Sure, we love doing secret santa on the office and generally there's someone handing pranks gifts while at it.
On the eve of the 24th we share our presents and let the kids open theirs under the tree. However most people here say is the baby Jesus the one bringing the presents, not Santa. But Saint Nicolas (not Maduro, hehe) is ever growing more popular and used interchangeably, dunno, its part globalisation, part given we are mostly a catolich country a saint doing Jesus work sounds kinda rigth I guess.
Another tradition we have is to use new clothes on the 24th and the 31th. Eat 12 grapes at midnight the end of the year were every one is a wish for the next year and people going around the block with empty luggage so you'll travel a lot. I guess the last one really worked given theres almost 6 million of us living outside now.
Of course the economic crisis put a lot of constraints on this, also lots of people not being here makes the Christmas more dramatic and melancholic as there's either no enough money or no lots of people to share with or both.
As for food there's this little piece of heaven called
hallaca. The best regional variant is the one from the Andes (my mountain home
) it's made with raw stew and the dough and stew are cooked together preferably on a wood stove. We also have pan de jamon (ham bread) which is fucking delicious.
Of course, sadly the food has suffered a lot for the crisis too. I think we won't be able to do them this year (again) and haven't eaten one either which is the cultural equivalency of... duno, thanksgiving without turkey or cranberry sauce for an US guy. Perhaps some family will do and share with us, that's also a tradition, hallacas exchange so you can brag about how yours are better.