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Erev Yom Tov Hours: (Starting March 6) OPEN DAILY TILL 11:00PM Thursday till 12:00am
Due to the exciting demand, we’ve opened our beautiful new Monsey store early, just in time for the Pesach season!
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From office meetings, to family gatherings and large simchas, we make hosting easy. Whether it’s a weekday event or Shabbos with family and friends, our catering menu offers an extensive selection of flavorful dishes to delight your guests.
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EXTENDED EREV YOM TOV HOURS
SUN.-MON. 11:00-8:00
TUESDAY 10:30-9:00
WEDNESDAY 10:30-10:00
BEDIKAS CHOMETZ 10:30-7:00
EREV YOM TOV 10:30-2:30
CHOL HAMOED CLOSED
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Now Kosher for Passover under the supervision of CRC
EXTENDED HOURS:
Motzai Shabbos April 5, 10pm-12am
Sunday - Wednesday, 11 AM to 9pm
Thursday 11am-6:30pm & 10pm-12am
Friday Erev Pesach 11am-1:30pm
The famous Gottesman Caterers is now hosting a pop-up eatery at The Marketplace — and you’re invited!
Enjoy a full buffet experience with a wide menu of mouthwatering dishes, served daily for breakfast, lunch, and dinner — all at special Erev Pesach affordable prices.
Family seating | Separate seating
Thursday night full Liel Shishi Menu after 6 pm
$29.99
There’s room for everyone: x
A glass of Mayim Chaim’s water is purity in a cup. Bottled at the spring, there is nothing that stands in the way between you and the best of nature.
For over a decade, we’ve been perfecting every layer, every flavor—bringing you the very best in Pesach baked goods. Available at your local grocery.
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At the premier individualized high school program in Monsey, supportive staff, tailored class sizes, and individuated goals give each girl the support to soar, as she experiences the joys of high school to the fullest.
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Pickup our Pesach Flyer in store.
− Easy Grab & Go
− Delicious Hot Food
− Full Sandwich Station
Yom Tov Hours: PHONE ORDERS
10:00-5:00
- Wed 9:00-5:00
9:00-6:00 Friday 9:00-12:30 APR. 6 - APR. 11 Sun 9:00-12:00 Mon - Thu 8:00-12:00 Friday 9:00-12:00pm BUTCHER ON PREMISES Sun -Thu 9:00- 6:00 Friday 9:00-1:00
3:00
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Give yourself this Gift
By Rebbetzin Ruchi Chaimowitz
Join the thousands of married men whose lives have already been impacted by the Mitzvas Habayis Shiurim of
Rabbi Silver will be coming to America after Pesach, and will be giving these Shiurim live in Lakewood.
R’ Silver began to give these shiurim at the direction of R’ Elyashiv zt”l, and R’ Ahron Leib Shteinman zt”l reviewed and edited the material, advising down to the smallest details. Rabbi Silver’s extraordinary clarity, practical approach, and unique ability to open the minds and hearts of his listeners will elevate the quality of your marriage and of your whole life.
Rav Silver’s shiurim have really changed my life, I wish I would’ve heard them 10 years ago...They should be mandatory for anyone married.
CB, Monsey
Rabbi Silver’s words are D’varim Hayotzim Min Halevthey opened my heart and changed me in a way nothing else has... But it would’ve been worth it to come just to witness such a Talmid Chochom.
BR, Lakewood
I had been to multiple counselors and therapists who couldn’t help me. R’ Silver transformed my marriage. Your Zechusim are tremendous!
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Audio & video access provided after each Shiur
Sample shiur available on our hotline
Hagaon R’ Yitzchok Silver is an exceptional Talmid Chacham and Dayan from Yerushalayim. He is the mechaber of multiple popular seforim, including Mishpatei Hashalom on the halachos of Bein Adam L’chaveiro, and Shaarei Mishpat, a comprehensive work on Choshen Mishpat, used in Batei Din across the world. This course addresses the topics discussed in his popular sefer, Yesodos Habayis Ukedushaso, in depth. R’ Silver’s extensive knowledge, deep understanding, and vast experience, have made him a sought after address for thousands of married men.
To hear Divrei Pesicha from R’ Uri Deutch (Tishrei 5785) call our hotline: 732.400.5020
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Sushi? At Yoffee? Yup.
Experience the art of sushi — now made fresh in our 59 location, best enjoyed seated… or in a Gorgeous platter to go.
Learn about the legendary Rabbi Yosef Chaim Klein, who transformed the chinuch world. With a huge heart and firm hand, he was able to reach the most hardened and complex talmid. His love for each talmid was legendary. Guiding each one of them to reach their full potential.
Rabbi Klein was a talmid muvhak of Reb Shloima Heiman, and a talmid chacham who was able to give over the importance of Torah learning and Torah life to an unfamiliar American world. His trademark keys and sense of humor made him a memorable figure to all who came in contact with him.
• 1 pizza + Large Regular fries $25
• 1 pizza + Large Mixed Fries $26.50
• 1 Pizza + Large Spicy fries $28
• 2 slices + soda $8
• 1 slice + small regular fries + drink $8
1) Our standard American pizza has less than 1 gram of added sugar per slice.
2) We have our own sourdough which is the best tasting pizza you will find in town.
3) We have a large variety of pizzas, American (standard), Italian, whole wheat, whole spelt, gluten free, and sourdough are all available.
4) Hard to believe but our whole wheat, Italian, whole spelt, and sourdough all have no added sugar.
5) We don’t use other sweeteners either, we just make real wholesome good tasting food.
MARCH 30 - APRIL 10 11am-8pm APRIL 11-APRIL 20 closed MOITZEI PESACH
30 min after the zman till 2am APRIL 21-APRIL 24 11am-8pm
Pre-Pesach Hours Beginning Rosh Chodesh: Extended hours S 10:30-7, M-Th 10:30-8 F 10:30-2
We pride ourselves on offering the largest selection of silverware at unbeatable prices. Elevate your Seder table with our exquisite pieces. Discover the perfect blend of quality, beauty, and affordability this Pesach season.
We pride ourselves on offering the largest selection of silverware at unbeatable prices. Elevate your Seder table with our exquisite pieces. Discover the perfect blend of quality, beauty, and affordability this Pesach season.
We pride ourselves on offering the largest selection of silverware at unbeatable prices. Elevate your Seder table with our exquisite pieces. Discover the perfect blend of quality, beauty, and affordability this Pesach season.
We pride ourselves on offering the largest selection of silverware at unbeatable prices. Elevate your Seder table with our exquisite pieces. Discover the perfect blend of quality, beauty, and affordability this Pesach season.
Monsey
Monsey
845-578-1760
108 NY-59
845-578-1760
Boro Park 718-689-1340 4424 13th Ave
108 NY-59
Monsey, NY 10952
Monsey, NY 10952
Monsey
Boro Park 718-689-1340
4424 13th Ave Brooklyn NY 11219
Boro Park
Monsey
845-578-1760
108 NY-59
845-578-1760
Monsey, NY 10952
108 NY-59
Monsey, NY 10952
718-689-1340
Boro Park
4424 13th Ave Brooklyn NY 11219
718-689-1340
Have Rella Cafe cater your next event! In -house or off-site, available all week, including Motzei Shabbos and Sunday.
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845.799.8678 | 54 Francis Pl. Back Entrance Sun: 11-5 | Tues & Thurs: 1-5 | Mon - Wed: 8:30 pm - 10 pm We’re happy to accommodate private appointments & phone orders upon request.
םיא ליוו'כ ןגאז ןיוש
ראי ייווצ
WHAT TO GET FOR AFIKOMEN?
Try the Chevington range of delicious English cheeses this Pesach. Melts beautifully in any cooked dish, or enjoy a slice straight from the pack. Some flavours now available in convenient snack size portion — ideal for Chol Hamoed trips!
Step it up for HIM mens and boys socks designed for ultimate comfort
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Keep him a step ahead with our snug-fit socks, made from breathable bamboo fabric. Our rich black color stays deep and vibrant, wash after wash.
(Re: Give and Take, Issue 492)
Thank you, Chanie Spira, for this entertaining serial. It’s the first thing I turn to each week!
I totally feel for Perela, how she is desperate for recognition and sipuk. I understand her desire to utilize her talents and make her dreams come true. As she runs her home day after day, doing the same things over and over again like all Yiddishe mamas do, it’s difficult to feel accomplished. I’m very curious about what Perela will choose: the glitz and glamor of the outside world, or the hidden diamonds at home? And how will her choice make her feel?
Thank you,
(Re: Second Language, Inbox, Issue 491)
Another Perela
I’d like to respond to the letter writer who suggested that our schools begin teaching Spanish to our children. As we come nearer to the time of Mashiach, it’s so difficult for us to shield our eyes as we encounter repulsive sights all around us, and shemiras einayim is one of the biggest nisyonos we face in this day and age.
It is a tremendous chesed from Hashem that we are unable to follow the conversations that might take place around us. Unlike your eyes, which can and should be averted to avoid improper sights, there is little you can do to close your ears to avoid improper discussions. We are so blessed that we don’t understand all the languages spoken around us!
Additionally, sharing a language enables relationships to form more easily. When I had a Hungarian cleaning lady, I used my broken, yet workable Hungarian to speak to her, and found myself sharing a joke pretty often. Although I am often frustrated that my current Spanish-speaking cleaning help and I have such a difficult time communicating, I realize it keeps any real relationship from forming by reducing conversation to work-related matters only.
The fact that we don’t understand or speak the language of the nations around us is not a problem to be fixed, but rather a chesed from Hashem to help us retain our purity.
Thank you for a wonderful weekly read.
(Re: School Rules, Inbox, Issue 491)
Thank you to Mother of High School Girls who replied to the letter Mother Knows Best in Issue 487.
The Monsey View is a public forum, and is read by parents, teachers and high school students. As Yiddishe mothers, we are dignified people who raise our daughters to have respect for authority. In addition, Chazal teach us that moreh rabach k’moreh Shamayim. If you have feedback or opinions on a function of your child’s school, a community magazine is not an effective or appropriate forum to raise the issue. Discuss it with the school principal instead. Not
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only will that achieve better results, it will also preserve the derech eretz we value so highly, and teach your children the appropriate way to navigate such issues.
