Sunday 29 March 2015

Pesach food and fun

To start with, a record of the fun we had raising money for Hat-tastic last Erev Shabbat ...






And now, here's something you can make for yourself at home -a Pesach recipe from Sam and Colin Fintz



Quajado De Karne – Meat bake (pesach)

Ingredients

1kg Steak mince
4 tablespoons Oil
8 Eggs
4 sheets Matza soaked in warm water and squeezed dry
1 ½ cups Chicken stock
3 tablespoons chopped Parsley
½ cup Chopped spring onions
Salt and pepper

Method

Heat oil in a saucepan, add mince and brown.  Add chicken stock and cook over medium heat until liquid has almost evaporated.  Allow to cool.  Separate eggs and beat whites until stiff.  In a bowl mix mince, matza, parsley, spring onions, beaten egg yolks and seasoning.  Fold in egg whites.  Pour mixture into a well greased ovenproof dish and bake at 180 – 200 degrees centigrade (gas mark 4) for 30 minutes until golden brown.  Cut into squares. 

This is traditionally served with Sephardic brown hard boiled eggs (Uevos Haminados)

Variations – Chopped cooked chicken may be used instead and I have also used quorn mince as well to make this. 




And if you're worried about the effect of all those Pesach calories, we have just the answer - a Matzah Ramble.

A Matzah Ramble is more than just a walk. It's a chance to catch up and connect with fellow congregants and re-enact that just-having-left-Egypt experience - only joking! You will have just left the Burrs Country Park car park on Woodhill Road at 10.30 am on Sunday April 5th instead, and Adam and Lucy Berger have arranged for the clouds to part so that we can walk through north Bury without getting wet.  We couldn't arrange for the Egyptian army to follow us - apologies.

The walk is mainly flat, is about 4 miles and should take about two and a half hours, including a picnic at Summerseat. Bring your own food.  Astonish the local wildlife by feeding them matzah crumbs.

For more details, contact Mandy at the shul office, and she will put you in touch with Adam and Lucy.  Please try to come - last years' ramble was a huge success and this one promises to be just as good.
 

 



Monday 23 March 2015

PESACH - Do It Yourself!

A message from the Rabbi ...

Approaching Pesach  I’m captivated by the many versions of the Haggadah that I use for commentaries, teaching and learning.
Among my favourites recently published is  the 2 volume My People’s Haggadah which is like sitting at a Seder with some of the world’s greatest  scholars and sharing the round table discussion between them – only there’s enough there for decades of Sedarim!  Also  the new Haggadah produced by the novelist and film-maker Jonathan Safran Foer which combines learning with fun. And I could go on and on…..
But you know which is the best Haggadah of all ? The one you and I are producing with our friends and family. 



 Yet to be put into writing – still at the discussion  round the table stage – usually over the meal. I know one family who actually did write their family story down as a companion to the Haggadah and circulated it among themselves.
This leads me to a plug for our new Book Club idea. Interest has been expressed amongst us to share our Jewish reading together.  My interest is Jewish History and I recently introduced from the pulpit the late Sir Martin Gilbert’s book  In Ishmael’s House  - a History of Jews in Muslim Lands(2010) which I highly recommend. But you may prefer to share your reading of a novel  or a travel book, or humour, or something spiritual. 
Let’s hear from you if you would like to join this new venture.

                                                ...

Rabbi was also one of the many signatories of the following letter that was published on the Guardian website, following the budget. The letter was sent by the UK Progressive rabbinate.


We view with great concern the fact that for the third year running the issue of child poverty has been absent from the proposals contained in the budget, and a misleading claim made that the rates of child poverty have gone down. We feel that it is absolutely essential that any discussion of Britain’s economic wellbeing also considers the 4 million children – equivalent to nine in every classroom of 30 children – who are growing up in hardship. This should shame us all. 
Soon Jewish people throughout the world will be celebrating the festival of Passover. We will eat “the bread of poverty” and consider how to transform it into the “bread of freedom”. Freedom from poverty is a basic freedom – one that should be part of the birthright of every child in Britain.




