LOVE your tagline, BTW.
I have so much King of the Hill love. Yours kills me too. I was just reading your LJ posts about that book.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
LOVE your tagline, BTW.
I have so much King of the Hill love. Yours kills me too. I was just reading your LJ posts about that book.
It's a prayer with visual aids, I mean.
She shouldn't have any leavened bread if it's about Passover. Tell her our peeps had no time to let the bread rise, so no pizza, no rolls, nothing but matzo.
Have her make some matzo ball soup, that's good, substantial, yummylicious, and traditional.
I think it would be better to email Nilly, as I'm sure a bonafide email from Israel would convince your mom better than a lame lapsed jew like me.
Koz, can you pop your butt on IM?
I"m watching the last NYPD Blue. Winnie Cooper should not have a sister who's a hooker. I don't care if it is pretend.
Allyson, I don't think she thinks so. She's just a bit clueless on the matter.
I don't think she's leading the meal. If I were, I'd totally do that.
Beyond Pizza, at least one of the pizzas would probably have meat on it. Possibly pig-flesh of some sort. That was really the moment when I got onboard with "I must fix this."
I was just reading your LJ posts about that book.
I am QUEEN of the Cannibals!
"I must fix this."
That's kind of you. Is it a Passover seder?
I am QUEEN of the Cannibals!
Hee!
Oooh! Homer is changing his name to Max Power right now on my TV.
"The name....you want to touch / but you mustn't touch...."
The book she's working from only talks about the symbolic foods (which do not a dinner make), so that's the extent of the official dinner plan, unless I can find a credible enough source to cite (pretty much anyone not -me) for other "traditional" stuff.
If you look at the Haggadah (the book that has the whole seder in it -- "seder" means "order," so what the Haggadah has is the specific order for doing things at the seder), one of the things is "Festive Meal," (in Hebrew, "Shulchan Orech,"), about halfway or 2/3 of the way through. Eat then. Generally, in Ashkenazic families, that'll be matzoh ball soup and/or gefilte fish follwed by some kind of meat dish with several potato-y sides, but there's nothing holding anyone to that.