Name Withheld
(Re: A Place to Call Home, Inbox, Issue 491)
Thank you to the reader who commented on the relationship between the financial difficulties faced by schools and local housing costs.
I completely agree with every point mentioned and want to add one more point that further complicates the housing crisis: when schools are unable to send buses to new outlying neighborhoods, even within the school district. There are quite a few beautiful neighborhoods with (relatively) affordable housing options that are located a bit further out, but families can’t or won’t consider moving there because they will not get busing. For chassidish families where women don’t drive, this can be a deal-breaker.
With all of our elected officials who are supposedly there to make a difference for us, perhaps our mosdos should work to advocate for reliable and fair transportation options for all private school students in Rockland County.
On a related note, the state has approved vouchers for all schools in New York State. There are guidelines for the schools, as well as eligibility factors for parents. I believe that our schools have an achrayus to see what they can do on their end to pave the way for parents to be able to apply for this assistance.
Thank you to The Monsey View for giving us this space for communal discussion.
I’d like to share a household tip that may benefit readers.
As Pesach approaches, many families use this opportunity to buy new linen in honor of Yom Tov. Many years ago, I was shopping in a linen store and overheard a woman picking up an
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order of matching linen for ten beds. I was intrigued and politely asked the woman if she had a bedroom with ten beds, or was perhaps outfitting a group home or camp. She told me that she has three childrens’ bedrooms and uses the same set in all rooms for the sake of convenience.
First, doing so makes it simple to stock extra sets (she bought ten for seven beds), which become so useful when individual sheets or pillowcases need to be changed. Also, when one or two pieces are no longer usable, you have “stock” that works for all rooms. Also, when changing linen that has become soiled, you can immediately put on a matching, clean set.
Since I was shopping for linen that day, I got excited with the idea. I purchased linen for my own three childrens’ rooms and ordered some spare sheets and pillowcases. This was a game-changer! Everything became so neat and clear cut. No mismatched sheets while we’re washing the dirty ones, no looking for a missing pillowcase, and no angst when a child uses a pen on a sheet (because there are plenty more to go around).
If you have a teenager who wants to decorate her room to her taste, she can be an exception, but if you choose carefully, you can definitely find a set of linen that works well for both girls’ and boys’ bedrooms. Buying a new set for the master bedroom every now and then will give the akeres habayis an opportunity to indulge her own taste and choice.
Although this requires a financial investment at the beginning, it will save you money in the long run, when the set doesn’t need to be discarded when a sheet or pillowcase is no longer usable.
After several years of using the same set in a few bedrooms, I went back to the linen store. Although they no longer sold this particular set, I was very fortunate that they found a roll of the fabric in their warehouse. On my request, they created some replacement sheets and pillowcases for me, and now I’m good to go for some more years.
I wonder if more families can benefit from this practical tip that has brought so much menuchas hanefesh, ease and enjoyment to my home.
Wishing all Yiddishe mammes an easy erev and a kosheren Pesach.
Another Yiddishe Mamme
Just put on music; it makes the whole atmosphere more exciting.
Try to keep yourself calm by reminding yourself that Hashem is in charge, and all you have to do is try your best. And when the mother is calm, everyone is calm, bez”H. With such a frame of mind, you might actually enjoy Pesach cleaning. Also, try to pace yourself by starting really early, so that only the real last-minute items are still on the to-do list at crunch time.
Make quick and easy suppers. Use ready-to-bake frozen foods, even if they’re more pricey. Your sanity counts more.
Clean your dining room chairs for Pesach, cover them with (cheap) chair covers, and leave them on until Pesach. The same goes for the couch; clean and cover it, and remove the plastic on Erev Pesach.
First, daven to Hashem to help you remain calm. Then, try to make sure that everyone in your family is well fed and that supper is ready on time. It’s easier to take a few minutes to prepare it than dealing with hungry and stressed parents and kids.
Take enough cleaning help, even if you’re young and feel you can’t afford it. Cut down on the overpriced peer-pressure clothes shopping if money is an issue. Your children need a calm mother, not high-end, brand-name clothes.
When there are so many extra things to cram into the same short day, it only makes sense to cut corners somewhere else. Prioritize a calm atmosphere above all. If it means that supper is cereal and milk for three days running, or laundry is taken straight from the dryer, so be it.
People before things. That includes you!
Prioritize one small task each day, and celebrate its completion. Keeps things manageable and stay upbeat!
Switch to kitniyos products: pretzels, crackers, cereals, pasta. It will help you stay calmer as the house goes through the process of turning over.
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Try to keep in mind that the most important thing during this time is to remain calm and happy, and that the children should have a good feeling about Pesach and not a stressful feeling of frantic frenzy. Although you may want to go through everything in the house to organize and freshen up, remember that Pesach is only about getting rid of the chametz, and nothing else.
If you have little kids and live in a small space, do this: After cleaning a room, say “l’kavod Yom Tov,” and the rest, Kol Chamira takes care of. It’s the only way not to get frazzled.
Buy ready-to-eat suppers the week before Pesach. When my kids say they love Pesach and the month leading up to it, I know I did something right.
If you’d review the halachos of what has to be cleaned for Pesach, you’d realize that you’re cleaning way more than needed.
Use kids’ story CDs, e.g., by Rabbi Weiss and Rabbi Berel Soifer, which entertain the kids marvelously in the playroom when you need them out of sight for a bit.
Having a decent lunch for yourself (including a proper protein and vegetable) gives you good fuel for the day. If you have teenagers at home, make sure they eat responsibly too.
Best trick: No spring cleaning for Pesach at all. You have time to do it for Shavuous! My family follows our rav’s guidelines, and we only halachically search for chametz Every room gets inspected for a mashehu of chometz This takes so fast, you have no idea. In fact, years ago, when we first asked our rav about this, he told us that cleaning for Pesach should not make you crazy. Take the things out of each drawer, look for a mashehu, and ignore any tiny crumbs. Only in the eating areas do we care about chametz crumbs. If you’re spending too much time cleaning your child’s bedroom, call me, and I will do it for you! Since then, we have had such a delightful time in the weeks leading up to Pesach. Easy-peasy Pesach cleaning, and lots of menu planning. Then, after Pesach, when there is no other pressure, we spring clean the house.
Here’s my take:
1. Cleaning: Know what the halacha is! You will realize that this isn’t even a bit stressful.
2. Shopping: This category can be split in two.
1) Yom Tov essentials. These you know you need, so get it early on. It will help you avoid the last-minute rush, it will help you get ahead of the cooking, and it may help ease the financial burden if you can get it into your March credit card statement.
2) Summer wardrobe. Sorry to burst your bubble, but the stores will still be carrying the SS25 collection long after Yom Tov!
3. Cooking: Remember, cooking is permitted on Yom Tov. Only cook in advance if you can do it without adding stress!
4. Financial stress: Leave it up to your husband.
Just stay calm! Don’t worry if you feel like you won’t get to Pesach; Pesach will come to you.
Please submit your answer by Tuesday night, April 8, for a chance to see it in print!
Email or text pov@themonseyview.com Fax 845-600-8483
Voicemail: 845-600-8484 ext. 811
To receive the POV question in your inbox every week, send an email to pov@themonseyview.com with the word “subscribe” in the subject line.
The response to LAFA has been incredible. Calls are already picking up, and just this week alone, we’ve added a whole fleet of new cars on the road. Behind the scenes, we’re not slowing down right now, our team is hard at work making sure every vehicle meets the safety standards established by Chaverim of Rockland. We’re rolling strong, and we’re just getting started.
Y. Levenstein
In this week’s parsha, Hashem tells Moshe Rabbeinu to speak to Bnei Yisroel about aveiros that are done accidentally — “ Nefesh ki secheta b’shegagah” (Vayikra 4:2).
A LEGENDARY FIGURE in Yerushalayim of old, Rav Zalman Brizel, zt”l, was known as a true yarei Shamayim. When it came to Pesach, he conducted himself with many chumros and minhagim.
One particular mitzvah he held close to heart was his matzos. He was careful with every detail — from the time the wheat was harvested until the baked matzos were neatly packaged. Every step came along with all the hiddur and shemirah he could acheive.
On Erev Pesach, he was a picture of joy and fire as he excitedly yet vigilantly baked his personal matzos mitzvah, which he would use for the Seder. He would bring home his precious boxes and place them in a designated corner of his little home in the neighborhood of Geulah. Of course, the spot he put them down in was carefully cleaned and inspected for chametz, as was the rest of his house.
Excitement was mounting on Erev Pesach afternoon one year as his young grandchildren arrived to be with their special Zeidy on this special night. The children were thrilled to meet their cousins and ran around happily, just as little kids like to do.
But, the house was a bit small… and before anyone could think, disaster struck.
While running, someone accidentally knocked over the matzos. The box opened and spilled onto the floor, a mix of mostly broken matzos — broken remnants of the pinnacle of hiddur
The children were terrified. How would their Zeidy react? They knew how important his matzos were to him. After all
the effort he had invested in his matzos mitzvah, they couldn’t even be used. What would he say?
Several minutes later, Reb Zalman walked into the room. He immediately noticed the mess. For a few moments, he was quiet. Everyone watched in fright. But Reb Zalman did not yell.
Ever composed, he lifted his hands upward and called out, “Ribbono Shel Olam, Thank You for giving me such precious, beloved grandchildren! How many people in this world don’t even have children, lo aleinu… And even those who do have children, so many haven’t been zoche to marry them off yet… And even parents who’ve married off their children, not all of them have the delight of seeing grandchildren… Even if my matzos fell and broke, I have no complaints, chas v’shalom!”
When Reb Zalman saw what had happened, he immediately recognized it as a personalized nisayon from Above. He was being tested specifically on this exceptional evening — and specifically with the one thing that he was moser nefesh for. Would he lose himself and stoop to anger, or would he reign over his middos?
* * * * *
The renowned mashpia, Reb Gamliel Rabinowitz, shlit”a, repeated a story told to him by a fourth grade rebbi in Boro Park, Reb Yisrael Yakov Pollack.
It happened one day that a lively boy in Rabbi Pollack’s class decided to throw some object to another boy in the room. Unfortunately for him, he did not aim well, and the object landed on the rebbi’s desk. If that was not enough, it knocked over a cup of coffee on the desk, which spilled all over a pile of papers the rebbi had prepared to give out to his students.
