Homeshuling

Homeshuling

October 2010 Archives

Boker Tov!

posted by Homeshuling

If your family is like mine, your children will be up too late tonight, and unable to fall asleep when they do finally get home from celebrating that holiday-which-shall-not-be named. But, because the pagans didn’t have the good sense to [...]

And the winner is……

posted by Homeshuling

Me! For all of your amazing and thoughtful comments. But, that’s not what you came to find out, is it? The other winner, chosen by random.org is Mary Ellen, who wrote: I was raised Catholic, and I loved Christmas. What’s [...]

Hanukkah Art Workshop with Homeshuling

posted by Homeshuling

Mahatma Ghandi once said, “Be the change you want to see in the world.” While I fall woefully short of fulfilling this mandate, I do tend to be the Jewish education I want to see in the world. In the [...]

Christmas for Jews – and no, this is not a post about Chinese Food

posted by Homeshuling

As I’ve written before, my girls are fascinated by Christmas. I don’t blame them – it’s sparkly, sweet and mysterious, and it’s practically everywhere, at least after the Halloween decorations come down. As part of an interfaith family, I used [...]

Previous Posts

April Jewish Book Carnival
I'm honored to be hosting this month's edition of the Jewish Book Carnival, a monthly event where Jewish Bloggers who blog about books can meet, read and comment on each other's posts. Jill Broderick shares two reviews of the New American Haggadah, one at Legal Legacy, and one at Rhapsody in Book

posted 6:00:02am Apr. 15, 2012 | read full post »

Surprisingly decent Passover cookies
Looking for an easy dessert for seder? Try these jelly-matzoh-thumbprint cookies, which I loved as a kid, and still think are pretty good (for Passover, that is.) 2 eggs 3/4 c. sugar 1 c. cake meal 2 T potato starch 1/2 c. shortening  (I'm all about coconut oil for my pareve baking this year.)

posted 6:13:47am Apr. 05, 2012 | read full post »

Matzoh Charlotte - my favorite Passover recipe
I thought this was an old family recipe. And it is, sort of. Our family has been serving it at seder for at least as long as the Israelites wandered in the desert. But it comes from a cookbook - the Molly Goldberg Jewish cookbook -  a gem worth buying just for the commentaries on the recipes ("By

posted 6:03:16am Apr. 04, 2012 | read full post »

Teaching the Four Questions to young children
One of the greatest privileges of being a kindergarten teacher in a Jewish day school is having the opportunity to teach children to recite the four questions. Unlike almost anything else I teach them about Jewish ritual, this is "real work." The candles will get blessed, kiddush will be recited, an

posted 7:36:03am Apr. 01, 2012 | read full post »

Guess what's Kosher for Passover (this will change your life.)
I'm not exaggerating. The bane of my Passover existence has been pareve baking. I cook a lot more meat during the holiday than I do the rest of the year, which means a lot more pareve desserts. Which has, up until now, usually meant margarine made from disgusting ingredients such as cottonseed oi

posted 5:02:27pm Mar. 22, 2012 | read full post »


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