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Rosh Hashanah marks the beginning of the Jewish New Year (also known as the Day of Judgment), and with it comes all sorts of religious traditions, including eating apples dipped in honey.
Apples and honey were basically made for each other ... breaking down a bushel of apples into a relatively small amount of dip, it’s the perfect recipe to lean on when you can’t seem to ...
Among the various symbolic actions that observant Jews complete during Rosh Hashanah is eating apples dipped in honey. This is a tasty treat anytime, but why is it significant on this autumn holiday?
Apples and honey symbolize the Rosh Hashanah holiday in a meaningful way. Traditionally, plates are offered around for the ceremonial dip to symbolize the sweetness of the new year. As ingredients, ...
An item in The Jewish Chronicle of London, dated September 26, 1902, specifically detailed “the loading on a ship of a Sefer Torah and a shofar, in addition to several large barrels of apples ...
Rabbi Ben Zion Mutzafi, a leading Sephardic rabbi, told a student not to eat the traditional apple dipped in honey on Rosh Hashanah (the Jewish New Year), Kikar Hashabbat reported. On Wednesday ...
“Gobby,” the pre-school friendly version of Spider-Man baddy the Green Goblin, steals the neighborhood’s bees, creating a wrinkle for a honey-centric ... and dipping an apple for a ...