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Food & Drink

New Yorkers Rang in Holidays by Eating Turtle, Dessert Meats a Century Ago

December 13, 2016 1:14pm | Updated December 14, 2016 2:46pm

New Yorkers celebrating the holidays by dining out encountered menus with plenty of options more than a century ago, a far cry from the sparse holiday menus popular today. 

DNAinfo New York dug into the New York Public Library's digital collection to see what people were eating during Christmas and New Year's in the late 1800s and at the turn of the century.

The answer, in short: a lot of meat. 

Restaurants served up meat as an appetizer, an entree and even a dessert (mince pie was popular alongside sweet pies and cakes). There were menu sections devoted to cold meat, boiled meat, game and roast meat, among others. 

Parts of the menus show the staying power of some traditions, like celebrating with Veuve Clicquot and oysters.

But others prove just how much tastes have changed, including the prevalence of green turtle soup as an appetizer or pipes full of tobacco to cap off a meal. 

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