Reb Zalman walked into the room. He immediately noticed the mess. For a few moments, he was quiet
“Nothing happened. I’ll clean up my desk, and we can print some more copies of these sheets. Go back to your seat”
Needless to say, the papers were ruined, and the boy who had tossed the item was speechless. His face turned white and he trembled fearfully. The entire classroom grew still. Many pairs of young eyes were fixed on the rebbi’s face. How would he discipline their friend? How would he react to such naughty behavior?
For several moments, the classroom remained silent — a thick silence. The troublemaker climbed down from his seat, shoulders slumped, and approached the rebbi’s desk. “II-I’m sorry,” he mumbled.
To his surprise, and to the surprise of all the boys in the room, the rebbi remained calm. Instead of yelling at the boy and putting him in his place, he said evenly, “Nothing happened. I’ll clean up my desk, and we can print some more copies of these sheets. Go back to your seat.”
Reb Yisrael Yakov explained the reason for his response. When he saw the boy’s deep regret as he tremulously asked forgiveness, he felt there was no need to add to the boy’s pain and yell at him. “In my heart, I knew that, after all, he was just a kid. Sometimes kids make mistakes…”
Several years passed. One day, the boy, who was no longer learning in the cheder, popped in to Rabbi Pollack’s classroom, holding an invitation to his bar mitzvah.
“I know most people don’t invite their old rebbeim to their bar mitzvah,” he said, “but I cannot forget you! I have to tell you that I can still see the expression you had on your face that day in fourth grade when I made trouble… I was expecting to be reprimanded and yelled at. I did something really wrong. But the fact that not only did you not yell, but you even calmed me down, made me feel so special. It made a deep impression on me. And that’s why I want to invite you to my bar mitzvah.”
* * * * *
say that when a person stumbles with a shogeg perpetrated by mistake — the yetzer hara doesn’t gain out of the deal. The yetzer hara doesn’t need that aveirah. After all, it wasn’t done on purpose!
The part that does bear weight is the person’s response to the mistake. Will he stoop to anger and lash out at those around him? Will he fall into depression and eat himself up for what he has done?
These reactions are no mistake. Here, the person is in control. And this is exactly where the yetzer hara stands to yetzer hara waits for these negative reactions, so he can cause the person to stumble all the way, by choice.
The mistake is just a mistake. But what you do next is what makes all the difference.
Don’t you love that surge of energy, health, and vitality you get when you’re doing something right for your body? Your body thanks you when you give it what it needs, like exercise in the fresh air, an early-morning swim, or taking the time to prepare and eat a balanced meal packed with macro-nutrients.
In a world where you’re often rushing from one responsibility to the next, where your family and your job call your name urgently almost every waking moment, the hectic pace of modern life takes its toll on physical wellbeing. It becomes ever more vital to do whatever we can to invest in our health.
Sometimes, prioritizing health and wellness can mean making difficult choices or even sacrifices. But at other times, it can be found in the simplest changes— like choosing the right water.
The human body is composed of 60%-70% water, making water the second most important element for human life, after oxygen. Everyone knows that drinking enough water—eight glasses a day—is vital to keeping your body hydrated. But is water just water?
Actually, sometimes, it’s not. Poland Spring, and many other regular water brands on the market, are slightly acidic. Over time, the acid can contribute to unhealthy acid levels in the body and blood, causing illness.
A first on the frum market, NATURAL ALKALINE WATER by Clair Water provides healthconscious kosher consumers
with the perfect, kosher alkaline water solution, with a naturally sourced soft water rated among the three best-tasting bottled waters in the world.
Alkaline water has a slightly higher pH level than regular water. It contains more natural minerals, and is typically smoother and slightly sweeter and more refreshing than regular water.
Scientists all over the world are fascinated by the idea that simply drinking better water could improve health. It almost sounds too good to be true. Yet rigorous testing has found that alkaline water contains four major minerals which help build a healthier you. From CALCIUM, which is important for bone health, as well as heart, muscle, and nerve function, to MAGNESIUM, which helps turn food into energy and is necessary for over 300 biochemical reactions in the body, this water
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offers a genuine mineral boost. It also boasts SODIUM to regulate blood pressure and volume, and support nerve and muscle function. Lastly, there is POTASSIUM, a type of electrolyte that’s essential for muscle function and promotes healthy digestion.
How exactly do these elements affect our bodies? While many speculative claims have been made, including that alkaline water assists weight loss and boosts the immune system, those ideas are still being researched. Yet completed studies have found no negative side effects, and ascertained several concrete benefits.
1. Improved bone health
A study published in the scientific journal Bone found a positive effect on bone resorption (the process where old bone cells are broken down and replaced by new ones) in people who consumed alkaline water rich in bicarbonate. Less bone resorption and more mineral density result in better bone strength.
2. Reduced high blood pressure, blood sugar, and cholesterol
According to a study in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, scientists in Shanghai found that after three to six months of drinking alkaline water, people with high blood pressure (hypertension), high blood sugar (diabetes), and high cholesterol achieved lower measures in all these factors.
3. Increased longevity
A study looking at the impact of alkaline water consumption on lab animals over three years found that those drinking alkaline water aged less, and had a higher likelihood of longer life spans than those who were given regular water.
4. Enhanced hydration
A Biology of Sport study suggests that drinking alkaline water has positive effects on hydration after anaerobic exercise, and also enhances lactate utilization after
high-intensity intervals. This leads to greater energy levels since lactate serves as a fuel source for muscles. Individuals who consumed regular drinking water, on the other hand, showed no changes over the same period.
5. Reduced Oxidative Stress and Free Radicals
Research reveals that alkaline water activates potent antioxidant enzymes, which directly combat the production and buildup of free radicals throughout the body, protecting cells from damage and reducing oxidative stress.
Some alkaline water brands use electronic ionization (electrolysis) to increase the pH of their water. However, Clair Water, the new kosher brand, offers a superior natural option. Their alkaline water is sourced from a spring, located in the remote, snowy acres of North Eastern Canada. This spring is considered one of the purest sources of water in existence, recognized for over 100 years; it stems from glacier waters. The water, which rises to the surface from deep underground under its own pressure, has an ideal pH level of 7.1 to 7.5, and mineral levels of 83 to 87 parts per million. It is naturally filtered by a perfect system of geological formations.
It’s no surprise that this Canadian spring water has won a place among the top three in the Non-Carbonated Waters category in the International Water Tasting Contests of the last three years. The combination of this excellence in taste with its health benefits make it a popular premium item across Canada. Now launching in the U.S. as Clair Water for the kosher consumer, with full Kosher L’Pesach certification, it brings that truly healthy feeling to your glass or water bottle. This is a small change which can bring you big dividends. Drink to your good health.
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With pre-Pesach price hikes often ocurring this time of year, New York Attorney General Letitia James called on state residents to report any instances of this illegal practice to her office.
In a March 27 statement, James noted that car washes in both the Hudson Valley and New York City have been known to raise their prices before Pesach, with some even advertising specials and then charging Jewish customers higher prices. Doing so is both illegal and discriminatory, said James.
“Taking advantage of someone else’s religious observances and practices is offensive and unacceptable,” said James.
James noted that her office has a zero-tolerance policy for discrimination of any kind, and that those who take advantage during the pre-Pesach season will be held accountable. In addition to higher prices at car washes, the attorney general also asked consumers to be on the lookout for unjustified price spikes in eggs, kosher meats, matzah, kosher l’Pesach products, cleaning services, travel and accommodations that exceed what she described as “normal market trends.”
“No New Yorker should be taken advantage of during a holiday season and forced to pay more because of their religion,” said James.
Complaints can be filed by calling the attorney general’s office at 800-771-7755 or online on the contact page of the New York State Attorney General’s office website, www.ag.ny.gov.
Once again, the Town of Ramapo is helping residents with their Pesach cleaning, deploying extra sanitation crews to pick up extra trash and bulk items.
The town’s Spring Clean Up operation runs from March 21 through April 10, the Thursday before Pesach. Ramapo will have extra street sweepers cleaning up roadways, and residents can leave bulk items out at the curb for pickup during that time.
Items such as paint, driveway sealant, pool chemicals, thermometers, batteries, propane and helium tanks, air conditioners, small refrigerators, light bulbs, electronics, and non-controlled prescription medications all require special handling and cannot be discarded with regular trash. Those items should be taken to the Household Hazardous Waste drive-through facility in Pomona, which is open from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday through Friday, and on Sunday, April 6. Additional information on which items are considered hazardous waste is available by calling 845-364-2444.
Several area villages have already released their pre-Pesach trash collection schedules as of this writing, including:
Airmont – Six extra dumpsters will be located at Village Hall in the rear parking lot, with a special pickup scheduled for Shabbos Hagadol for last-minute items.
Kaser: Daily pickups will be taking place from March 30 through April 11, for all garbage placed at the curb by midnight. Two dumpsters will be placed in Kaser for Shabbos Hagadol chometz disposal, with locations to be announced.
New Hempstead: One dumpster will be located at Village Hall from March 31 through April 14. A special garbage pickup will take place on Shabbos Hagadol for last-minute items.
Pomona: Pickups scheduled for April 11 and Shabbos Hagadol.
Spring Valley: Daily pickups scheduled from April 9 through Shabbos Hagadol.
Wesley Hills: Dumpsters will be available for household waste at Village Hall from 9 a.m. April 10 through 4 p.m. April 11. Residents should not bring any bread to feed the ducks and geese at Willow Tree and Greg Sikorsky parks in the days leading up to Pesach.
Chesed 24/7 officially opened its 26th hospitality facility in the New York/New Jersey area last week, this one benefitting patients at Valley Hospital in Paramus.
Opened last spring, the hospital has three separate chesed
spots, one located on the fifth floor in Room S5-505 in the South Tower family pavilion; another on the seventh floor in room S7-620 near the north elevators; and a third housing a kosher pantry in the emergency room across from room E40. In addition to featuring hot meals, Shabbos needs, snacks and similar items, the chesed rooms also come along with an apartment that can be booked on Chesed 24/7’s website, www.chesed247.org.
Hospital officials, members of Rockland Hatzoloh, medical staff and community liaisons all gathered at Valley Hospital to celebrate the rooms’ inaugurations, which included the placement of mezuzas on their doorposts. Since the hospital’s move to Paramus from its prior location in Ridgewood, Rockland Hatzoloh has begun transporting many of its patients to Valley, which is a 370-bed acute care facility, with over 1,100 doctors and a staff of 3,700.
