remember about christmas, was helping grandma make holiday candies. Grandpa loved black walnuts, and the walnut divinity was almost exclusively for him.
A possible fudge substitute called
"aunt bills" might also be possible.
Open to other suggestions, but keep it in line with what the fortress larder is likely to contain.
*chemistry nerd notes:
"Cream of tartar" is really just refined tartaric acid. It is a common precipitate from wine making.
Since dwarves make wine in abundance, I would presume we have a heafty supply of raw tartaric acid salts building up in the wine barrels, that just need a little repeat crystallization to purify.
Sodium bicarbonate, baking soda, can be artificially synthesized using a combination of the solvay process, calcination of the raw soda ash to get sodium hydroxide lye (as a purification step. The sodium hydroxide is highly hygroscopic, and will form highly pure solution from dry powder if allowed to draw moisture, leaving the far less soluble calcium compounds behind.), then bubbling carbon dioxide through the solution under pressure. "Elf friendly" soap can be produced without wood ashes this way as well.
Weird likely already has bicarbonate of soda on hand. It is an essential cleanup material when dealing with strong acids. We have all the materials to make it already.