11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (2024)

Date: · Updated: Author: Sharon Rigsby

If you want good luck and prosperity in the new year, ensure your New Year’s Day menu includes traditional Southern dishes, including greens, pork, black-eyed peas, and cornbread.

11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (1)

I have rounded up these tasty and lucky recipes to give you the best chance of a happy and prosperous new year! I’ve also thrown in a festive co*cktail recipe because every new year should be celebrated!

Southern Black-Eyed Peas

Black-Eyed Peas are considered a classic New Year’s Day tradition in the South! And, according to tradition, eating Black-Eyed Peas on New Year’s Day will bring good luck and prosperity in the new year!

My healthy Southern Black-Eyed Peas recipe is also perfect for a delicious, low-calorie, nutritional bonanza paired with brown rice!

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11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (2)

Black-Eyed Pea Soup – Southern-Style

Black-Eyed Pea Soup, full of carrots, celery, onions, and collard greens, is the epitome of a lucky New Year’s Day dish. With black-eyed peas for luck and greens, which symbolize money, you can’t go wrong with this nutritious and delicious soup to welcome in the new year.

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11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (3)

Healthy Southern Collard Greens

Healthy Southern Collard Greens are made without traditional ham hocks or other pork products. This simple, straightforward method of cooking the greens enhances the mild flavor of the fresh collards and keeps them crisp and tender.

According to tradition, greens are the same color as money, and making a dish using green, leafy vegetables ensures good fortune for the coming year.

11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (4)

Easy Southern Hoppin’ John

Another New Year’s Day tradition in the South is eating Hoppin’ John for dinner. Hoppin’ John is nothing more than cooked Black-Eyed Peas served over white or brown rice, and this recipe couldn’t be easier.

Some folks also like to serve Hoppin’ John with a side of cooked turnip or collard greens and cornbread to soak up all the delicious juices.

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11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (5)

The Best Oven-Baked Baby Back Ribs

Oven-baked baby back ribs are mouthwateringly juicy and fall-off-the-bone tender. When slathered with tangy barbecue sauce, they are plain finger-lickin’ good! According to tradition, the more pork you have on New Year’s day, the more good luck you will have! And that’s good enough for me!

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Black-Eyed Pea Hummus

New Year’s Day is coming up, and we have established that you need black-eyed peas so that you will have the best chance for good luck and prosperity. How about serving this hummus as an appetizer on New Year’s Eve, and then another black-eyed pea recipe for New Year’s Day? You can never have too much good luck.

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Best Old-Fashioned Cornbread

Hot out of the oven, this Old-Fashioned Southern Buttermilk Cornbread, with its delicious corn flavor and crispy, crunchy edges, has been a family favorite for generations. And it’s a quick and easy, gluten-free recipe. Classic Southern cornbread made in a cast-iron skillet is a true Southern staple, and according to tradition, it symbolizes gold.

11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (8)

Lucky Black-Eyed Pea Salad

We have already established that eating Black-Eyed Peas on New Year’s Day brings prosperity and good luck in the year ahead. That’s why this delicious and nutritious dish is called Lucky Black-Eyed Pea Salad.

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Brown Sugar Bourbon-Glazed Ham

Nothing says New Year’s Day dinner like baked ham! Lots of it, especially this classic bourbon-glazed ham with pineapple! You and your family or guests will love this easy-baked ham recipe.

It’s complete with traditional pineapple rings and maraschino cherries. Don’t forget the more pork you have, the better your luck will be!

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Traditional Southern Cornbread

Easy traditional southern cornbread, made with buttermilk and stone-ground cornmeal, has rich corn flavor and a deliciously crunchy crust.

A true reflection of Southern goodness, this cornbread is made in a cast-iron skillet. It’s versatile, easy to prepare, and a welcome addition to any meal. Plan to serve it with your black-eyed peas and collard greens.

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Bonus: Meyer Lemon French 75

See, just reading this roundup post about lucky foods has already brought you good luck! You are lucky to find this recipe for an elegant champagne co*cktail to welcome in the New Year!

It is a celebration, after all. Not only is this co*cktail delicious, but it is a great way to use up some of your Meyer lemons.

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11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (12)

I guarantee all of these recipes taste great! The lucky part is up to you! Happy New Year!

If you are planning a New Year’s Eve celebration, check out my round-up post .

I have included my appetizer recipes here if you need more menu ideas.

⭐ ⭐ ⭐⭐⭐If you make this dish, please leave a comment and give this recipe a star rating. I would love to know how you liked it!

Thank you so much for visiting Grits and Pinecones; I hope you come back soon!