Two aging New York State Thruway bridges are undergoing much-needed repairs, with shifted lane configurations in place through the fall of 2026.
Governor Kathy Hochul announced the $19.4 million plan last week, which will affect the bridge that crosses Route 202 at mile marker 29.54, and the bridge that crosses the Mahwah River at milepost 29.41. Both bridges, which are located between exits 14B and 15, are slated to have repairs made to their concrete and steel superstructures. The Route 202 bridge will have its concrete deck and parapets completely replaced, while the Mahwah River bridge will receive new bridge joints.
The Thruway Authority remains committed to having three lanes of traffic running in each direction through the construction, which began last fall. Built in the 1950s, the bridges
are each more than 70 years old, with an estimated 120,000 vehicles passing over them daily.
Hochul described the project as part of a statewide commitment to New York’s roads and bridges, with $477.3 million earmarked in Thruway improvements in 2025.
“This investment will help enhance safety, ensuring a smoother ride for tens of thousands of regional travelers who use this vital Thruway corridor each day,” said Hochul.
A lawsuit charging the Sullivan County Town of Forestburgh with violating the federal Fair Housing Act is picking up steam, with the United States Department of Justice issuing a Statement of Interest in the case, paving the way for it to be heard in court.
Filed in early March by Matthew Podolsky, acting United States attorney for the Southern District of New York, the statement classifies the suit against Forestburgh as “ripe for adjudication,” a term that signifies that the charges involve a substantial controversy that warrants judicial intervention.
The developers of Lost Lake Holdings, LLC, alleged that once it learned that the development would likely be home to Orthodox Jews, Forestburgh engaged in a series of discriminatory acts to block the construction of what the town had previously described as a “shovel-ready” development. The lawsuit charges the town with unfairly applying the land use process, and quotes biased comments made by town officials and residents. One described Orthodox Jews as “locusts” that “take over,” while another said that the development was be-
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ing funded with dirty money from “the Jewish mafia,” and added, “and you wonder why the Germans did what they did.”
Lost Lakes Holdings, LLC, filed suit against Forestburgh in March 2023. Podolsky’s decision is a significant blow to the town’s attempts to have the case dismissed.
As the Trump administration continues in its quest to eliminate inefficiencies, the Department of Health and Human Services announced last week that it would be slashing $11.4 billion in COVID funding.
“The COVID-19 pandemic is over, and HHS will no longer waste billions of taxpayer dollars responding to a non-existent pandemic that Americans moved on from years ago,” said the agency in a statement. “HHS is prioritizing funding projects that will deliver on President Trump’s mandate to address our chronic disease epidemic and Make America Healthy Again.”
According to NBC News, much of the money was used for COVID testing, vaccinations and other projects.
Washington shut down its covidtest.gov website, which mailed out free COVID tests by request, in early March, and more than 24 COVID-related research grants funded by the National Institutes of Health have also been terminated.
While COVID continues to claim lives, the federal public health emergency sparked by the pandemic was officially declared over on May 11, 2023.
Amid the hustle and bustle of the Palisades Center megamall, a new quiet space will give
overstimulated kids a place to unwind.
With 1,000 square feet of soothing sights, sounds and activities, the Sensory Room will likely be a welcome addition to the mall, particularly for those with anxiety disorders or developmental disabilities, as well as children on the autism spectrum, for whom noisy spaces can be overstimulating.
Located next to Target on the mall’s fourth floor, the Sensory Room is a project of BRIDGES, a local nonprofit that assists those with disabilities, reported The Journal News
“If a kid is having a reaction, struggling with regulation because the mall is so overwhelming, they can come here, sort of to relax,” said BRIDGES executive director Carlos Martinez.
The space will have a book nook for kids, seating areas that will include rocking chairs, an elevated ball pit, a giant pegboard, weighted blankets, soothing water displays, and lighted floor tiles, among other features.
The Sensory Room’s grand opening will take place at 10 a.m. on April 4, and will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. to children under 18 who are accompanied by a caregiver. Admission is $15 for each child-caregiver pair, with all profits to be used to support BRIDGES programming.
Roiza hatches a plan for a shidduch for Kaily. Perela’s husband doesn’t think Perela should miss Sheva’s play.
Now, where to start?
chapter
TWENTY-FOUR
Perela’s Wednesdays off easily put Dr. Seuss’s Wacky Wednesday to shame.
Today there was an added urgency to her schedule. She was leaving Monday morning, and whatever had to get done before the trip had to get done today.
Yanky was standing next to the coat closet screaming “bye-bye.” She’d planned on keeping him home on Wednesdays, partly because she felt bad for him and partly because she felt guilty, but sometimes she suspected that he loved going to morah more than he liked staying home with her. At least he’d be happy staying with her for the week while she was in China.
Anyway, she didn’t have time to take him today. Counterintuitive? Likely. But the fact that she had to Mommy-sit soon made her do counterintuitive things. She spilled a box of Magnatiles for him instead.
“Come, Yanky, build the Great Wall of China.” Joke was, she wouldn’t be seeing the Great Wall of China at all. The factories they were visiting were located in a totally different province, almost a day’s drive away from the capital.
“Co, co!” he screamed, pulling the doorknob of the coat closet. Fine, wear a coat. Coat on, he finally agreed to play.
She had exactly one hour before she had to be at her mother’s house. She’d have breakfast there. Ten minutes gained. First: laundry. Her fingers worked speedily as she folded, sorted and distributed, trying to make a dent on the skyscraper that had accumulated over the week.
Quickly, she did a pants count in the boys’ room to confirm they each had enough to last the week.
Just in case, she took the spare pile of worn, torn and ill-fitting pants from the top shelf and stuffed it into a shopping bag. Maybe she’d mend them at her mother’s house. She’d fish out her old sewing machine and use her time wisely.
She ran downstairs to check on Yanky. His face was flushed from wearing a coat indoors — a Prance beauty, of course — but he was hard at work with his blocks.
“Munchkin, you really learned to play!” See? Babysitting built them.
She had fifteen minutes left.
There was another Great Wall of China of grocery boxes in her foyer, with enough snacks and nosh for Ezriel to bribe the kids all week.
As she opened the first box, the phone rang.
“Perela,” Kaily said. There was a lilt in her voice, maybe even a giggle. “I’m working on Sruly’s chasan album for Chanukah,” she said. “You cannot imagine what funny pictures I keep coming across. Why don’t you come a little early so you can see?” Perela heard her mother saying something in the background, and Kaily started laughing again. “You should see your hair in high school! Not exactly the look of a cool clothing designer!”
Perela looked at the tower of boxes longingly. “Sure, can’t wait! I’m leaving now. I should be there in ten minutes.” She hoped her voice carried at least some enthusiasm.
WHAT HIT PERELA WAS HERSELF. SHE LOOKED TOTALLY DIFFERENT — IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE. OF COURSE, THE YERUSHALMI TICHEL, BUT BESIDES THAT, SHE LOOKED SO JOYFUL
“Great! I have to leave in about half an hour — latest, an hour — if I want to accomplish anything before your Charni’s bus.”
She was giving away all of her free hours today. Yet Kaily still managed to make her feel like it wasn’t enough. At least Yanky was wearing his coat already.
Midway, she remembered the bag of pants. Oh, well. Worst case, Avrumy would wear dirty pants to cheder
There wasn’t an inch of room on her mother’s kitchen table when she arrived. Kaily and her mother were laughing over a picture. “Are you laughing at me?” she groaned.
“Yes, dear,” her mother answered. “Come see your sheitel, and you’ll laugh, too.” Said sheitel had a side part practically touching her ear.
“Ooh! And this one.” It was the Purim that she and Ezriel had dressed up as a Yerushalmi couple, and Leiby and Yonah were dressed as little Yerushalmi boys. Yonah didn’t even have peyos yet, and he had long, fake peyos affixed to his white knit yarmulke. She was wearing a large black tichel over her wide black dress, and Ezriel had done her a favor and donned a striped bekishe that Shalom had kindly sent from Eretz Yisroel.
The kids were adorable, but what hit Perela was herself. She looked totally different — in more ways than one. Of course, the Yerushalmi tichel, but besides that, she looked so joyful. It didn’t take a psychologist to determine the pride she took in her family that day, the completeness she experienced from the cute costumes, the simplicity of her admiration for her husband.
Where had that Perela disappeared to?
“I have to leave already,” Kaily said. “Maybe skim through the rest of the pictures, and put a sticky note next to pictures I can use.”
“Sure,” Perela agreed quickly. There was something magnetic about those pictures.
She finally peeled off her coat and sat down.
“Did you have breakfast?” her mother asked.
Perela shook her head. “No time.”
“I’ll make you something.”
“No, no. Please, don’t bother.”
Her mother looked hurt. “Can’t I make breakfast for my own daughter?”
“It’ll be a real treat,” Perela amended quickly. She didn’t recognize this mother of hers. She’d never been this sensitive.
Perela watched her mother shuffle to the counter with her walker. She still hadn’t forgotten the scene of her mother clutching the sink.
“You know, you can look at the pictures,” her mother said, almost snidely. I’m not that interesting.”
So Perela looked. She settled Yanky on the chair next to her. There were mostly pictures of Kaily’s kids, but quite a few of her family, too.
She stopped to look closely at one. When was it? Not so long ago. About five years ago, right after Chaim had gotten engaged, she had come over with her kids to celebrate.
There were pictures of her dancing with her kids in Kaily’s kitchen. Her eyes alight and looking at her kids with such love… such innocence and pride. They were her life.
Where had she gone? When had she become a woman who had lost most of her joy at mothering? When had it become stifling and unfulfilling and just… drab?
Her eyes welled. No. She wasn’t crying. But the tears
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THERE WAS NO NEED FOR THESE CALCULATIONS. HER MECHUTENISTE HAD GIVEN HER THAT ELUSIVE IDEA SHE WAS LOOKING FOR
fell one after the other. This was ridiculous. Her mother was painstakingly slicing an avocado at the counter, while she sat at the table, weeping.
Yanky looked at her, eyes wide.
“Shh… shh…” he said.
She smiled through her tears and picked him up. She hugged him and kissed the top of his sweet head. Everything fell away. The urgency to unpack the groceries, the urgency to finish packing for her own trip. Through blurry eyes, she looked at the page in front of her, at the disparity between her sweet family and Kaily’s lonely one.
