Honey
cake recipe
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Ingredients
3 Eggs
1 1/3 cups honey
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 cup strong black coffee
2 tsps. Baking powder
3 Tbsps. Margarine, softened
1 tsp. Baking soda
4 cups flour
1 tsp cinnamon
Oven
Pre heat oven to 325f / 160c
Method
Grease and flour a 9 by
13-inch cake pan.
In a large mixer bowl, beat
eggs and honey together.
Add sugar and mix again.
Mix coffee with baking powder,
and then add with margarine to
the egg mixture.
Add baking soda, flour, and
cinnamon and beat together
well.
Pour into greased cake pan.
Bake for 55 minutes to an
hour.
Produces.
1 very tasty honey cake!
Excerpted from
Spice
and Spirit, The
Complete Kosher Jewish
Cookbook, published by
Lubavitch Women's Cookbook
Publications
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Festival summary
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The festival of Rosh Hashanah
--the name means "Head of the
Year"
It is observed for two days
beginning on Tishrei 1, the
first day of the Jewish year. It
is the anniversary of the
creation of Adam and Eve, the
first man and woman, and their
first actions toward the
realization of mankind's role in
G-d's world.
Rosh Hashanah thus emphasizes
the special relationship between
G-d and humanity: our dependence
upon G-d as our creator and
sustainer, and G-d's dependence
upon us as the ones who make His
presence known and felt in His
world. Each year on Rosh
Hashanah, "all inhabitants of
the world pass before G-d like a
flock of sheep," and it is
decreed in the heavenly court,
"who shall live, and who shall
die... who shall be
impoverished, and who shall be
enriched; who shall fall and who
shall rise." But this is also
the day we proclaim G-d King of
the Universe.
The Kabbalists teach that the
continued existence of the
universe is dependant upon the
renewal of the divine desire for
a world when we accept G-d's
kingship each year on Rosh
Hashanah.
The central observance of Rosh
Hashanah is the sounding of the
shofar, the ram's horn, which
represents the trumpet blast of
a people's coronation of their
king. The cry of the shofar is
also a call to repentance; for
Rosh Hashanah is also the
anniversary of man's first sin
and his repentance thereof, and
serves as the first of the "Ten
Days of Repentance" which
culminate in Yom Kippur, the Day
of Atonement. Another
significance of the shofar is to
recall the Binding of Isaac
which also occurred on Rosh
Hashanah, in which a ram took
Isaac's place as an offering to
G-d; we evoke Abraham's
readiness to sacrifice his son
and plead that the merit of his
deed should stand by us as we
pray for a year of life, health
and prosperity. Altogether, the
shofar is sounded 100 times in
the course of the Rosh Hashanah
service.
Additional Rosh Hashanah
observances include:
a) Eating a piece of apple
dipped in honey to symbolize our
desire for a sweet year, and
other special foods symbolic of
the new year's blessings.
b) Blessing one another with the
words Leshanah tovah tikateiv
veteichateim, "May you be
inscribed and sealed for a good
year."
c) Tashlich, a special prayer
said near a body of water (an
ocean, river, pond, etc.) in
evocation of the verse, "And You
shall cast their sins into the
depths of the sea." And as with
every major Jewish holiday after
candlelighting and prayers we
recite Kiddush and make a
blessing on the Challah.
Learn more about Rosh Hashanah
at Chabad's mini site
click here
The above content on this page
is produced by Chabad.org, and
is copyrighted by the author
and/or Chabad.org.
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