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Passover Banana Chocolate Chip Cake!!!!!
woooooo! It is fluffy and moist and delicious!!!
#food#delicious#kosher#kosher for passover#passover#kosher for pesach#pesach#kosher l'pesach#l"pesach#gebrochts#banana#chocolate#chocolate chip#cake#passover cake#passover desserts
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Can't let your matzah get wet or it will become unkosher. Like the gremlins past midnight
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Gonna get a little personal here, but....
I grew up Chabad. I realized that I wasn't straight when I was 13, and my parents found out and forbid me from talking to my friends. For a whole year I was cut off from the friends I had made who had helped me come to terms with my identity. Some of these friends I've never spoken to again, because I didn't have their numbers memorized and it's been so long.
But that was years ago.
My parents have come around for the most part. I'm now in my twenties. I currently identify as a transgender man and bisexual. I wear tzizit and a Kippah, and I'm observant. These two aren't in conflict for me. I keep strict kosher and Shabbat (although I've eaten a non-Chalav Yisrael chocolate and I hated it, American chocolate is disgusting, and I eat gebrochts on Pesach). I'm one of the only "frum" students at my university, and I'm also the president of the LGBTQ organization there. In April, Im Yirtze Hashem I'm going to my first doctor's appointment that'll screen me for and medical issues before I start taking testosterone.
Last Summer, I had the privilege of attending NYC Pride with the LGBTQ Jewish organizations that were part of the parade. We called it Jew York Pride. I made so many new friends who were queer and frum just like me. People who live in the heart of Crown Heights, who go to Yeshiva and seminary, who are gay and bisexual and lesbian and trans and nonbinary and asexual. I had no idea there were so many LGBTQ people within Chabad. Some still identify as Chabad, others don't, but lots are still observant.
There are Orthodox communities that are accepting. On Chanukah I visited a shul that was Orthodox and LGBTQ accepting. We made menorahs while Chaddische music played and there were all kinds of people there. Unfortunately the shul is too far from where I currently live to be walking distance, but hopefully I'll move closer in the next few years.
It's hard. It's not easy. But it's possible, and you have a community of people just like you all around the world.
There are organizations and support groups that specifically cater to Orthodox and observant LGBTQ Jews (this isn't a thorough list of all LGBTQ Jewish organizations, just a few I selected that are specifically for LGBTQ observant Jews):
North America:
Eshel
JQY
Kesher Families
Israel:
Havruta
Shoval
Online Support Network:
LGBTQ Chabad
This is just a very basic list, and if you're not from North America or Israel there are other organizations around the world, these are just a few I selected.
If you ever want to talk to me, please don't hesitate to reach out. You are not alone- you are among so so many people like you.
It’s odd. I grew up chabad but i’m gay. I don’t know what to do as i’m only 15, i’ve always been supportive of lgbtq but now i’m stuck (for the past 4 years) I want to keep judaism as much as possible but chabad or other orthodox movements aren’t accepting and i’m worried where i’ll find a community or if i’ll stay observant…i’m also kinda resentful of gender roles being pushed upon me ss i was always kind of feminine
There are orthodox communities who are more open than most people would think. Modern orthodox or open orthodox are for sure more accepting, and certainly in Israel. Chabad I'm not so sure, it really depends on the chabad couple. But there ARE orthodox communities who are more accepting. The good news is that even if it takes you some time to find a community you feel that you fit in, being gay does not prevent you from being observant or fulfilling any mitzvot. You can do everything anyone else does, even fulfilling the mitzvah of having children (adoption counts, and it's a man's mitzvah to fulfill, IF that's something you would want to do) and you have no obligation to enact gender roles in your home. That's a personal choice. So you don't have to choose between being gay or being observant.
There are also support networks of gay frum/orthodox Jews. Multiple actually, at least in the New York and LA area (though I'm sure any orthodox community would have one). They do shabbat meals and torah study together. Here is a link to an article about them.
You are not alone. For all of history there have been gay orthodox jews, whether they were open about it or not. People are becoming more accepting every day. Never for a second do I want you to feel ashamed or like you're defective or that anything is wrong with you just because your community isn't open. I'm also in a chabad community and attracted to women, though this doesn't get brought up or addressed in conversation much except by friends I trust, so I haven't faced any sort of discrimination in my community.