She had so much. Where had her joy gone?
* * * * *
“Your kallah is from Brooklyn, you said, right?” the saleslady asked. “Then you must take this.”
I must nothing!
Kaily fingered the pretty clutch. The obviously luxurious leather, the studded closure. She surreptitiously flipped over the bag and read the sticker. She blanched.
“It’s on sale now,” the saleslady gushed. “But only until tomorrow. It’s 20 percent off.”
She quickly calculated. About $150 would come off. It would still cost her close to a half a week of caregiving. It could also buy her a new gown.
“Okay,” she said slowly, her entire body going hot at the thought of spending this kind of money. “Do you wrap this? And if I bring in an album, would you include it in the package?”
“Sure we wrap!” The saleslady took her to the back of the store to show her some classy packages. “For forty dollars. It’s like half price.”
Wow! For the measly price of $640, her son’s kallah would have a non-practical cell phone holder. But she loved Bina, and she deserved it.
“Lemme think about this for a few minutes.” She needed space to make this decision. “I’ll be back in a few.”
The saleslady wasn’t happy, but Kaily couldn’t think with that cloud of perfume obscuring her senses.
She found a little bench outside the strip mall, and she sat down. The cool November air cleared her brain, and she was able to think.
She used her cellphone’s calculator to make her decision. She was hardly spending these days, except for food and utilities. But weddings were expensive! Whichever way she calculated, she fell many thousands short.
She was putting in the total of her monthly expenses when the phone rang and neatly wiped out her careful calculations.
It was her mechuteniste
“Hello,” Kaily said politely.
“Hi, Kaily, it’s Leah,” Leah Czinner greeted her. “I’m with Levi” — G-d forbid, never her alone — “and we’re finalizing with the furniture store now. They can’t process the order before it’s paid up.”
“Okay.”
“So we just made the final payment on our end…” Leah hinted broadly.
“Uh, sure, I understand. Can you email me the details, and I’ll pay my share?”
“No problem. Just let me know after you pay, so I’ll know where we are on this. I feel bad to call you. Bina told me how busy you are with your mother. Like you practically moved upstairs.”
Kaily murmured something.
She disconnected and put her phone away. There was no need for these calculations. Her mechuteniste had given her that elusive idea she was looking for.
You practically moved upstairs…
She walked toward the store. Bina would get her clutch and her furniture — for the price of her privacy.
But it was a small price to pay.
“I’M JUST ABOUT ZIPPING MY SUITCASE,” SHE ADDED, HATING HERSELF. SHE DIDN’T EVEN HAVE A SUITCASE — ONLY THAT SAME NERDY DUFFEL BAG LEIBY HAD USED IN CAMP.
Perela walked home slowly. She held one picture in her pocket — a shot of her building a snowman with her kids and Kaily’s. There was nothing remarkable about the picture, except for her remarkable smile.
She’d once taken such joy in building a snowman, and she wanted to keep this picture close to her during her entire trip.
Her phone rang. Tziri. Her finger hovered over the ignore button. She was in such a different mode now. Definitely not Tziri mode. But Tziri had something important to say about the trip, probably.
“Hello,”
“Perela!” Tziri exclaimed. “I get a mazel Tov! My Mali had a baby girl!”
“Mazel tov!” Perela said genuinely. She knew Mali had two boys and this was probably a big deal. “I’m just about zipping my suitcase,” she added, hating herself. She didn’t even have a suitcase — only that same nerdy duffel bag Leiby had used in camp.
But Tziri wasn’t listening to her.
“Four weeks early,” Tziri added slowly.
“Wow! Is the baby doing okay?” Perela asked.
“She’s small, but doing fine.”
“Baruch Hashem!”
Good girl, baby. Perela thought. Good that you’re a girl so your grandmother doesn’t miss your vachnacht and bris
“You know I was supposed to be long back from the trip when the baby comes…” Tziri trailed off.
Okay.
“Perela, there’s no way I can travel now. I have a big kiddush to plan. I’ll speak to the travel agent. Let’s push it off two weeks so we can be back for Chanukah.”
“You’re joking, right?” Perela choked out. “You’re canceling the trip?” Her voice shook.
She stopped walking and leaned on a tree. She thought of her semi-packed duffel bag, the impossible arrangements she’d made for every single child. The neatly frozen suppers.
Sheva’s play...
“Not cancelling, pushing it off,” Tziri said smoothly.
“B-but all those appointments,” Perela said stupidly. When she’d finally gathered the courage to ask Tziri if they could return a day earlier so she’d make it to the play, Tziri had said that they had appointments every minute of every day.
“I know,” Tziri drawled. “But what don’t we do for our kids?”
THE SUBLIME PROMISE OF SPRING COMES ON THE HEELS OF A LONG AND FRIGID WINTER. PESACH: A TIME OF RENEWAL, AN EXALTED AND ELEVATED SEASON.
Tradition shines in the special dishes we prepare. We maintain our special customs with pride, viewing the same heimish ingredients with a fresh set of eyes. The results are nothing short of spectacular.
Let us embrace this upcoming Yom Tov with vitality and joy. Happy cooking, and a chag kasher v’same’ach!
ISSUE 491
SWEET BEGINNINGS BY
LIBBY GOLDBERGER
Cinnamon Marble Biscotti
Chocolate Crumb Cake
Pesach Muffins
Marble Meringues
ISSUE 492
THE ULTIMATE PESACH EVENING MEAL BY FAIGY REINER
Mock Sushi Side of Salmon
Creamy Squash Soup With Marrow Bones
Apple Ginger Roast
Spaghetti Squash Muffins
Chocolate Mousse With Red Wine Reduction
ISSUE 493
THE ULTIMATE PESACH DAY MEAL
BY FRIMY SILBERMAN
Salmon Crudo
Velvety Meat and Potato Soup
French Roast With Onion Marmalade
Praline Pavlova
ISSUE 494
THE ALL-AROUND PESACH MEAL
BY MIRIAM PESSY WERCBERGER
Salmon Cubes With Orange Wine Reduction
Beef Back Rib Minestrone Soup
Square Flanken in Charred Tomato Sauce
Over Sweet Potato Carpaccio
Cinnamon Buns and Vietnamese Coffee
FRIMY SILBERMAN
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Pesach holds a special place in my heart. There’s a certain satisfaction to creating and cooking delicious food with simple, traditional ingredients. Savor the festivity and beauty of this timeless season!
Fresh, flavorful and surprisingly simple to make, this cured salmon dish is an ultimate crowd-pleaser. Don’t get scared off by the “raw” look, it’s completely cured!
INGREDIENTS
2 slices baby salmon, skinless
1 cup kosher salt
TOPPINGS
Select to your liking from the below list:
Peeled jalapeno
Diced red onions
Diced cucumber
Diced radish
Supremed oranges
Olive oil
Black pepper
DIRECTIONS
1. Pat the salmon dry.
2. Place a large piece of plastic wrap on a flat surface, and pour a third of the salt over it.
3. Place the salmon on the salt, and completely cover with the rest of the salt.
4. Tightly wrap the fish in the plastic wrap.
5. Place the wrapped fish in a deep pan (as it may leak), and cure in the refrigerator for 24 to 36 hours.
6. After curing, wipe the salt off the fish with a paper towel (I don’t rinse it off).
7. Slice thinly. Arrange on a plate, add toppings, and sprinkle with olive oil.
8. Salmon can also be diced and used “herring style.”
Rich and creamy homemade potato soup is all you need to satisfy little ones and adults alike. The chicken soup and meat completes this dish and makes it a fantastic yomtovdig addition to any meal
3 large Spanish onions, sliced
3 T. olive oil
7 Idaho potatoes, cubed
2 lb. beef bones
2 lb. kolichel
6–8 cups chicken soup (to just cover potatoes)
1 T. black pepper
1 T. kosher salt or to taste
1. Saute the onions in the oil for 20 minutes until translucent and starting to brown at the edges.
2. Add the cubed potatoes, beef bones and kolichel. Add the chicken soup and pepper.
3. Bring to a boil, and simmer for 2 to 3 hours (or longer). Add salt to taste.
4. Remove the bones and meat from the pot, and blend the soup.
5. Shred the meat, and return to the soup.
Note: The soup gets salted only at the end because it cooks in the chicken soup which is salted. Season and adjust accordingly at the end as instructed.
This spice-rubbed meat is an absolute showstopper. Combine it with the sweet and tangy onion jam, and you’ll have a super flavorful dish that only uses minimal ingredients.
ROAST
1 large French roast
1 T. salt
1 T. black pepper
1 T. sugar
1 T. coffee
¼ cup olive oil
DIRECTIONS
1. Preheat the oven to 200°. Pat the roast dry.
2. Combine the spices in a bowl, and rub the mix into all sides of the meat.
3. Drizzle well with the olive oil.
4. Place in a deep pan, and bake uncovered for 10 hours, occasionally basting the juices.
ONION MARMALADE
8 red onions, sliced into half-circles
1 cup sugar
1 T. salt
1 tsp. black pepper, optional
1 tsp. lemon juice
DIRECTIONS
1. In a dry frying pan, saute the onions on medium-high heat, stirring constantly so they don’t burn.
2. After 15 minutes, once they start to brown, add 1 cup of sugar. Lower the heat to medium.
3. Mixing constantly, continue sauteing the mixture. The onions will release their juices, until a jam-like texture is achieved, approximately 25 more minutes.
This stunning dessert is so simple to make. It’s crunchy on the outside, smooth and velvety on the inside, and finished off with nutty praline.
4 eggs whites, at room temperature
1 cup sugar
2 tsp. potato starch
DIRECTIONS
1. Preheat the oven to 200°.
2. Beat the egg whites until foamy. Gradually add the sugar.
3. Beat for 5 for minutes until stiff peaks form.
4. Add potato starch.
5. Trace individual-sized circles on a baking sheet using a large cup.
6. Dollop approximately ¾ cup of pavlova mixture onto each circle shape, smoothing it out with a spatula.
7. Bake for 2 hours. Allow to cool in the oven.
4 cups raw hazelnuts
2 cups sugar
⅓ cup water
DIRECTIONS
1. Roast the hazelnuts on 375° for 15 to 20 minutes.
2. Meanwhile, in a medium saucepan, cook the sugar and water on low for 5 to 8 minutes until the sugar melts and starts to bubble. Increase the heat to medium, and cook the mixture until a caramel color is achieved.
