It looks like the question of the Cold Pool of Great Joy has been solved this morning - France will be the lucky recipients of a White Christmas. It's a shame, but it's within the envelope of predictions. GEFS was as high as 55% a couple of days ago wrt Christmas snow here, but now it's zero. I don't expect that to change.
So, what happens next? ECM-46 is still rock-solid on a prolonged colder than average spell, peaking over the New Year week but lingering well beyond - indeed, there's blue throughout down here, and even on week 4 - the least cold of the weeks - there's blue shading over southern and western parts.
https://charts.ecmwf.int/products/extended-anomaly-2t?base_time=202512210000&projection=opencharts_europe&valid_time=202601050000
Note that there are a few options with the cold - it could be the mean of a -9 and +3 anomaly, say, or it could be the mean of a -4 to -2 anomaly - we can't see that detail, annoyingly.
It does look like there'll be a relatively benign spell once the easterly waft clears away, with the potential (just potential) for some really cold temperatures, especially "up north", should skies stay clear under the ridge.
After that is when it gets interesting, which tallies with that New Year week forecast from the ECM-46. It's not very exciting down here to be frank, but if I were further north I'd be keeping a keen eye on developments, as the potential is there for a snowy spell... and this time it wouldn't go over France, either.