"I have a religious obligation to drink these two bottles of beer tonight."
Sold hametz to a friend. Removed it from my apartment (To the landing outside my door. That should suffice). Generally cleaned up some more, particularly in the kitchen. Washed all dishes, and kashered most of the cookware and other kasherable things. Finished the beer that was in a (Jewish) friend's fridge, so that's no longer an issue.
I'm heading off tomorrow afternoon to spend the weekend with family. It's the first year in a while I'm not providing a place at the table for out-of-town friends, the family is dwindling in size, and my parents have invited local friends of theirs. It should be interesting to see what this year's crowd feels like.
Founder's Day falls during Passover this year. I'm not thrilled. Celebrating a brewer's birthday during Passover just doesn't promise to be as much fun. Hmmm....anybody know of anybody that sells real cider (made from fermented pressed apples, not beer and apple juice) that's either kosher for passover, or close enough I can convince myself it is? (No hametz grains involved in the process, or other beverages involving such in the same brewery ought to suffice, right?)
Chag Sameach.
Sold hametz to a friend. Removed it from my apartment (To the landing outside my door. That should suffice). Generally cleaned up some more, particularly in the kitchen. Washed all dishes, and kashered most of the cookware and other kasherable things. Finished the beer that was in a (Jewish) friend's fridge, so that's no longer an issue.
I'm heading off tomorrow afternoon to spend the weekend with family. It's the first year in a while I'm not providing a place at the table for out-of-town friends, the family is dwindling in size, and my parents have invited local friends of theirs. It should be interesting to see what this year's crowd feels like.
Founder's Day falls during Passover this year. I'm not thrilled. Celebrating a brewer's birthday during Passover just doesn't promise to be as much fun. Hmmm....anybody know of anybody that sells real cider (made from fermented pressed apples, not beer and apple juice) that's either kosher for passover, or close enough I can convince myself it is? (No hametz grains involved in the process, or other beverages involving such in the same brewery ought to suffice, right?)
Chag Sameach.
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"Old Brick is a superior cider, specially formulated to American tastes."
So this means what exactly? Watered down?
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I have to say that despite my fondness for Guiness and other non-American beverages, English cider is pretty foul.
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I am kind of suprised that no one has petitioned the college and Founder's Day crew to provide non-grain alcochol alternatives to the Jewish students. Of course it does not really matter to me because I generally fudge the last day of Passover (Friday April 29 will be my last fully Kosher for Passover day)
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Are your friends picky about their beverages being labeled Kosher for Passover (as I am not)? Many wines should qualify, and I know a number (besides Maneschevitz and other sweet concord grape wines of its ilk) are even labeled. So wine, and things made with wine and other non-grain ingredients, should qualify. Hmmmm....sangria...
In general, you'd want to look for the words "Kosher for Passover" in English and/or Hebrew explicitly on the label. If you don't know what it looks like in Hebrew and can't get someone to show you before I get back to Poughkeepsie, I can show you on Monday. The closest thing to foolproof is the Slivovitz, but I'm not certain that all Slivovitz is KfP, so you'll still want to check the label.
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Not when you are as about as religious as I am. I keep kosher for passover 6 days. So Friday will be the last night I stay kosher for passover. I also follow kosher by passover by using the rules of my 1/4 Sephardic blood which allows me to eat rice, legumes (i.e. peanut butter), corn, etc.
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Any decent wine store should have a good selection of "kosher for passover" wines which are not Maneshevitz. Maneshevitz is no longer the be all and end all of kosher wine anymore. Lots of wineries have discovered there is a market for producing good kosher wine.
Rum should be okay to drink at least by my understanding of "kosher for passover" Keep in mind that I am a reform Jew and very willing to add exceptions to the "kosher for passover" rules in order to fit my own needs.
I won't eat bread or any kind of pastry, cake, or obvious grain product. But pretty much everything else is on the table. Most Jews consider rice and legumes to be unkosher during passover. Coke is also a no-no because it contains corn syurp. I do not follow those rules because I find them inconvient and silly.
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I don't have a lot of confidence that rum is made entirely from fermented sugar, and doesn't have a neutral grain alcohol added to make it cheaper. Lots of liquors (other than whisk(e)y) should, in theory, be fine, but it's hard to know the contents if they haven't been approved by a rabbi.