3. Pour the caramel mixture over the nuts.
4. Cool completely. (You can save some caramelized nuts for toppings.)
5. Blend the nuts in a food processor on high speed until a paste is formed. This can take a while; keep blending until you reach a praline consistency.
6. To assemble pavlovas, heap a spoonful of praline onto the center of the pavlovas (or pipe with a piping bag), and top as desired with spun sugar, caramelized nuts and pomegranate arils.
Note: Store at room temperature, covered, until ready to serve. Assemble prior to serving.
As a well-deserved treat, or the perfect Yom Tov dessert, enjoy the quality cookies you love year-round — now kosher for Passover. Available in all Kosher supermarkets
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WEEK 3 OF 4
As you get ready to tackle your Pesach cooking, we are back with a four-week culinary collection of timeless Yom Tov classics developed by our beloved and unforgettable food columnist Leah Stern, a”h
The following recipes require a bit more time than putting up chicken and potatoes, but these are delicious options if you want a break from the standard Pesach fare.
A dark turkey specialty that serves as a great veal substitute for those who don’t use meat.
Serves 4
1 lb. dark turkey cutlets Salt Potato starch Oil or schmaltz
1 cup sauteed onions
2 T. grated horseradish
½ small knob celery
6 oz. chicken soup
DIRECTIONS
1. Cut each cutlet in half. Sprinkle with some salt, and dredge in potato starch.
2. Heat schmaltz or oil in a 10-inch frying pan, and sear cutlets for about 1 minute on each side.
3. Place onions in a pan. Top with cutlets and then horseradish. Slice knob celery, and add to the pan along with the chicken soup.
4. Simmer on a low flame for 2 to 2½ hours.
Treat your family to a merge of two Pesach favorites: chicken cutlets fried in latke batter. One year, our butcher was short on chicken schmaltz and sent duck fat instead. I dared to try it, and it was a hit with everything I cooked it with! This dish was especially enhanced by the delicate duck flavor. All you need is a scant amount of fat in a nonstick pan and a low flame.
INGREDIENTS
4 chicken cutlets
8 potatoes
8 eggs
4 tsp. salt
Oil or duck fat, for frying
DIRECTIONS
1. Cut each cutlet in half to obtain two thin slices. Then cut each one in half in the width.
2. Grate potatoes with a fine grater. Mix with eggs and salt.
3. Heat oil in a nonstick pan, drop some batter into the pan, and flatten to the size of a cutlet. Place cutlet over batter and cover with more batter.
4. Fry for approximately 7 to 8 minutes on each side. To prevent browning of potatoes, prepare in small batches as needed.
Moist, flavorful and elegant! For a simpler option that is also gourmet, stuff regular chicken bottoms with the filling recipe below.
INGREDIENTS
6 dark chicken capons
1 cup sauteed onions, divided
3 sweet potatoes, sliced
2 T. oil or schmaltz (plus some for rubbing)
Salt, to taste
Juice of 1 orange (⅓ cup)
Juice of half a grapefruit (⅓ cup)
2 T. shredded horseradish
DIRECTIONS
1. Heat half a cup of sauteed onions in a pan. Add sweet potatoes, and cook until soft. Mash very well with oil and some salt.
2. Rub the inside of the capons with some oil or schmaltz. Place 2 to 3 tablespoons of the sweet potato mixture onto each capon, and roll it up.
3. Place remaining sauteed onions into a 9x13-inch pan. Place capons seam side down onto onions, and rub tops with prepared horseradish. Pour juices over chicken.
4. Bake at 350° for 2 to 3 hours, or freeze and bake at a later point at 350° for 4 to 4½ hours.
Around the Kitchen Table, by Leah Stern, a”h, is available at your local Judaica store.
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Pickling is one of the oldest and most universal methods of food preservation. Long before the refrigeration, freezing or vacuum-sealing days, people found a simple, reliable way to extend the shelf life of their food: salt, water and patience.
As Pesach approaches, many families find themselves looking for fresh, natural foods that will last through Yom Tov and beyond. Pickling — whether it’s veggies, fruit or even fish — is a tradition that has stood the test of time, providing a flavorful and practical solution for generations.
In this feature, we’ll explore the fascinating history of pickling, the scientific and health benefits behind it, and some practical tips for those looking to bring pickling into their Pesach kitchens. Finally, we’ll provide a variety of kosher-for-Pesach recipes, both fermented and vinegar- or lemon juicebased, to enhance your Yom Tov meals.
Pickling is believed to date back more than 4,000 years, with the earliest known records coming from Mesopotamia (as in Avraham Avinu’s neighborhood) and the Indus Valley civilizations. These early cultures found that immersing food in a salty brine could preserve it for months, making it a crucial technique for survival in regions where food storage was a challenge.
The Egyptians (c. 2000 BCE) pickled vegetables, particularly cucumbers, and are believed to have introduced the technique to other Mediterranean cultures. (Not to mention the pickled locusts they tried
to make before Hashem swept them away. Rashi notes that after the plague of locusts, the Mitzriim attempted to pickle and preserve them for future consumption. However, their plans were thwarted when Hashem removed every last locust from Egypt, ensuring that no benefit could be derived from the makkah meant to punish them.)
The Chinese were pickling foods as early as 2000 BCE, using vinegar and fermentation to preserve everything from vegetables to eggs.
Ancient Greeks and Romans developed pickling further, both as a method of food preservation and as a source of flavor and health benefits. Roman emperors reportedly gave pickled foods to their soldiers, believing that they provided strength and endurance (halevai they hadn’t).
Indian cuisine has a long and rich tradition of pickling, particularly mangoes, lemons and chilies, often using oil and spices alongside the salt for preservation.
In Japan, pickling (or tsukemono) has been part of the cuisine for centuries, with vegetables fermented in rice bran, miso or salt. I once made miso and beet-juice-pressed pickled apple slices that were out of this world.
And, of course, kimchi, Korea’s famous pickled and
fermented dish, is made from Napa cabbage, radishes and other vegetables, preserved in a spicy, garlicky brine. Traditionally buried underground in clay pots to ferment, it has been a staple of Korean cuisine for centuries, valued for its bold flavor and probiotic benefits. By the Middle Ages, pickling had become an essential food preservation method across Europe, the Middle East and Asia. Sailors relied on pickled foods to sustain them on long journeys, and in many cultures, it became a culinary art form as well as a survival technique.
There are two primary methods of pickling:
FERMENTATION · Natural bacteria convert the sugars in vegetables into lactic acid, which preserves the food and gives it its distinct sour taste.
VINEGAR PICKLING · Instead of relying on natural bacteria, food is preserved using acidic vinegar, which inhibits spoilage and enhances flavor.
Both methods have been used for thousands of years, and both provide health benefits.
Yidden, like in many other cultures, turned to pickling out of necessity. In Eastern Europe, long, cold winters made fresh vegetables scarce, and so pickling became an essential part of preparing for the season. Cucumbers, cabbage (sauerkraut) and beets (borscht) were among the most commonly pickled foods, providing much-needed nutrition when fresh produce wasn’t available.
These traditions followed us across the sea. The influx of Eastern European Jewish immigrants to New York City in the late 19th and early 20th centuries brought with it a rich tradition of pickling, particularly in terms of cucumbers, to preserve vegetables for the harsh winters. On Manhattan’s Lower East Side, numerous pickle vendors established themselves selling their goods from barrels lining the streets. This area became so renowned for its pickles that it earned the nickname “Pickle Alley.”
Meanwhile, Sephardic and Middle Eastern Jewish communities developed their own pickling traditions. Moroccan and Yemenite Jews pickled carrots and turnips with harissa and cumin, while in the Ottoman Empire, pickled lemons became a staple in many Jewish households.
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Rich in nutrients: Unlike cooking, which can reduce vitamin content, pickling retains most of the vegetables’ nutrients.
Probiotics and gut health: Fermented foods contain beneficial bacteria that is said to aid digestion, improve gut health and support the immune system.
Hydration and electrolytes: The salt in pickling brine helps the body retain essential minerals, which can be especially
useful during hot weather or before fasting.
Blood sugar control: Some studies suggest that vinegarbased pickled foods can help regulate blood sugar levels, making them a useful dietary addition for those managing blood sugar concerns.
Natural food preservation: Unlike modern processed foods with artificial preservatives, pickling relies on natural methods to extend the shelf life of produce without chemicals.
Pickling has always been about making the most of what we have, whether by preserving a bumper crop, adding flavor to simple ingredients, or offering something tangy in a heavy Yom Tov meal.
On Pesach, when ingredient lists are shorter, homemade pickled foods bring a special heimishe taste to the Yom Tov menu. They’re easy to make, and if they happen to do our stomachs a favor along the way — well, that’s just good planning.
Note: All the herbs and spices are marked as optional. These will add flavor for those who use them on Pesach, but those who omit them for Yom Tov will get great results anyway.
Use pure kosher or sea salt; iodized salt can affect the fermentation process, so stick to pure, natural salts.
Filtered or bottled water is best; chlorinated tap water can kill beneficial bacteria.
Use glass jars over plastic; glass preserves flavor better and won’t leach chemicals into the brine. But plastic does the job, too.
Fermented cucumber pickles need three to seven days at room temperature before refrigeration.
Vinegar pickles can be eaten after 24 hours, but taste better after a few days.
Always keep foods submerged while pickling. If any pieces float above the brine, the food will spoil. I once found that out the hard way, when I decided to make a huge batch of pickled cucumbers for mishloach manos — cheap, easy and delicious. Not. A few cucumbers floated above the brine line, and spoiled and killed the whole batch.
A lightly sweet, tangy treat that pairs well with fish or can serve a side dish.
9 large carrots, peeled and sliced into thin rounds
1½ cups lemon juice (or apple cider vinegar for yearround use)
1½ cups water
3 T. kosher salt
6 T. sugar
1½ tsp. whole peppercorns
DIRECTIONS
1. Heat the lemon juice, water, salt and sugar in a pot until everything dissolves.
2. Pack the carrot slices into large jars, and add the peppercorns.
3. Pour the warm brine over the carrots and let cool.
4. Seal and refrigerate for at least 24 hours before serving.
Tip: For a spicier version, add sliced chili peppers or a pinch of red pepper flakes, if your family eats either of these on Pesach.
