Many Americans eat Irish Stew and Corned Beef and cabbage on St. Patrick's Day. Although, corned Beef is not an Irish dish. A more traditional meal would be ham and cabbage or bacon and cabbage.
Mutton and potatoes or turnips. Usually as a stew.
Corned beef and cabbage is an American construct that began in the 1800s.
In the United States during the Irish potato famine influx, Irish immigrants lived near Jewish communities. Jewish butchers had adopted a preservation process of "corning" or packing in salt. The process is actually Anglican and predates the New World application of the word corn to the plant we now know (research Alton Brown cooking show where he makes his own corned beef). Preserved meats were cheaper than fresh cuts of mutton, and poor Irish immigrants bought what they could. Other neighborhoods began to associate the cheap cut of tough brisket with the Irish.
enjoy your day as it was you luckiest day ever or wear green end of world 2012
On saint patricks day we where green and have parades and the irish eat corn beef.
It is writen "St. Patricks Day" maybe when you write it right I'll answer, idiot.
Eat Biscuits
Eat good food
Saint Andrew's Day is on the 30th of November.
The Romans did not eat anything in particular on Valentine's Day because they didn't celebrate Valentine's Day.
They don't celebrate Christmas
If Philip has a feast day, that means he has died and in Heaven where there is no need to eat.
Mutton
all they do is give god thanks and eat turkey
Many people do, especially if they celebrate the traditional "Day of the Death".
Israel is a country so doesn't eat anything. The Israeli population are Jewish and do not celebrate Christmas so they will eat the same food as any other day.