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  2. List of Jewish cuisine dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_cuisine_dishes

    Yapchik is a potato-based Ashkenazi Jewish meat dish similar to both cholent and kugel, and of Hungarian Jewish and Polish Jewish origin. It is considered a comfort food, and yapchik has increased in popularity over the past decade, especially among members of the Orthodox Jewish community in North America.

  3. Afikoman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afikoman

    Like the eating of the matzo earlier in the Seder, the afikoman is eaten while reclining to the left (in some Orthodox Jewish circles, women and girls do not lean). [4] According to Jewish law, the afikoman must be consumed before midnight, just as the Korban Pesach was eaten before midnight during the days of the Temple in Jerusalem. [10]

  4. Break fast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Break_fast

    Orthodox Jews generally do not eat meat or drink wine at the break-fast after Tisha B'Av because the burning of the Temple on the 9th of Av is said to have continued until noon on the 10th of Av. [11] Even when the 9th of Av falls on Shabbat and Tisha B'Av is observed on the 10th, wine and meat are customarily still not consumed at the break ...

  5. Shabbat meals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shabbat_meals

    The Saturday morning meal traditionally begins with kiddush and Hamotzi on two challot.. It is customary to eat hot foods at this meal. During and after the Second Temple period, the Sadducees, who rejected the Oral Torah, did not eat heated food on Shabbat (as heated food appears to be prohibited in the written section of the Torah).

  6. Milk and meat in Jewish law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milk_and_meat_in_Jewish_law

    The mixture of meat and dairy (Hebrew: בשר בחלב, romanized: basar bechalav, lit. 'meat in milk') is forbidden according to Jewish law.This dietary law, basic to kashrut, is based on two verses in the Book of Exodus, which forbid "boiling a (goat) kid in its mother's milk" [1] and a third repetition of this prohibition in Deuteronomy.

  7. Orthodox Judaism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthodox_Judaism

    Orthodox Judaism is a collective term for the traditionalist branches of contemporary Judaism. Theologically , it is chiefly defined by regarding the Torah , both Written and Oral , as literally revealed by God on Mount Sinai and faithfully transmitted ever since.

  8. Kosher animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosher_animals

    If a bird kills other animals to get its food, eats meat, or is a dangerous bird, then is not kosher, a predatory bird is unfit to eat, raptors like the eagles, hawks, owls and other hunting birds are not kosher, vultures and other carrion-eating birds are not kosher either.

  9. Seudah shlishit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seudah_Shlishit

    Jews are obligated to eat three meals on Shabbat according to the Talmud, and the seudah shlishit/shaleshudes is that third meal, eaten before the Sabbath ends at sundown. [1] The practice of eating three meals is homiletically attached to Ex. 16:25, in which the word for day, hayom , appears three times with reference to the manna that fell in ...