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Bubbie's Secrets - A Cookbook for Everyone -- Beef Brisket
Bubbie’s Secrets - A Cookbook for Everyone Traditional Beef Brisket This recipe is the authentic beef brisket and vegetables made exactly the way your Bubbie (grandmother) made it 50 years or longer ago. It is tender, easy to slice,...
2 commentsJewish Holiday Calendar 2010-2016
Jewish Holidays Calendar is handy to find all the dates of Jewish Holidays you need. Explanation how Jewish Calendar works with dates for Jewish holidays that correspond to Gregorian Calendar.
22 commentsHow to have a great Passover Seder with kids
How can pre-schoolers keep their attention during the Seder? How to make this Passover Seder a fun and enjoyable evening for kids and adults too?
8 commentsHow to Make Passover Fun for Everyone
Some people love Passover -- the matzo ball soup and brisket, the long evenings with family at the seder table, and the freshly cleaned house. Others (realists like me) have to work a little harder to get over the stress that comes with all that...
43 commentsKids Cook Monday: Matzo Ball Soup
Nothing beats a bowl of hot, steaming chicken soup filled with matzo balls for a cold winter day or a holiday meal. In my house, matzo ball soup is reserved for Passover, but plenty of people love to eat matzo balls year-round. They're super easy to...
10 commentsCreative Ways to Celebrate Passover for Adults and Kids
I'm Jewish, and I'm not at all religious. However, my favorite Jewish holiday is Passover. Maybe it's partly because I actually LIKE matzah, but it also has to do with the rituals, lessons, and yes, food that goes along with the holiday. Like most...
0 commentsVI. “Jesus is our Passover!”- Part 6
The original Passover was celebrated by the Israelites on the 14th day of their 1st month, in the very 1st year on the Hebrew calendar, requiring the sacrificial killing of a lamb per household. The Passover lamb must be without blemish, a male of the 1st year. Its valuable blood would be collected for sprinkling on every door of every house belonging to the Israelites, while its body would have to be roasted and served for the Passover dinner with accompanying unleavened bread & bitter herbs.
0 commentsEaster Traditions and Passover Celebrations
I love Easter and Pesach. The message is so uplifting and the food is amazing. Come and share the traditions involved in the celebration of freedom from slavery and sin.
1 commentPassover: Karaite Perspectives
To describe this article as a Karaite Perspective is somewhat of a misnomer. Perhaps it should be more accurately described as an opinion or a gut feeling. Something quite not right though I just can't place...
2 commentsIV. “Jesus is our Passover!”- Part 4
The English word Passover was rendered originally in Hebrew as pesach which means pretermission or omission or skip or exemption or immunity; and pesach came from another Hebrew word pasach which means to hop or to leap or to skip over or to spare. The Greek word for Passover is pascha; It is pascua in Spanish & paskua or pasko in Tagalog, the meaning of which is the shedding of blood of a sacrificial lamb unto death, in order for a household to be exempted from plague or curses induced by God.
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