                                            .....


And a pre-Pesach date for your diaries. If you've ever thought about coming to a Shir Chadash service on a Friday night (see previous blog entry for more information), come THIS Friday. We are raising funds for Hat-tastic - supporting Brain Tumour research - as well as celebrating our congregant Darren Walshaw's 50th birthday.  As many of you know, Darren has been diagnosed with an advanced brain tumour, and has his own blog, Heaven Can Wait -  http://heavencanwaitblog.com/

Read it, donate, come to Shir Chadash this Friday, and wear a silly hat - it is Hat-tastic, after all!









 

Friday 20 March 2015

SHIR CHADASH



Shir Chadash is ‘a new song’ and that’s just what our Shir Chadash Friday nights are about.

Jewish music doesn’t have to be the same as it has been for years – though actually, you might be surprised to learn that some of the tunes we think of as ‘traditional’ were actually written by identifiable people not that many years ago. Synagogue worship doesn’t have to be formal. Jewish music isn’t just chazzanut or klezmer – it can be Oriental or Spanish or Israeli, it can be pop or rock, it can be mellow or lively, soulful or rocking. It can be new.


At Shir Chadash we have a lively musical service. There’s a band – we have guitars, percussion, piano, horn, and anything anyone else wants to bring along. The tunes are a mix of traditional and contemporary – and a number of Shir Chadash originals. These have been written by me (so far), and are part of my repertoire of original Jewish material which has now been released in 3 albums and performed in a variety of communities around the world.

Plus, there’s always some food. How much depends on who brings what – but the atmosphere of a Shir Chadash Friday is always about staying around, eating and chatting and not just coming to shul and then zooming off into the night. It means that if you come to a Shir Chadash Friday night, it can be your whole Friday evening, for all the best reasons.

So we hope you will give this a try – the more people who come, the more special the atmosphere. It’s a very different sort of service.

If you play an instrument or sing and you’d like to learn some of our tunes so you can take part, you’re very welcome to join in. Rehearsals are very informal and enthusiasm is more important than talent, because this is about worship and not performance. Everyone should be able to take part in whatever way they want to. Please contact me to find out more: david@shirchadash.org.uk.

We also now have a CD out so you can hear what our music sounds like. There are some samples on our website: www.shirchadash.org.uk.  You can buy a copy at the Synagogue or from me by email.

Plus you can find us on facebook: www.facebook.com/shirchadashmanchester

I hope to see you soon at a Shir Chadash service!

David Hoffman


And there's a very special Shir Chadash service coming soon (March 27th) More details in the next blog update.

Shabbat shalom, everyone.  (Three scrolls tomorrow!) 

Friday 13 March 2015

Preparing for Pesach




1.    Tell yourself matzah CAN be a versatile meal ingredient and matzah pizza is every bit as good as Domino’s.
2.   Get cleaning – it’s traditional, feels good after winter and who knows what you might find lurking down the sides of the sofa (last year’s matzah crumbs?)
3.    Buy your matzahs early as most supermarkets discount them right now – and buy FEWER than you think you’ll need unless you want to celebrate Passover all year round.
4.   Ring Mandy at the shul office and book your places for our communal seder.  That’s the second night – Saturday April 4th, starting at 7.30 pm.  It’s fully catered, £12 for adults and £10 for children. Non-members £15. Have fun, meet people, learn something new about Pesach.
5.    Hunt around for your Haggadot, and when you’ve found them, if they look something like this ...

you might want to consider buying our new MRJ Haggadah, which looks like this ..


and can be purchased from http://prayer.reformjudaism.org.uk/

6.     And if you open the pages of the Haggadah, and wish your Hebrew was just a little bit better, and that you understood what was written there just a little more, then come along to the Rabbi's Pre-Pesach Haggadah study sessions. The first will take place Thursday 19th March in the boardroom at shul at 12 midday. Just turn up with your Haggadah.  As long as you can sound out Hebrew in a halting fashion, you know enough to join us!