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  2. Israeli cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israeli_cuisine

    Fruits grown in Israel include avocados, bananas, apples, cherries, plums, lychees, nectarines, grapes, dates, strawberries, prickly pear (tzabbar), persimmon, loquat (shesek) and pomegranates, and are eaten on a regular basis. Israelis consume an average of nearly 160 kg (350 lb) of fruit per person a year.

  3. List of Israeli dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Israeli_dishes

    Merguez — a spicy sausage originating in North Africa, mainly eaten grilled in Israel. Moussaka — oven-baked layered ground-meat and eggplant casserole. Schnitzel — fried chicken breast with breadcrumb or spice-flavored flour coating. Shashlik — skewered and grilled cubes of meat. Skewered goose liver—flavored with spices.

  4. Ancient Israelite cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Israelite_cuisine

    The Israelites usually ate meat from domesticated goats and sheep. Goat’s meat was the most common. Fat-tailed sheep were the predominant variety of sheep in ancient Israel, but, as sheep were valued more than goats, they were eaten less often. The fat of the tail was considered a delicacy. [63]

  5. List of Jewish cuisine dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_cuisine_dishes

    a version of hamin popular among Spanish Jews. Baba ghanoush. The Levant (Syria, Lebanon, Middle East, Jordan) Broiled eggplant mixed with garlic, lemon, tahini, and spices. Israeli Baba Ganouj is made with mayonnaise instead of tahini and is sometimes called salat hatzilim (eggplant salad). Baklava.

  6. Shabbat meals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabbat_meals

    Shabbat meals or Shabbos meals (Hebrew: סעודות שבת, romanized: Seudot Shabbat, Seudoys Shabbos) are the three meals eaten by Shabbat -observant Jews, the first on Friday night, the second on Saturday day, and the third late on Saturday afternoon. The Hebrew word for meal is seudah, with the plural version being seudos or seudot, thus ...

  7. Hungry judge effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hungry_judge_effect

    The hungry judge effect is a term originally coined to describe a data pattern that judges' verdicts are more lenient after a meal break. Since the original study, the term has morphed to encompass a stream of research concerned with implications of hunger on economic and social behavior. It has been suggested that this may be an artifact of ...

  8. Israel’s initial response was clearly not the reaction the White House had anticipated, and it raised immediate question of why, if Israel was on board with the proposal, its leader appeared so ...

  9. Corn schnitzel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corn_schnitzel

    Israel. Created by. Israelis. Serving temperature. Warm. Main ingredients. Corn, eggs (not in vegan versions), breadcrumbs, flour, matzo meal during Pesach. Media: Corn schnitzel. Corn schnitzel is an Israeli fried corn dish and variant of Israeli schnitzel that is especially popular among vegetarians, vegans, Kashrut keepers and children.