A vibrant addition to any Pesach meal, with a naturally sweet-tart flavor.
Note: Beets on Pesach are a wonder-food, counteracting the digestive challenges of matzah and heavy Yom Tov meals.
INGREDIENTS
9 medium beets, peeled and thinly sliced or cut into matchsticks
3 cups lemon juice (or apple cider vinegar for yearround use)
3 cups water
6 T. kosher salt
3 T. sugar
3 tsp. whole peppercorns
3 bay leaves (optional)
DIRECTIONS
1. Pack the sliced beets into large glass jars.
2. Heat the lemon juice, water, salt and sugar in a pot until dissolved.
3. Add peppercorns and bay leaves to glass jars. Pour the warm brine over the beets and spices, ensuring they are fully submerged.
4. Let cool to room temperature before sealing and refrigerating.
5. For best flavor, let sit for at least 48 hours before eating.
Tip: Save the deep crimson brine! It makes a great base for Pesach-friendly salad dressings.
Perfect for topping salads, fish or eggs.
INGREDIENTS
3 large red onions, thinly sliced
1½ cups lemon juice (or apple cider vinegar for yearround use)
1½ cups water
3 T. kosher salt
3 T. sugar
DIRECTIONS
1. Heat the lemon juice, water, salt and sugar until dissolved.
2. Pack the onion slices into large jars, and pour the brine over them.
3. Cool to room temperature, then refrigerate.
4. These will be ready to eat in 24 hours!
Tip: For extra spice, add a few slices of jalapeno pepper or a pinch of crushed red pepper flakes, if your family eats either of these on Pesach.
A Middle Eastern and Moroccan classic, these salt-preserved lemons add a deep, citrusy tang to fish, chicken or salads. Since they take time to ferment, prepare well in advance.
12 small lemons, quartered but left attached at the base (If your family minhag is to remove peels from food, you can remove the rind’s outer layer.)
¾ cup kosher salt
Juice of 6 additional lemons
1½ tsp. whole peppercorns (optional)
Thick slice of peeled turmeric root (optional, but adds a deep yellow color)
DIRECTIONS
1. Rub the salt into the cut lemons, and pack them tightly into a large glass jar or ceramic crock.
2. Add the peppercorns and turmeric (if using).
3. Squeeze in the extra lemon juice to cover the lemons as much as possible.
4. Seal and leave at room temperature for two weeks, shaking the jar daily.
5. After two weeks, refrigerate and use as needed. The rind is the part that is typically enjoyed.
Tip: To speed up the process, add a few tablespoons of warm water to help dissolve the salt.
A true fermented pickle — crunchy, probiotic-rich and naturally tangy.
INGREDIENTS
15 small cucumbers (kirby or Persian cucumbers work best)
12 cups filtered water
9 T. kosher salt
3 tsp. whole black peppercorns
6 bay leaves (optional)
9 cloves peeled garlic (optional)
3 large handfuls of fresh dill (optional)
DIRECTIONS
1. Dissolve the salt in the water.
2. Pack the cucumbers, peppercorns, garlic (if using), dill (if using) and bay leaves (if using) into large glass jars or a ceramic crock.
3. Pour the saltwater brine over everything, ensuring the cucumbers are fully submerged (use fermentation weights or a bag of water, if needed, to keep them down).
4. Cover loosely with a breathable cloth, and leave at room temperature for 5 to 7 days, checking daily to release any pressure buildup.
5. Once pickles reach desired tanginess, refrigerate to slow fermentation.
Tip: For extra-crisp pickles, add a grape leaf or an extra bay leaf or two, if using on Pesach. The tannins help preserve texture.
Unlikely yet real pickled foods from around the world
Pickles aren’t just about cucumbers and beets. Across the globe, people have been pickling all kinds of surprising things. For the adventurous, give these a try this Pesach — if you dare.
PICKLED EGGS · (UK and USA)
Found in old-fashioned pubs and general stores, these hard-boiled eggs are soaked in vinegar, salt and spices. Some versions use beet juice to give them a bright pink color.
PICKLED WATERMELON RIND · (Southern USA and Eastern Europe)
That’s right — the rind, not the fruit. Sweet, crunchy and slightly tangy, this old-school delicacy ensures nothing goes to waste.
PICKLED GRAPE LEAVES ·
They’re fermented or pickled to make them even more flavorful before use in dishes like dolmas (stuffed grape leaves).
PICKLED GREEN ALMONDS · (Middle East and Mediterranean)
Before almonds fully ripen, they have a soft, fuzzy exterior and a tart, juicy interior — perfect for pickling. The result is a crunchy, tangy snack.
PICKLED MANGO · (India and Caribbean)
Mango isn’t just for sweet dishes. In India and the Caribbean, it’s spiced and pickled for a sour, spicy and slightly sweet condiment.
PICKLED YOUNG PINE CONES · (Russia and Eastern Europe)
Yes, actual baby pine cones. When picked young, they’re soft enough to eat and are often fermented in honey or brine for medicinal syrups and snacks.
PICKLED CANTALOUPE · (USA and Eastern Europe)
A cousin of pickled watermelon rind, pickled cantaloupe combines sweet, salty and sour flavors in a way that’s surprisingly refreshing.
PICKLED TEA LEAVES · (Myanmar)
Called lahpet, these fermented tea leaves are a national delicacy in Myanmar, often mixed with garlic, peanuts and chili for a crunchy salad.
PICKLED WALNUTS · (UK and Italy)
Before walnuts fully ripen and harden, they’re soaked in brine and spices to create a rich, tangy, balsamic-like flavor.
I started making this on Pesach about ten years ago, and it became an instant classic with family and friends. The combination of sweet, sour and oily flavors, as well as the many onions, gives it the authentic herring-style geshmak
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1 lb. fresh boneless salmon side, skin on
¼ cup kosher salt
1 T. sugar
½ cup dry white wine (red will also do)
¼ cup freshly squeezed lemon juice
¼ cup light olive oil (or another neutral oil)
2 T. fresh dill, chopped (optional)
2–3 medium onions, thinly sliced into rings
1. Cure the salmon: Rub the salmon fillet on both sides with kosher salt and sugar. Wrap tightly in parchment paper, then plastic wrap. Place in a shallow dish, weigh it down with a heavy plate, and refrigerate for 48 hours, flipping once halfway.
2. Rinse and slice: After 48 hours, gently rinse off the salt under cold water and pat dry. Slice the salmon into thin strips or bite-sized pieces.
3. Prepare the marinade: In a bowl, whisk together the wine, lemon juice and oil. Stir in the chopped dill, if using.
4. Assemble and marinate: Layer the sliced onions generously with the salmon pieces in a glass jar or dish. Pour the marinade over everything, ensuring the fish and onions are fully submerged. Cover and refrigerate for at least 24 hours before serving to allow flavors to meld.
Notes:
The onions will absorb the briny, slightly sweet marinade and develop an amazing flavor. Don’t be surprised if your family members eat them straight from the jar!
The wine and lemon juice give the fish a balanced tanginess while keeping the flavors fresh and delicate. For a slightly sweeter version, add an extra ½ tablespoon of sugar to the marinade.
Best enjoyed within 5 days for optimal freshness (although some say that herring, like fine wine, only gets better with age).
Nesanel Yoel Safran is a writer, chef and student of Torah and life. You can read about all of this and more on his blog Soul Foodie (soulfoodiecom.wordpress. com) and contact him at soulfoodie613@gmail.com.
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Erev Pesach is a pretty intense season. This means that balabustas often rely on their spouses for help — sometimes with unexpected results.
SIX ACCOUNTS
Making Yom Tov for the first time was overwhelming. Naturally, I had a meticulously organized list, outlining which kitchen cabinets needed clean ing and when. But what good is an or ganized list when confronted with the whirlwind of a chaotic kitchen?
There were shmattes strewn across the floor, chairs and table. The strong scent of Mr. Clean and Fantastic filled the air, taunting me and urging me onward. But I remained frozen in the center of the kitchen, deliberately avoiding the sight of the fridge, freezer and oven, all of which needed clean ing today — the last day before play group ended until after Pesach. De feated, I sank into a chair draped with shmattes, wondering how I would ever accomplish it all.
“Everyone gets there,” my friend reassured me over the phone. I nodded glumly, thinking, Yes, but how? What gets neglected? And at what point will we even kasher?
My husband walked in, surveyed the scene, and retreated. Smart man, I
thought. He understands that bein hazmanim is for the beis medrash, not my tiny kitchen. Yet within two minutes, he returned, a man on a mission. Like the Cat in the Hat, he strode straight to the oven, sleeves rolled up, armed with a pail of Mr. Clean, St. Moritz and more shmattes
that he’d somehow unearthed.
And all the ragged, tired, weary woman of the house was able to do was gape.
“But I said I’ll help you,” he said, noticing my shocked face. “This is what I did for my mother when I helped her out every year for Pesach.”
I nodded dumbly as I watched him wrestle with a particularly stubborn patch of burnt… something.
Did husbands really do this — battle greasy, grimy, caked-on ovens and gas ranges? He even had experience with oven cleaning! This was wow. Just wow.
I made sure to express my gratitude profusely, but I suppose I’m fortunate; my husband cleans the oven for Pesach every year, and I definitely owe some credit to my motherin-law.
No cleaning lady. No wife-turnedshmatte. Just a helpful husband and an unexpectedly gleaming oven.
I MADE SURE TO EXPRESS MY GRATITUDE PROFUSELY, BUT I SUPPOSE I’M FORTUNATE; MY HUSBAND CLEANS THE OVEN FOR PESACH EVERY YEAR, AND I DEFINITELY OWE SOME CREDIT TO MY MOTHER-IN-LAW
TZIVY WAGNER
Like every chassidishe kallah, I was gifted the priceless chasan album, though back in the day, these albums were still (gasp) actual scrapbooks in the more practical sense of the word, complete with little add-on caption stickers like “Say cheese!” and “Precious child.”
Once I hit the teen section of the album, my young husband-to-be was showcased as quite the balabusta. He’d been captured on camera doing things like peeling potatoes, scrubbing counters, rolling out wafer cake, and making
In my childhood Erev Pesach memories, the picture of my father sitting at the dinette table, food processor in front of him and goggles over his eyes, features prominently.
