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Matilda has always loved watching Bubbe make the soup. Now she wants to try out some of her own ideas. Adding lemon and dill to the matzah balls seems like a great idea. But making one GIANT matzah ball is a giant mistake.Yet Bubbe is encouraging. "The best part of experimenting is you can always try again," she tells Matilda.And so the grandmother/granddaughter cooking team continues the kitchen experiments, with some unusual (and unusually delicious!) results.Includes a recipe for Matilda and Bubbe's Matzah Ball Soup.
The autumn leaves are turning yellow and gold.The apples are ready to pick.Miriam can't wait to have fresh apples and honey for Rosh HashanahBut something is eating the apples in the orchard.IT'S A SASQUATCH!
A clever story about two rival families and a Rosh Hashanah cake recipe. Saralee Siegel has a "super nose"""she can smell things like no one's business. Her Zadie says that with a nose like that, she'll rule the world. This fast-paced, magical story about a girl who loves to cook, a rival restaurant, and a secret Rosh Hashanah cake recipe, is told in an illustrated chapter book format.
"A fun romp through a neighborhood where even monsters can be mensches"--
A boy and his grandfather help popularize chocolate in 17th century France playing a key role in the chocolate trade. A fold-out includes facts about chocolate history chocolate-making and a hot chocolate recipe by Claudia Roden. "Highly recommended" --The Jewish Book CouncilBank Street College "Best Children's Books of the Year," 2023 Edition"Weav-ing togeth-er fairy tale ele-ments and his-to-ry, Lev-en-thal illus-trates the per-sis-tence of one Jew-ish fam-i-ly as they enrich the cul-ture of their new home." - Emily Schneider, Jewish Book CouncilBenjamin dreams of making chocolate like his grandfather Marco--roasting and grinding the cocoa beans, and stirring it just right. Back in Spain, Marco was known as the Chocolate King for his incredible hot chocolate! But here in France, most people in town have never had chocolate. They think it looks strange, like mud. It just may take a chocolate catastrophe to change their minds.Set in France in the mid-1600's, this intergenerational story of one family's part in the migration of chocolate from the Americas to Spain and then to France and other parts of Europe includes an age-appropriate look at the Jewish expulsion from Spain: "They called me El Rey del Chocolate . . . The Chocolate King!""But one day," Marco said sadly, "we heard that the royal court wanted anyone who wasn't Catholic to leave the country -- including Jewish people like us. We stayed in Spain for as long as we could, but finally we had to leave."An 8-page fold-out includes an illustrated, bite-sized history of chocolate and the Jewish community, and a look at how cocoa beans are made into chocolate, all extensively researched, plus a recipe for thick hot chocolate from Claudia Roden.
2021 Sydney Taylor Picture Book Honor AwardRanked #1 in New Releases, Children's Judaism Books!“groundbreaking” – Rabbinic Pastor Cantor Lisa LevineThe Torah is called the Tree of Life. Just as a tree is always growing and changing, the Torah's ideas can help us grow and change, too. Yoga can do the same. Both can help us strengthen ourselves, calm our minds, and learn to appreciate the world around us.Written by rabbi and certified yoga instructor Mychal Copeland, I Am the Tree of Life encourages us to explore both the world of yoga and the stories of the Bible and find meaning in both.
"Hannah gets hiccups! Will they go away in time for her Hanukkah performance?"--Provided by publisher.
Oy Vey! Such bad mazel you are having. You tripped, banged your shnoz and fell on your tuchus. Then, oy vey is mir, you lost your vocab notebook the day before the big test! But don't worry, don't kvetch, your whole mishpacha is here to help you, and they have plenty of unique, Yiddish words that'll help you ace that test like a MAVEN! So quietly sit like the MENTSH that you are, You're a YIDDISHKEIT MAVEN"" Collect your gold star!
Young Kayla celebrates Hanukkah with her family and mischievous dog, Kugel, by lighting menorahs, playing dreidel, and sharing the story of how the holiday came to be.
Saralee is stunned to learn that she's not the only one in the family with a superpower. Her great-grandmother Gigi also had a magical sense of smell. And when Saralee makes Gigi's Hanukkah donut recipe, the scent creates a portal in time. Soon Saralee finds herself face-to-face with a young Gigi--and she's not the fierce, unstoppable person Saralee imagined. Gigi's ready to give up on her dreams. Saralee needs to help her find courage, or the future will be changed forever!
As the Israelites journey to the Promised Land, a unicorn brings joy and inspiration to the children. This story draws from the rabbinic understanding of tachash, a mysterious creature named in the Book of Exodus.
"A young boy imagines that he has an adventure with the biblical Jonah"--
"Max, a kid with a big imagination, builds a time machine to meet Abraham, Sarah, and three mysterious angels in biblical times"--
Originally published in 2006 by Dutton Children's Books.
"During the time period of the Hanukkah story, two boys, one Jewish and one Greek, form a lasting friendship"--
When a shark robot realizes that he is low on charge, he has to rush through Shabbat preparations.
Ten-year-old Saralee Siegel accidentally creates a magical soup for the Jewish holiday of Sukkot and must use her heightened sense of smell to save the town from a culinary disaster.
"In this lively retelling of the Purim story, Queen Esther finds the courage to save the Jewish people from Haman, the king's evil advisor"--Provided by publisher.
Between bad weather, hard work, and a food shortage, passengers on Noah's ark wonder if things could get worse until, on day thirty, Noah helps them to make it all better. Includes author's note about empathy.
In the 1920's the world was changing for women. Maybe it was time for things to change in the synagogue as well. But when Judy's father, Rabbi Mordechai Kaplan, said it was time for her to become bat mitzvah and lead services, she nearly dropped the noodle kugel. It was unthinkable--or was it? The tradition of bat mitzvah int he synagogue had just begun.
What would you do if you could meet the animals on Noah's ark? Would you make friends with the monkeys? Read stories to the cows? Play games with the chickens? Maybe you'd set up a diving board so you could all swim in the sea together. Come climb aboard the ark, and let's find out!
Where oh where can a zombie find a little rest and relaxation? Sounds like the Dead Sea might be perfect . . . Take a tour of Israel with an unusually adorable zombie who desperately needs a break. Ages 5-8
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