More New Year's Recipes

  • Easy Southern Black-Eyed Peas Recipe (Stovetop)
  • Easy Bacon-Wrapped Stuffed Dates with Almonds Recipe
  • Easy Baked Ricotta Cheese Dip Recipe with Tomatoes
  • Stuffed Cornish Hens Recipe with Cornbread Stuffing

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  1. 11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (17)Linger

    Sharon, you always pull together the best recipes for every season. These recipes look great and what a wonderful start for a New Year. I hope yours is wonderful.

    Reply

    • 11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (18)Sharon Rigsby

      Kristy, thank you so much! I hope you have a wonderful New Year too!
      All my best,
      Sharon

      Reply

11 Traditional Good Luck Recipes for the New Year (2024)

FAQs

What is the traditional New Years Eve food for good luck? ›

Food traditions that you can do to bring good luck next year
  • Pork. Pork is thought to bring good luck on New Year's Day. ...
  • Cabbage. ...
  • Black-Eyed Peas. ...
  • Greens. ...
  • Lentils. ...
  • Fish. ...
  • Noodles. ...
  • Grapes and other fruit.
Dec 31, 2023

What is a traditional new year's Day dish? ›

Greens, pork, and cornbread, as well as black-eyed peas, cowpeas, or beans, are some of the typical symbolic foods served on New Year's Day. When planning your dinner menu, add the Southern foods that some say bring good luck and avoid those that may do just the opposite in the new year.

What is the superstition food for new year's Day? ›

Black-eyed peas, collard greens and cornbread served on New Year's Day is a tradition that is not only popular in the South, but all over the nation. The saying, "peas for pennies, greens for dollars, and cornbread for gold," is associated with the foods, according to AllRecipes.com.

Which of the following should you eat on new year's Day for good luck? ›

Along with black-eyed peas, some cultures believe that grapes, noodles, pork, or pomegranates can be considered lucky when eaten on New Year's.

What not to cook on new year's Eve? ›

Chicken, Squab, or Anything with Wings

If it has wings, it can fly away - and that's what legend says about chicken on New Years. Eating chicken can cause your good luck to fly away, and well - we definitely don't want that. Make that Roasted Chicken later in January, just to be safe.

What not to do on new year's Day? ›

Don't Clean the House on New Year's Day - You will wash away any good luck coming your way.

What are you supposed to cook for new year's? ›

Greens. It's traditional to eat hearty greens like cabbage or kale to bring prosperity in the New Year. Traditionally, they're paired with dishes like black-eyed peas and cornbread, or alongside pork in the form of sauerkraut. We say get creative!

Why do you eat cornbread on new year's Day? ›

If there was any corn left they made cornbread. So, theses three items have come to represent hope and prosperity for the New Year. The peas represent coins, the greens - paper money and the cornbread, gold.

What not to eat on New Year's Eve dinner? ›

From chicken to lobster, consider leaving these unlucky food items off your New Year's Eve and Day menus.
  • Catfish. Catfish have no place on a New Year's menu. / ...
  • Hollow bread. You'll want to avoid hollow bread at dinner. / ...
  • Lobster. ...
  • Chicken. ...
  • Tofu. ...
  • Beef. ...
  • Broken noodles. ...
  • A Full Plate of Food.
Dec 11, 2023

Why can't you wash on New Years? ›

Another superstition, this is American folklore: don't wash clothes on New Year's Day. If you clean clothes on Jan. 1, you may wash away a member of your family in the coming year — meaning someone will die. Not to mention sending a year of good fortune down the drain.

Can I wash clothes on New Year's Eve? ›

Don't wash those clothes

According to folklore, if you wash clothes on New Year's Day, you'll be “washing for the dead” or washing a loved one away -- meaning someone in your household will die in the coming year. Get your laundry washed, dried, folded and put away by New Year's Eve.

What foods not to eat on new year's Day? ›

It's said that you shouldn't eat winged fowl (read: birds like turkey or chicken), bottom feeders (like shrimp or catfish), or any seafood that swims backward or side to side (like lobster or crab).

Can you eat pork on new year's Day? ›

Like many other cultures, the Pennsylvania Dutch believe eating pork on New Year's Day brings good luck because pigs root around with their snouts in a forward motion. After all, we want to move forward, not backward, in the new year.

Can you take a shower on new year's Day? ›

Taking a bath on New Year's is not necessary, but it is a personal choice. Different cultures and superstitions have varying beliefs about bathing on New Year's Day.

What are foods associated with new year's Eve? ›

From black-eyed peas to lentils to soba noodles, these foods and others are believed to bring good luck in the new year. Champagne, noise makers and confetti are all New Year's Eve staples. But, in some parts of the country and the world, so are black-eyed peas, lentils, grapes and pickled herring.

What is the new year's prosperity ritual? ›

The Prosperity Ritual

When you return home for the first time in the new year (perhaps after a late-night party), have a bowl of coins sitting outside your front door. Bless them for everything you want in the new year—a handful for abundance, a handful for a healthy baby, etc.

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