If you want to keep in touch, feel free to message me privately.
#jumblr#lgbt jews#queer jews#gay jews#growing up chabad#personal#goyim don't touch#if jew know jew know#queer
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Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls.
You can do this. Yes.
First the soup: buy chicken necks, backs, wings. Don’t bother boiling anything with a lot of meat on it—it’s the bones and skin make the soup. If you can only get a chicken in 8 parts, pull most of the meat off first and fridge it for later, and then boil the carcass.
Anway, start in cold water, add bones, skin and salt. Simmer very slowly, a really long time. For me, easiest thing is to stick it in a slow oven abut 275 degrees for anywhere from 1 to 6 hours while I do other things around the house.
Water should just barely be bubbling–hardly moving even, but warm enough not to be a breeding ground for icky. It’s important that everything be submerged–drop a heat proof dish into the broth on top of the bones to keep everything under water.
If you have time to make this ahead, chill it, then skim off most of the cold fat, then reheat.
In another pan, saute some veggies and then throw them in the soup near the end. Long cook does not improve them much. Carrots, celery, onions, parsnip are traditional, but use what you like, or what you have, anyway. Deglaze the pan with some water and pour that in the soup as well for color and depth of flavor.
Also, if you want more meat in your soup, cut up the meat you stripped from the bones in step 1, and then poach it lightly in the broth for about 20 minutes near the end.
Near the end, taste and adjust the salt, add pepper, thyme, sage, parsley etc. to taste. Or not.
MEANWHILE (and this is the important part) make matzo balls: in a small bowl beat 2 eggs with 2 TBS oil until really well blended.
Then add 1 tsp salt and 2 TBS water (You can use 1/2 eggshell to measure a tablespoon.) Beat it all smooth before adding in ½ cup matzo meal.
Stir really well, cover, let it sit AT LEAST 15 minutes.
Get a large pot full of salted water boiling and make sure you know where the lid is–you’ll need it. When the 15 minutes are done, start rolling the matzo mixture into walnut sized balls. I use a small cookie scoop to measure them out, and then get my hands wet and hand roll them until they are smooth. Then drop them into the boiling water, [note–drop each one in as you roll it and move quickly so they all hit the water within a short time–don’t try to roll them all out first and then put them in–the early ones will dry out too much] and reduce heat to very low simmer, and put the lid on tight and don’t even think about lifting it to peek for about 20 minutes. IMPORTANT: The water must be boiling before you put them in, and it must not be allowed to get above a simmer after they go in, so use your ears to keep track of what’s going on. You are poaching an egg gently, not boiling pasta.The lid is important because a matzo ball is partly a steamed dumpling.
When they are done, serve them floating in your soup. (See picture 1.)
If this is your first time doing this, don’t be surprised if you get them too heavy or too loose–the only way to learn the exact measurements is to make a few batches, and pretty soon you’ll know when the mixture “feels right” during the rolling stage. If it’s too dense, it needs a little more water or they come out like lead. If it’s too wet (or the water isn’t boiling) they will fall apart and you’ll get mush. So add some more meal. If you make them too grandiose in size, it’s hard to get them to cook all the way through and you get dry bits in the middle. If the water is boiling too hard, the egg cooks hard before the matzo meal can fluff up, and you get golf balls. (Sounds like I’ve made all of the above mistakes, right?)
Practice helps.
Go practice.
