Wednesday, 03 December, 2025
London, UK
Wednesday, December 3, 2025 11:20 PM
broken clouds 7.4°C
Condition: Broken clouds
Humidity: 90%
Wind Speed: 9.3 km/h

Former Royal Chef Spills Secrets About The Queen’s Military-Style Holiday Feast

https://s.yimg.com/ny/api/res/1.2/0Q6EGVHDVw9nWGYDH9xpyA--/YXBwaWQ9aGlnaGxhbmRlcjt3PTEyMDA7aD01NTQ7Y2Y9d2VicA--/https:/media.zenfs.com/en/theblast_73/b95e2af107b4077589235282a1e9fc50

As families around the world prepare for their own holiday traditions, former royal chef Darren McGrady is giving a rare, detailed look at what Christmas looked like inside Sandringham House, and according to him, it was a military-style operation from start to finish. McGrady, who spent 15 years cooking for Queen Elizabeth, Prince Philip, Princess Diana, and Princes William and Harry, shared his behind-the-scenes memories in a new interview. From the exact dishes served to the unbreakable dining rules and the highly structured kitchen preparations, McGrady paints a vivid picture of a royal Christmas rooted in tradition, precision, and zero room for improvisation.

How Queen Elizabeth’s Christmas Feast Followed A Precise, Unchanging Royal Tradition

The Royal Family attend the Wedding of Lady Gabriella Windsor and Mr Thomas Kingston

MEGA

When speaking to Smooth Spins Casino, McGrady said Christmas Day at Sandringham followed a strict culinary script, one Her Majesty never deviated from. According to the interview, which was sent to The Blast via email, Breakfast began early, with a full English spread for the men (sausage, eggs, bacon, mushrooms, and kidneys for Prince Philip, who loved offal). The women, meanwhile, enjoyed light breakfast trays upstairs, usually fruit. After church, lunch began with canapés before jumping straight into the main event, roast turkey.

“There was no salad course,” McGrady explained, because the meal was “quite heavy.” The Queen preferred traditional roast turkey, cheshunt stuffing (sometimes), Brussels sprouts, roast parsnips, roast and mashed potatoes, turkey gravy, and cranberry sauce. Then came a royal showstopper, the Christmas pudding, flamed and carried into the dining room by the Queen’s page to applause. The pudding was always made a year in advance and stored to mature through the following Christmas.

Advertisement

Advertisement

And not to mention, everyone wore their paper party hats as they tucked in.

No Special Requests: The Queen Allegedly Dictated The Entire Christmas Menu

The Royal Family attend the Wedding of Lady Gabriella Windsor and Mr Thomas Kingston

MEGA

When asked if any family member requested favorite dishes, McGrady was firm. Absolutely not.

“You’re dining with Her Majesty the monarch, so whatever she chooses, that’s what you eat,” he said. “If you don’t like that, you get a McDonald’s on the way home!”

No vegan, vegetarian, gluten-free, or lactose-free variations. When the Queen was present, the menu was the menu.

For William And Harry, Christmas Dinner Came With One Exception

Prince William at King Charles III. birthday

MEGA

When it came to the youngest members of the royal family, McGrady explained that Christmas dinner followed the same rules of tradition, with only the slightest wiggle room. The young princes didn’t get to choose their own meals, but the chefs did prepare a separate turkey for the younger royals.

Advertisement

Advertisement

They then received the same traditional Sunday roast–style Christmas dinner served across the UK. The one accommodation they did get? “Ice cream,” McGrady said, because “they weren’t big mince pie eaters.”

A Christmas Kitchen That Ran Like Clockwork

Royal Family Dinner table

Canva

As for what it was like behind the scenes in the royal kitchens, McGrady claims precision was the name of the game. Every detail, from the menu to the timing to the presentation, followed a system honed over decades.

McGrady said the Christmas kitchen ran like clockwork, “business as usual.” The same recipes, the same dishes, the same portions, every year. Everything arrived ahead of time, even the perfectly ripe fruit selected for display bowls. “Nothing was allowed to go wrong,” he said. “Everything was perfectly planned and laid out.”

The Rituals And Traditions That Defined A Royal Christmas

King Charles and Prince Harry at The Funeral procession of her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II as it processes through Engine Court, Windsor Castle on its way to St Georges Chapel , her final resting place.

WPA-Pool / MEGA

McGrady also revealed that every staff member received a personal Christmas gift from the Queen and Prince Philip, a tradition that added warmth to the otherwise highly structured holiday. Early in his career, he said staff were invited to choose discounted items from a catalog, often collectible china or cutlery pieces they could add to each year. Each gift was presented personally by the Queen and Prince Philip, along with a card and a Tesco Christmas pudding, a gesture McGrady recalls lasting for many years.

Advertisement

Advertisement

The holiday table itself changed over time, too. Before the Windsor Castle fire, Christmas dinners included around 30 guests, including extended family like the Gloucesters and the Kents. But once celebrations moved to Sandringham’s smaller dining room, the list was trimmed to 16, though around 100 staff still worked behind the scenes to keep the day running flawlessly.

With his firsthand accounts of carefully curated menus, disciplined planning, and endearing traditions, McGrady paints a vivid picture of a royal Christmas steeped in ritual. From flaming puddings to military-style food delivery, the holiday season at Sandringham was a blend of ceremony, precision, and festive spirit, exactly as Queen Elizabeth preferred it.

LP Staff Writers

Writers at Lord’s Press come from a range of professional backgrounds, including history, diplomacy, heraldry, and public administration. Many publish anonymously or under initials—a practice that reflects the publication’s long-standing emphasis on discretion and editorial objectivity. While they bring expertise in European nobility, protocol, and archival research, their role is not to opine, but to document. Their focus remains on accuracy, historical integrity, and the preservation of events and individuals whose significance might otherwise go unrecorded.

Categories

Follow

    Newsletter

    Subscribe to receive your complimentary login credentials and unlock full access to all features and stories from Lord’s Press.

    As a journal of record, Lord’s Press remains freely accessible—thanks to the enduring support of our distinguished partners and patrons. Subscribing ensures uninterrupted access to our archives, special reports, and exclusive notices.

    LP is free thanks to our Sponsors

    Privacy Overview

    Privacy & Cookie Notice

    This website uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience and to help us understand how our content is accessed and used. Cookies are small text files stored in your browser that allow us to recognise your device upon return, retain your preferences, and gather anonymised usage statistics to improve site performance.

    Under EU General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), we process this data based on your consent. You will be prompted to accept or customise your cookie preferences when you first visit our site.

    You may adjust or withdraw your consent at any time via the cookie settings link in the website footer. For more information on how we handle your data, please refer to our full Privacy Policy