Christmas on the Lower Danube
With an extended Christmas period that lasts until January and a high probability of a dusting of snow, the holidays on the Lower Danube region (along the Danube River southeast of Budapest, Hungary) feature unique traditions along with familiar festivities, including a handful of holiday market stalls to sample local delights and handicrafts here and there, making this a wonderful place to enjoy the magic of the festive season.
Cities such as Bucharest, Romania and Vukovar, Croatia are beautifully decorated and there are concerts, theater plays, ice rinks and various fairs, including wine, cheese and honey fairs. Many performances are even free of charge.
Best Local Delicacies
Winter on the Lower Danube not only announces itself with snow and awe-inspiring Christmas decorations but also with the smell of donuts, candies, mulled wine and rakija (Serbian brandy). Licitar hearts, colorfully decorated biscuits made of sweet honey dough, are unique to this part of the world and take nearly a month to make from start to finish.
Visitors can also buy and taste honey, BBQ, grilled meats, various cakes such as kürtőskalács(a spit cake specific to Hungarians from Transylvania) and gugelhupf (a prestige pastry by Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria and popularized in France by Marie-Antoinette).
Orthodox Traditions Before Christmas
The Serbian Orthodox Calendar is aligned to the Julian calendar instead of the Gregorian, meaning that there is a 13-day delay in the holiday. Christmas comes on the 7th of January and the New Year on the 14th. However, all the holiday festivities start around the 28th of November, and last until after Orthodox Christmas, prolonging the revelry for several weeks.