Have You Heard the Legend of The Christmas Flounder?

Christmas dinners are a time to show off your best holiday china and fill those plates with turkey or ham or, if you happen to live in the Southeastern corner of North Carolina, a good piece of Christmas flounder.

While many cultures celebrate the Yuletide season with a seafood meal, like the Italian-American Feast of the Seven Fishes, The Christmas Flounder is unique to one little pocket of the South. The Christmas Flounder sounds like a heartwarming children’s holiday tale, but according to the Wilmington Morning Star, it is a “tradition born of hardship” that has become part of Lower Cape Fear’s history.

Paul Jennewein, the late newsman, who the StarNews claims was the world’s only authority on The Christmas Flounder, a tradition started during the Great Depression when money was especially tight. Faced with the idea of nothing to fill their Christmas tables, since turkey and ham were out of reach for most folks, Cape Fear fishermen decided to head out to sea. Soon enough, a fleet of flounder had been pulled out of the mud, bound for the dinner table. Those fish were joined on the Christmas table stuffed with other local delicacies plucked from the sea, like oysters and crabs, with traditional Southern fare like collards and grits to round out the meal.

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From that first meal, a holiday tradition was born and Christmas flounder became an annual treat—at least for some time. Now, according to the StarNews the tradition is “practically forgotten” although they have been working hard to keep the practice alive. Every Christmas Eve they reprint the original story crafted by Jennewein and Charles Riesz, the former editorial page editor of the StarNews. They even print a recipe that pairs the flounder with shrimp, crab, and cornbread crumbs, which makes The Christmas Flounder sound like the perfect addition to a holiday spread.

There’s just one thing, though: The story of The Christmas Flounder is a bit, ahem, fishy. According to Our State, in Jennewein’s obituary, which was published in the paper on August 5, 2000, Jennewein’s widow, Virginia Nesbitt Jennewein, confessed that he had made the whole thing up. “He invented it,” she told a reporter. While Jennewein had seen some intrepid fisherman gigging flounder on Christmas Eve, the back story about the Great Depression was invented whole cloth.

The fact that The Christmas Flounder wasn’t a Christmas custom with historical roots didn’t stop people from getting in on the fun, though. People reportedly invented their own childhood memories of The Christmas Flounder and other newspapers and magazines, including the Charlotte Observer, contributed their own stories and recipes and reprinted Jennewein’s and Riesz’s tribute in their own newspapers, helping spread the legend across the state. Now, restaurants feature The Christmas Flounder on their menu and it may even show up on Christmas dinner tables across North Carolina. And why not? It’s undoubtedly a delicious addition to a Christmas dinner that serves as a conversation starter, too.

If you do intend to add this to your holiday traditions, Amazon has an ugly Christmas shirt that will help kick start the fishy festivities.