#matzo balls#matzah balls#soup#chicken soup#passover#recipe#kosher for pesach#kosher for passover#kosher#jewish cuisine#jewish#comfort food#comfort foods#seder#passover recipes#recipes#yum#yummy#delicious#gebrochts
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Kosher Food Recipes in Dubai - How to Make a Mean Matzo Ball Soup
It is believed that the Matzo Ball soup is the Holy Grail of kosher food in Dubai- אוכל כשר בדובאי. This soup, also known as the Matzo Ball, or knaidel or kneidlach, has been in use for centuries. It all started with Moses taking people of the Jews to the desert. A boy, who was wandering with a handful of matzo in his hands, discovered a hot spring. He realized that simply dipping the matzo in water was not going to be very beneficial therefore he broke the matzo with his hands and then shaped it into an oval. He managed to join it, maybe he was carrying chickens with him at the moment, perhaps through divine help and after attempting his creation, he came across an excellent alternative to eating matzo that was flat. The practice developed into the matzo ball soup we are familiar with and love to this day. (Maybe). Everybody knows what matzo ball soup is, it's a child-friendly Kosher food, and people who are not Jewish often like it. However, there are numerous distinct characteristics that differentiate the best matzo ball soups from the bad. If you're looking to wow your friends this Passover or, even if you're trying to alter the pace on Sabbath, make sure you follow these steps.
1. In order to really enjoy the fresh taste, it is necessary to prepare the chicken. Clean a turkey neck that is cut into pieces. Add 1 pound of wings of chicken. Put them into the large soup pot and then fill it up with water till the chicken is completely submerged at the bottom, with two inches of water to the top.
2. Bring to a simmering boil. Scrape off any froth that has accumulated on the surface of the.
3. The next step is to add the vegetables. Choose 3-4 carrots, three zucchinis, three celery sticks, two small onions, 2 small parsley roots, and an optional pumpkin (which is a must, because pumpkin is exceptionally healthy for your family and you) along with fresh parsley, and some spices and poultry soup mix. Bring the vegetables to the point of boiling.
4. Reduce the heat until it is at a simmer. Allow it to simmer for 2 hours and then let the steam out. If the level of waterfalls below the vegetables, simply add more.
5. In this time you are able to prepare matzo balls, which are considered holy. You will need 4 egg whites. 4 teaspoons. of water, 4 tsp. of oil, 1 teaspoon. salt of oil, of salt, tsp. pepper, 1 cup matzo meal, optional 2 tsp. chopped parsley. In a separate bowl, you can take the yolks of eggs, and then beat them up with some water.
6. Mix the ingredients from each bowl until they form a soft dough. Keep it covered and chilled for at least one hour.
7. Strain the soup once two hours have gone.
8. Bring the soup you have strained to the point of boiling. Then, take the chilled matzo ball dough and stir it around. Wet your hands and begin rolling small matzo balls. Keep in mind matzo balls expand by about a third of their size before they are cooked, therefore, make your decision in accordance with the size of the matzo balls. Include them in the soup, and ensure they are floating because you don't want them sticking at the top.
9. Cover the pot and allow it to simmer, including the vegetables that have been strained, for about an hour.
It's that simple! If you follow this dish, you'll certainly be able to impress anyone in the audience, Jew or Gentile. Keep in mind this: Hasidic Jews follow gebrocht kosher Kashrut and are not a fan of matzo meal in water thus another option is using potato starch.
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barren-and-trivial-words
this year for pesach challenge yourself to not eat gebrochts
i just spent what felt like an hour researching the one person in my family tree i believe to be Jewish (given ancestry test results said someone was, lmao) in order to prove that even if he was ashekenazi he wasn’t hasidic or in the realm of hasidic minhag because he was from the balkans
just to justify me eating gebrochts
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Yes, I am aware that it is normal, however, there are some Jews that do not do it. It's called Gebrochts, it's an actual custom some Jews have. My family does not have matzah brei on Pesach because that would be wetting the matzah. Matzah brei is not essential for Pesach.
do you eat kitniyot on pesach?
I wish!
Because my parents are Baalei Tshuvah, they really just followed the traditions of the various Rabbis and families that took them in. And because my family is Chabad, there's no kitniyot.
My parents were utterly heartbroken when they found out that I don't peel my fruit and vegetables for Pesach, they don't even know that I wet my matzah, so honestly I don't think I'm ready to tackle kitniyot haha (although it would make my life as a vegetarian on Pesach sooo much easier).
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In the Shainfeld tradition of hospitality, enjoy top-notch hospitality during the holiday, Kosher gourmet food for Passover (no gebrocht and no kitniot), full board, festive seder night, performances by top Jewish singer, family activities and the opportunity for fascinating tours in Greece.
