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Ritual Foods on the New Year's Table: The Semiotics of Food in the Context of Time Mythology

Introduction: Food as a Spell for the Future

Ritual New Year's dishes are not just a gastronomic tradition, but a complex system of food magic and symbolism aimed at programming the future through the act of consumption. At the moment of transition from old time to new, a person tries to incorporate desired qualities (wealth, health, fertility) and avert potential threats through special food. These dishes function as edible amulets, and their preparation and consumption are governed by strict rules, often of pre-Christian origin.

Classification by Functions and Symbolism

1. Dishes-Symbols of Abundance and Wealth

They are united by visual or etymological similarity to money symbols, grain, or wealth.

Lentils and Beans (Italy, Brazil, Germany): The shape of lentils and beans resembles coins. In Italy (cotechino con lenticchie), the mandatory combination of pork sausage (a symbol of abundance from the animal) and lentils. Eating them means "acquiring" wealth for the year. In Brazil, the first dish of the new year is lentil soup or simply a plate of lentils.

Whole Fish (China, Eastern European countries): The Chinese word "fish" (yu) is homonymous with the word "abundance." Fish (niao niao yu yu) is not eaten to the end to "transfer abundance" to the new year. In Poland or Slovakia, herring in various forms is a symbol of moderation but also of abundance.

Pomegranate (Greece, Turkey, Caucasus): On the morning of New Year's Day, a pomegranate is broken: the more seeds scatter, the more blessings there will be in the year. The seeds are also added to salads. This symbolizes fertility, prosperity, and the multitude of blessings.

Circular Dishes (circles, wreaths): In Northern European countries, ring-shaped breads and cookies (kransekake in Norway, Christmas wreath from dough in Germany) are baked. The circle symbolizes the cyclical nature of time, the sun, and eternity, as well as the unity of the family.

2. Dishes-Guarantors of Longevity and Health

They are associated with the image of a long, "tugging" life.

Long Noodles (Japan - toshikoshi soba): Soba noodles made from buckwheat are eaten on New Year's Eve. They must not be cut and must not be chewed to the end - they must be pulled in to make life "long and strong" like a whole noodle. Not eating it is to invite misfortune.

Green Vegetables (Southern United States): The tradition of consuming collard greens (collard greens) and black beans (Hoppin' John) among African Americans and in the Southern United States. The color of the cabbage resembles dollars, and its leaves are like paper money. Eating it is to ensure financial success, which is a kind of "health" of the economy.

3. Dishes-Guides to Luck and Happiness

They often contain a surprise that determines the fate for the year.

vasilopita (Greece, Cyprus): New Year's pie, in which a coin (fouri) is baked. The strict ritual is observed when cutting: the first piece is for Christ, the second for the house, the third for the oldest family member, etc. The person who finds the coin will be particularly lucky in the new year. This is an act of lottery transferred to the food space.

King Cake (Galette des Rois) in France: Although it is more associated with the Epiphany (January 6), it is often eaten during the winter holiday period. A porcelain figurine (fève) is baked inside. The person who finds it becomes the "king" or "queen" of the day. This is a ritual of temporary reversal of hierarchy and the granting of luck.

4. Dishes that Repel Evil and Impurity

They have a sharp, spicy taste or a specific color traditionally associated with protection.

Red dishes (Vietnam): The Vietnamese New Year (Tet) is impossible without red products: watermelon with red sweet flesh, red banh ting. Red is a symbol of fire, life, luck, and protection from evil spirits.

Garlic and Spicy Pepper (various cultures): Often present in dishes as apotropaic (repelling evil) ingredients. For example, in Hungarian cuisine, a New Year's soup may be spicy to "drive away" the old year.

Scientific and Anthropological Analysis: Why Does It Work?

The theory of magical thinking (J. Frazer): Ritual food acts on the principle of "like produces like" (imitative magic): long noodles → long life; coin-like lentils → money. And on the principle of contact magic: by eating a part of the whole (grapefruit, fish), a person appropriates all its properties (abundance).

Semiotics of food (K. Levi-Strauss): Food is a language. A ritual dish is a message to the world of spirits, ancestors, or the future. Its structure (whole/fragmented, round/long) carries meaning. An uneaten fish in China is a message: "There is always an excess in our home."

Neurobiology and the formation of habits: Joint ritual consumption of the same food at the same time of the year creates strong contextually dependent memories and neural connections. The food itself becomes a trigger for positive emotions and a sense of community, which is subjectively perceived as "luck" or "well-being."

Psychology of control: In a situation of uncertainty (the future), the ritual gives an illusion of control. Careful preparation of a special dish according to a strict recipe is a way to symbolically "prepare" and order the coming year.

Interesting fact: In Spain, the ritual of eating 12 grapes under the sound of the bells (one for each chime) is one of the youngest (beginning of the 20th century), but incredibly resilient. It combines the magic of numbers (12 months), synchronicity (exact time), and collective action (the whole country does the same thing at the same moment). This is an example of an artificially created but instantly mythologized tradition.

Modern Transformations and Globalization

In the modern world, the following is happening:

Hybridization: Ritual dishes migrate (sushi as "holiday" food in Russia, although in Japan they are not exclusively New Year's).

Virtualization: When it is impossible to be physically present with the family, they can prepare the same dish according to a common recipe in different parts of the world and eat it during a video call.

Ethicalization: The appearance of "correct" ritual dishes - vegan lentils, gluten-free soba noodles - shows the adaptation of ancient magic to new ethical systems.

Conclusion: Food as Chronophage

Ritual New Year's dishes are chronoaphages in the literal sense ("time eaters"): by eating them, a person tries to absorb and appropriate the future time, endowing it with the necessary qualities. They materialize abstract hopes for wealth, health, and happiness, turning them into a concrete, edible object.

This tradition demonstrates the amazing resilience of magical thinking in the rational era. Even not believing in magic, people subconsciously follow the ritual because it structures the holiday, creates a sense of continuity, and psychological comfort. Ultimately, the division of ritual food is an act of deep trust in the world: we invest our most precious wishes in food, and by eating it, we believe that they will come true because our ancestors did and will continue to do so. This is a gastronomic bridge between the past and the future, built from lentils, noodles, and pomegranate seeds.


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Ritual dishes on the New Year's table // Delhi: India (ELIB.ORG.IN). Updated: 01.01.2026. URL: https://elib.org.in/m/articles/view/Ritual-dishes-on-the-New-Year-s-table (date of access: 08.06.2026).

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