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We recline at the Seder table because in ancient times, a person who reclined at a meal was a free person, while slaves and servants stood. We eat only roasted meat because that is how the Pesach/Passover lamb is prepared during sacrifice in the Temple at Jerusalem. Some of these answers are stated over the course of the Seder.
Yes, a Seder is a meal, which means everybody gets a plate of food. But the Seder plate is a specific one just for Passover. It has special spots for each of the six foods listed above, plus some ...
The use of an egg in the seder is first attested in the 16th-century Shulchan Aruch commentary of Rabbi Moses Isserles, and it is not known when the custom began. [5] It is not used during the formal part of the seder. Some people eat a regular hard-boiled egg dipped in salt water or vinegar as part of the first course of the meal, or as an ...
The Talmud states that it is forbidden to have any other food after the afikoman, so that the taste of the matzo that was eaten after the meal remains in the participants' mouths. [5] Since the destruction of the Temple and the discontinuation of the Korban Pesach, Jews eat a piece of matzo now known as afikomen to finish the Passover Seder ...
Three matzot are stacked on the seder table; at this stage, the middle matzah of the three is broken in half. [26] According to the custom of the Vilna Gaon and others, only two matzot are used, and the top one is broken. [27] The larger piece is hidden, to be used later as the afikoman, the "dessert" after the meal. The smaller piece is ...
Passover Seder plate. Categories (with imaged examples in brackets): 1. Zeroa (shankbone) 2. Beitza (roasted hard-boiled egg) 3. Maror/Chazeret (horseradish) 4. Maror/Chazeret (onion) 5. Charoset 6. Karpas (parsley) Maror is one of the foods placed on the Passover Seder Plate and there is a rabbinical requirement to eat maror at the Seder.
Seder is a transliteration of the Hebrew סדר, which means 'order' or 'procedure'. The name also expresses the conduct of the meal, all the dishes, the blessings, the prayers, the stories and the songs, written in the Haggadah, a book that determines the order of Passover and tells the story of the Exodus from Egypt.
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