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In the Shainfeld tradition of hospitality, enjoy top-notch hospitality during the holiday, Kosher gourmet food for Passover (no gebrocht and no kitniot), full board, festive seder night, performances by top Jewish singer, family activities and the opportunity for fascinating tours in Greece.
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OP, the big words to ask your friends about are "gebrochts" and "kitniyot." If he cares about both of those, this is probably above your paygrade. If he only cares about kitniyot, ask him to spell out exactly what counts, because it's not consistent. If he cares about gebrochts and not kitniyot, please put us in touch if he's amenable, because I am curious what the heck kind of community is that kind of stringent.
Regardless of personal customs, baked potatoes are going to be safe. If he cares about kosher cheese, make finding it his problem, but if you're in a heavily Jewish area.
Salad on its own is going to be safe. The things to watch out for for Pesach are seeds, nuts, and dressings. For kashrut in general, it's that leafy greens are adequately washed, and also dressings (if not homemade).
Latkes are also generally kosher for Pesach as long as you don't add a leavening agent. This applies to cheese latkes too -the Jamie Geller recipe's pretty solid.
My go-to Pesach dessert is meringue cups filled with lemon curd. It's super easy as long as you've got a mixer and an oven. The tl;dr: find a meringue recipe you like (egg whites, sugar, vanilla), beat the egg whites until stiff, slowly add the sugar and vanilla and keep beating. Cut the corner off a ziploc bag, and then pipe into cup shapes on a cookie sheet or in a muffin tin (use liners if you go this route). Bake according to your preferred recipe's directions.
For the lemon curd, take the egg yolks, some sugar, and the juice and zest of couple lemons (quantity depends on how many eggs) and heat on low while stirring in a double boiler (bowl in pot works fine) until it thickens. Then fold in some butter (well, I use margarine so it's pareve).
Once the curd's cool and the cups are set, just scoop it in as close as possible to serving. Garnish with a mint leaf if you want to be ~fancy.~
anyone have recipe recommendations for a dinner party during passover my friend is trying to host? i'm not jewish but he's asked me to help cook and i'm not super familiar with the rules of what's kosher for passover. we're trying to come up with the menu together, so far we've determined that (because we have vegetarians in the crew) it's gonna be a dairy night, plus he's gluten intolerant so not wheat either (though that might be chametz?? again not clear on this). we found a cheesecake recipe but that's the only thing
#not adding links because tumblr eats them in reblogs#and trying to keep my own recipe notes short to avoid dash-spam
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Seinen links Hand so in Oberhausen gebrocht worden gegen die AltEhern.
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PASSOVER 2018 V.I.P PESACH VACATIONS 2018 OLAM HOLIDAYS from Pessah 2018 Olam Holidays on Vimeo.
A Wonderful Pesach 2018 at The Best Negresco Spa **** Salou Costa Dorada Spain The Perfect Glatt Kosher Passover Vacation 5778 in Europe #pesach2018 #passover2018 #olamholidays #edenprestige olamholidays.com/en/pesach-2018/ pesach2018.com UK +44 (0) 203 318 2194 USA +1 (0) 646 975 94 58 Exceptional Program! Dream Destination! Sea View ! Direct flights from major European capitals to Barcelona Aiport. The Warmest Passover 2018 in Europe . Enjoy the unique opportunity to celebrate Passover holiday in the idyllic setting of a beautiful destination. Accommodations: Full board- 3 meals a day, Tea room, wine & drink bar and other treats throughout the entire day. The vacation package includes: 10 nights, 13 Nissan-23 Nissan, March 29 -April 8, 2018. Arrive like a guest and leave like family ! « Glatt Kosher LeMehadrin » No kitniot,No Gebrocht Shmura Matza. Leave us to take care of you! Join Olam Holidays with your family to enjoy a warm and festive holiday! Let Kosher Pesach 2018 be a relaxing experience for you and your loved ones in addition to a trip you will all remember.
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Passover Gnocchi
2 eggs
1 TBs oil
¼ cup chicken stock
1/2 cup passover cake meal
¼ cup potato starch
1/2 cup mashed potatoes
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp sugar
½ tsp baking powder
Mix the wet stuff until blended smooth. Add the dry ingredients together, then add to the wet and mix until smooth, adding extra soup or water if needed to get to pudding-like consistency.
