"The name....you want to touch / but you mustn't touch...."
"I'm Max Power."
"Ooh, nice name."
"Thanks, I got it off a hair dryer."
River ,'Safe'
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.
"The name....you want to touch / but you mustn't touch...."
"I'm Max Power."
"Ooh, nice name."
"Thanks, I got it off a hair dryer."
(Oh, and the Haggadah used by most families I know is the one made by Maxwell House, which has everything in both Hebrew and English and is about $3, or free if you buy enough coffee, I think.)
Allyson, that is the intent.
I have no control over the actual serving of the meal. I suspect that there will be a good bit of "what this means to us as Christians"-ing. I only have influence over food.
I think, what it means to Christians is that it was Jesus' last meal.
Seder plate:
Bone from the roasted leg of lamb: Symbolizes the lambs sacrificed to smear blood on our doors so the Angel would "pass over" us.
Matzo is the unleavened bread. When running for our lives from Egypt, we had no time for the bread to rise. Had to haul ass because the pharoah was running to catch us.
Bitter herbs, symbolozing how bitter we were about the whole slavery thing.
Haroses, which is sort of an apple/nut/cinnamon chutney. It symbolizes the mortor used to make the pyramids while we were slaves.
Parsley , thanks to god for the green earth.
Water with salt to dip the herbs and parsley. I've been told this is about the tears shed in slavery, and about the red sea parting, but at any rate, eating it is gross.
Since they're learning about Judaism, about Jesus' faith, The kids should call the questions, the answers explain Passover, the seder plate, and then dinner should be not pizza. They could have latkes with sour cream or apple sauce, which are really good, easy to make, and a traditional food. I mean, it's a french fry patty.
I'm sorry if I sound impatient. I get weirdly sensitive that people don't know this stuff, and yet, I know tons about christianity. It's a minority reminder.
TAR: I am sooo glad that Rob/Amber didn't win that $20,000! Which, btw, shocked the heck out of me--the prize, I mean, not that they came in third place. Loved that the girls who were helping the mother/son team came in first. Bye bye, country boys, we'll miss your accents !
TAR: I must say that I am glad that this time around they picked teams that didn't irritate me as soon as they left the starting line. I also was very please that multiple people on this episide at at least a smattering if not actual fluency in Spanish. And hey -- weren't Gretchen & Meredith excellent with the llamas ?
I was surprised about the prize money too which made me extremely happy that Rob/Amber didn't come in first. Wonder if that was a special first place in the first leg prize or if they'll all win money for coming in first? The bonus is that it makes the attempt to come in first in each leg THAT much more meaningful.
TAR: The only team that really bugged me were the ones I figured might-- the on-again/off-again dating couple with the woman who was choking on her basket. I thought that their interactions might get a bit strained at the first sign of stress in the race, and I was right.
TAR: Theolder couple bugged me, the whining and wheezing. Didn't they realize there was going to be running and stuff?
Neither mine nor the ones in the store have the word 'alkali' or 'dutch' on the packaging. And I was told it would say.
ita, what does it say under ingredients?
Allyson, in Evansville, it is not only minority, but most of these kids, if they don't leave the city, are unlikely to encounter any Jewish person face-to-face.
And I have now had what imput I will be having. It aggrivates me that she didn't...I don't know, google? anywhere in this process. So the best I've achieved is kosher pizza (found a recipe).
t sigh
Thanks, though