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March 18, 2013 3:30 am at 3:30 am #608653WIYMember
Post your favorite store bought kosher l’Pesach noshes and cakes. Also post whether it is gebrochts or dairy.
Thanks
March 18, 2013 3:48 am at 3:48 am #939061popa_bar_abbaParticipantmatza. Not dairy, but can become gebrochts
March 18, 2013 4:32 am at 4:32 am #939062sharpMemberSchmerling’s Chocolate!! Dairy
March 18, 2013 4:45 am at 4:45 am #939063rebdonielMemberI think Oberlander’s rainbow cake and sandwich cookies with chocolate/jam are to die for. Because the cookies are made with nut flour, I’d even eat them during the year and I sometimes do.
I enjoy macaroons, especially chocolate chip macaroons, dipped in chocolate. I have them during the year sometimes, also.
For nosh, I like frying plantains and different exotic root vegetables. It is also really nice to take tapioca flour and make popovers with eggs, pepper, salt, cheese and herbs and butter with them (you make it like a pate choux).
I’ve seen Gefen tapioca flour. These popovers are apparently really popular in Brazil, where they call them pan de quecao.
Another idea is crudites with homemade mayonnaise (someone posted something about that not long ago) that is basically a base for making any kind of dip (olive, pepper, dill, baba, etc.)
March 18, 2013 6:33 am at 6:33 am #939064☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantMatza. Not gebrochts, but can become dairy.
March 18, 2013 7:36 am at 7:36 am #939065popa_bar_abbaParticipantwhy is everyone sleeping when I’m awake?
March 18, 2013 7:49 am at 7:49 am #939066takahmamashParticipantPesach “cake” and “cookies” taste good until about an hour after havadala on the last night.
March 18, 2013 10:34 am at 10:34 am #939067Torah613TorahParticipantWIY: LOL one of my favorite books ever!
Everything my mother makes, I personally don’t suffer at all on Pesach from chometz cravings.
March 18, 2013 11:48 am at 11:48 am #939068interjectionParticipantstrausses chocolate brownie mix with the walnuts. its gebrokts.
March 18, 2013 1:00 pm at 1:00 pm #939069MorahRachMemberCheesecake kosher l pesach
March 18, 2013 2:09 pm at 2:09 pm #939070akupermaParticipantJust imagine when QUINOA gets accepted widely. Then we can have kosher-le-pesach pizza and hallah. Of course, once such recipes become common, I suspect opinion will turn against accepted quinoa as kosher-le-pesach.
March 18, 2013 6:40 pm at 6:40 pm #939071mewhoParticipantbe careful, that which u think is too good to be pareve might really be milchig.
once i bought mini ice cream cones for dessert in a store upstate and thought they were pareve but they were dairy.
i found that out AFTER we ate them.
When i went back to the store to see how i could do something so stupid i saw that they were all in the same freezer. the milchig ones and the pareve ones.
yes, i should have been more careful BUT the store should be too.
March 19, 2013 2:13 am at 2:13 am #939072shnitzyMemberI second that, sharp 🙂 🙂
Not fair, you stole my answer!!!!
Also those awesomely delicious coconut balls we buy every single year,(with total memory loss). They MAKE my Pesach. I forgot what they’re called…oh yeah…macarooooooons.
And even BETTER (and soggier)…LADYFINGERS!
I can’t believe they’re not Chometz!
March 19, 2013 6:14 pm at 6:14 pm #939073twistedParticipantMorahRach, what to do for crust?
March 19, 2013 6:19 pm at 6:19 pm #939074zahavasdadParticipantYou cant really make Quinoa into bread, but you CAN make POTATO BREAD
March 19, 2013 6:30 pm at 6:30 pm #939076rebdonielMemberThis year, I am buying Pesah Nutella from Israel (I saw it in Mountain Fruit’s Pesach Store on the kitniyot shelf) and will be making sandwich cookies with those and some Oberlander lady fingers.
I do the same during the year with Nilla wafers, and this should be a nice treat.
March 19, 2013 7:37 pm at 7:37 pm #939077writersoulParticipantWell, besides for my awesome homemade chocolate cake (we make 2 pans every year- one for yom tov and one to eat while we’re cooking), I have a weakness for rainbow cake (it’s embarrassing but true) and my all-time favorite Pesach breakfast is ladyfingers dunked in milk. The key is to take it out of the milk when it’s soggy enough that it ALMOST dissolves in the milk but it doesn’t and then you take the ladyfinge ot and eat the soggy bit. BLISS.
March 19, 2013 7:48 pm at 7:48 pm #939078🐵 ⌨ GamanitParticipantwritersoul- only two pans? We make 16!!! And then more on chol hamoed…
March 20, 2013 12:08 am at 12:08 am #939079writersoulParticipantWe’re not that many people, and we’re only home half of yom tov- actually, what I do is make two in a double batch, mess it up somehow so it’s not how it’s supposed to be but it’s still good, then oh no! we have to make some more! 🙂
Actually, maybe that’s just me being a bad baker. I love to rationalize.
Anyway, don’t worry- there’s no shortage of dessert in MY house. I think we’re up to three types of cake, two types of cookies, and ice cream and ices- besides for whatever my aunt is bringing :).
March 20, 2013 12:26 am at 12:26 am #939080David Bar-MagenMemberPotato starch. If you add tons and tons of sugar, it tastes like sugary potato starch.
March 20, 2013 4:09 pm at 4:09 pm #939081oomisParticipantWe eat Pesachdig type foods (primarily non-gebrochts, though our family minhag is to eat gebrochts) all year round, because a member of my family has celiac. You can get used to anything, when you have no breira. personally, I like some of the Pesach cakes VERY much.
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