Let sit 15 minutes, then check to see how firm it is—add more liquid/potatoes if necessary.
If the batter is thin like pancake batter, you will get long thin squiggles of spaetzl (like funnel cake strands). If the batter is thick like pudding, you get gnocchi-like little dumplings. If it is thick like hummus, you get something close to matzo balls.
Scoop up a spoonful and drop into lightly salted boiling water. Simmer three minutes and remove from water with slotted spoon. Taste test and adjust batter if needed (salt? Sugar? Too thick? Too thin?)
When you have it the way you like it, drop spoonfuls into the water and simmer until they all float (about three minutes). Do not crowd the pot. Remove from the water with slotted spoon and then do the next batch.
Set the first batch into a pot of warm sauce while doing the second and third batches.
Tomato sauce is fine, but brisket gravy also works, or just a whole lot of sauteed mushrooms & onions & wine.
A milchig version could easily be done with water or milk instead of the chicken soup, and could go with marinara, or plain butter, or cheese, or pesto, or alfredo sauce—basically anything that would be good on pasta. Anything that would be good on pirogies would also work: try sauteed onions and sour cream with black pepper.
Rating: almost wouldn't know it's kosher l'pesach. A year after year family favorite for this holiday especially with the kids. Fluffy and light in the mouth, but sits a little heavy in the stomach: filling, and a few dumplings are a meal.
#gebrochts#passover#kosher#kosher for passover#passover recipe#passover recipes#kosher food#kosher l'pesach
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Yeah, well guess who's getting up at the crack of dawn to say slichot for a month?
Not this bitch
LMAO bitch can't eat kitniyot!
#Honestly fine with not eating kitniyot#I still eat gebrochts so it's all good#Jewish stuff#my queue is almost empty
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A Wonderful Pesach 2018 at The Best Negresco Spa **** Salou Costa Dorada Spain
The Perfect Glatt Kosher Passover Vacation 5778 in Europe #pesach2018 #passover2018 #OLAMHOLIDAYS
http://olamholidays.com/
France +33 (0) 1 86 96 36 75 Israel +972 (0) 7 47 57 15 53 UK +44 (0) 203 318 2194 USA +1 (0) 646 975 94 58
Exceptional Program! Dream Destination! Sea View !
Direct flights from major European capitals to Barcelona Aiport.
The Warmest Passover 2018 in Europe .
Enjoy the unique opportunity to celebrate Passover holiday in the idyllic setting of a beautiful destination.
Accommodations: Full board- 3 meals a day, Tea room, wine & drink bar and other treats throughout the entire day. The vacation package includes: 10 nights, 13 Nissan-23 Nissan, March 29 -April 8, 2018.
Arrive like a guest and leave like family !
« Glatt Kosher LeMehadrin » No kitniot,No Gebrocht Shmura Matza.
Leave us to take care of you!
Join Olam Holidays with your family to enjoy a warm and festive holiday!
Let Kosher Pesach 2018 be a relaxing experience for you and your loved ones in addition to a trip you will all remember.
''Because only the BEST is good enough for you!"
http://olamholidays.com/
#PESACH HOTELS#PASSOVER RESORTS#PASSOVER HOTELS#PESACH IN SPAIN#PASSOVER IN SPAIN#PESACH PROGRAMS#OLAM HOLIDAYS#EDEN PRESTIGE#OLAMHOLIDAYS
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Pesach Strategies for Eating Healthy & Shopping Smart
Eating Healthy on Pesach - Shopping & cooking tips to prevent weight gain and shrinking your wallet (too much) this Pesach
Pesach (Passover), especially for those of us who do not eat kitniyot (certain legumes, grains, and vegetables) and/or gebrochts, often find the holiday to be onerously heavy on the matzah and potatoes. Faced with what’s perceived as “the possibility of near starvation” for a week, diets become laden with all types of matzah and potato recipes, products, and derivatives. And because all our food…
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#Carbohydrates#Chometz#Cooking for Pesach#Food#Gebrochts#Health#Israel#Kitniyot#Matzah#Passover#Pesach#Pesach shopping#Quinoa#Weight gain
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