Throughout the year, he rarely helped out in the kitchen; food prep was strictly my
HINDY KLEIN
mother’s domain. But come Pesach, preparing the bitter marror was a responsibility that rested very seriously on his shoulders, and on his shoulders alone.
Many Pesachs passed in this manner, and eventually, I got married. My husband doesn’t help out much in the kitchen either; his culinary skills are pretty much nonexistent. But still, the men prepare the marror, don’t they?
The first time we made Pesach, and a horseradish was delivered to our home along with the rest of our oversized grocery order, I handed the soil-covered vegetable to my husband along with a peeler.
He looked at me blankly. “What do I do with this?”
I shrugged. “Ask my father. Or yours. Doesn’t he do the marror ?”
My husband shook his head. “No. My mother does.”
“Well,” I said. “This is something my father does before Pesach. Let’s call him to get instructions.”
We did, and my husband, always a good sport, set out to peel the horseradish. The peeler sat awkwardly in his hand, as if the tool itself didn’t trust this strange hand to settle in comfortably, and ever so slowly, the outer layer of the horseradish was stripped away.
But the going was so slow, and the movements so irregular, it was painful to watch. I took over at some point — before handing it back to my husband with a flourish when it was all peeled.
“What now?” my husband asked.
“The food processor. My father said with the S blade.”
“With the what?”
“The S blade.”
By now I was getting impatient. And also possibly resentful. If my father was man enough to take care of the marror, why couldn’t my husband do it too? I was drowning in a mountain of other things to peel, saute, cook, freeze — not to mention clean! Couldn’t he keep his one-item list and figure it out?
I ended up preparing the marror. I was not a happy camper.
But by the time the next Pesach rolled around, I was a year older, a year wiser and a year more compassionate. My husband was amazing with the kids. He was a great sport when it came to helping me clean. So he couldn’t prepare the marror ? So what?
And it certainly wasn’t his fault that his shver did the marror every year, and that his wife had such specific expectations about it, was it?
No, I decided. And that was that. Today he’s still the man of the house, even though it’s me who shreds the marror to perfection.
Pesach lokshen. “Best helper!” gushed the scrapbook stickers.
I didn’t take it personally at all. I mean, this was all just for pics, right? In real life, the kitchen would be mine.
One thing I hadn’t known then was how wonderful a shvigger my mechuteniste was, already as a young mother. Because she taught her boys the way to the kitchen, not just the fridge. She put them to work at the counters for real, not only for the camera. She taught her sons that potatoes must be peeled, onions sauteed and Pesach lokshen fried if they wanted meals to happen. Her boys took to the kitchen with yeshiva bochurishe drive and creativity, peeling potatoes sitting down and commandeering the entire stovetop with multiple frying pans to make the lokshen more efficiently. So while I, as an unsuspecting teen, helped my own mother with Pesach kugels and cakes,
my future shvigger was guiding her sons toward helpful husbandhood.
Our first married Pesach at home, something strange happened. My husband was cracking eggs and whisking them, and even though I’d dutifully copied down a Pesach-lokshen recipe, he was following it. Not just helping, but taking responsibility for the whole thing, start to finish. I should say it was exhilarating, right? But it felt strange. How unwomanly of me, not to do all the cooking myself. The martyr in me fought for control… and lost.
Because who was I kidding? Small kids, huge responsibilities; all help is appreciated. I’ve grown into it by now, and no, I’ve never made a single egg loksh in my married life. Just call me a surrendered wife.
SHAYNA STEIN
Growing up, there was a clear division of labor in our home. My father earned a living, my mother took care of the house and children. They each worked long hours, shouldered a heavy burden, and they both felt they were partners in the project of running a Yiddishe home. In general, my father rarely helped out at home.
Like many young girls, I assumed my husband would be similar to my father. So I was shocked when my husband-to-be casually shared that he liked to cook. In fact, I didn’t quite know what to make of it. A man? Who liked to cook? Who knew how to cook?
Three weeks after our wedding, it became clear that it wasn’t just cooking. My brand-new husband came home to find me proudly washing the floors of our tiny rental. He took one look and said, “That’s not the way to do sponja.”
For a moment I was hurt, but then I graciously handed him the sponja stick and said, “Please, do it the right way.” And he did.
He’s been washing the floors weekly ever since, and I think he regrets ever making that comment. I’ve heard him jokingly (I hope!) tell chasanim to “be careful with what you offer during shanah rishonah; you might be stuck doing it for the rest of your life.”
My husband grew up as one of six boys, and my mother-in-law educated her sons that cleaning (bathrooms in particular) is a man’s job and not befitting for women. My sisters-in-law and I are supremely grateful. Mothers of boys, take note!
Come Pesach, I’m still surprised, grateful and glad that he feels it is his job to line the counters and stove, and then peel the potatoes. Looking back at my childhood home, I don’t know how my mother made Pesach all by herself.
I’m trying to raise my children, boys and girls alike, with the feeling that the house belongs to have a responsibility to keep it running — even more so around Pesach time. I appreciate my mother-in-law’s wisdom in teaching her sons to roll up their sleeves and take an active part in caring for their mikdash me’at.
SANDY ELLER
Goggles? Check.
Plastic containers? Check. Gloves, massive foil pan, mixing spoon? Check, check, check.
That’s how things go in our house a few nights before Pesach when everything comes to a standstill for the ceremonial production of Zaidy Baum’s chrein, an annual tradition that has been going on in my husband’s family for I-don’tknow-how-long.
The first time I saw chrein being made was shortly after I started making Pesach, when my father-in-law showed up armed with father-in-law’s recipe. The only two things I remember about that night are the horse radish root breaking my food processor’s blade, and beets splattering all over my kitchen walls.
Eventually my husband took over the chrein-making duties, albeit with a new food processor. It was a ritual that had him donning goggles to keep the tear-inducing fumes at bay as he shoved chunks of oversized horseradish root into the food processor, with one of the kids assisting as he mixed everything together in the aforementioned foil pan until it looked (and tasted) just right.
With an average yield of over ten pounds of chrein, my husband delighted in sharing his handiwork with friends, relatives and neighbors. He would lovingly spoon it into containers as I feverishly rearranged my freshly-cleaned refrigerator to accommodate them all, secretly cringing because they were being stored upside down to ensure the juice was evenly distributed, and twenty-cent deli containers aren’t exactly leakproof.
Over the years, we’ve had some memorable moments. There was the time my husband took a long thin beet tail and tucked it under the door to the basement. Calling one of our teenage daughters into the kitchen, my husband suddenly stopped and pointed to the trailing wisp: “A mouse!” She shrieked and jumped onto a chair, and he burst out laughing.
That same sense of humor is evident on every container of chrein that bears a sticker that reads “Chreino sinus cleaner — also good on fish,” because, let’s face it, horseradish is powerful stuff. For a while I had quite the collection of large pareve Pesach’dik knives, because my husband bought a new one each year until he found one that could actually cut through the super-tough roots.
Of course, my husband glows with pride when people come back for seconds on Chol Hamoed. At that point, the beet juice usually has (mostly) faded from his hands and my refrigerator shelves, and I can appreciate the fact that, like his father before him, my husband is the family chrein-maker.
Which of my kids is going to don the goggles and make Zaidy Baum’s chrein for the next generation? To be honest, I have no idea, but kids, if any of you are reading this, chop the horseradish into pieces before you put it into the food processor, and be careful with those beets. Or give me a call, and I can tell you how to clean beet juice off your kitchen walls.
CHANA HINDY SCHECHTER
One of my earliest memories is of my father’s desperate attempt, in a time of acute necessity, at making pasta. When the pot scorched to ugly black cinders, he was surprised to learn that water was needed to actually get the pasta to cook.
So when I got married, I was fully expecting to shoulder all the housework alone. I was shocked to learn, in one of our newlywed DMCs, that my father-in-law was the one who took charge of all the heavy Pesach cleaning.
We did it together the first year, smiling and joking as we scrubbed tiles and emptied drawers, spraying and mopping and obviously taking elaborate snack breaks often enough. The second year we were married, we had another noisy family member added to the mix. It was then, in the hectic firstbaby chaos, that I learned an interesting truth: My husband had golden, nimble hands, had been scouring and kashering for years, and actually enjoyed getting things done. I watched in relief as the house transformed under his focused touch. He had plenty of tricks and shticks under his belt, and his clarity in halacha didn’t hurt either. It was the blessing I needed, the space to care for my little blonde baby who just wanted his mommy to hold him all day.
The next few years brought us a bounty of blessing. With four lively kinderlach under the age of five, life was incredibly hectic. I was so grateful, but so, so overwhelmed. And so tired and weepy.
Slowly — far from my ideal, but born of little other choice — my husband took over Pesach. He did everything: from the shopping and cleaning all the way to the kashering. I joined the ranks of fathers and teenage girls who traipsed around town with kids in tow, to shops, bakeries and parks. Part of this time was sacred, golden, set apart for the joy of our life, my husband’s rigorous Torah learning. The other part of the time, my husband listened to shiurim as he steadily worked through our to-do list. He relished the quiet, and I relished the results.
When he was finally done, the house sparkled. Now I was ready to start the balabusta marathon, whipping up Pesach deli cacies in my silver foil kingdom.
This was a new system for me. Different, yes. I hope that one day I’ll resume the role of chief executive cleaner, or at least take over some part of it. But for now, I am grateful and comforted that My Father had it all planned for me, with my husband right at my side.
Expanded Kosher L'pesach section All Kosher L'Pesach medications are marked
Special kosher l'pesach questions for Maple Pharmacy customers: Week of pesach from Sunday - Thursday from 6:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Space. Space. Space. We all need space. We need living space. We need personal space. But the most important space in a Yiddishe home is… refrigerator and freezer space! Shabbosos, Yomim Tovim and just about every day, we rely on our refrigerators and freezers even more than we do on our cleaning ladies.
Still, choosing the perfect refrigerator can give us the chills. With a plethora of models boasting countless features, it’s normal to feel confused. Here, some women share what they love about their configurations and why.
Compare the various models, and find the one that suits your kitchen and lifestyle needs best.
Stay-at-home mother of 5
I absolutely love my sideby-side refrigerator and freezer. It’s super functional for my stage and keeps everything really organized. There are three big drawers on the bottom, and the shelf space is laid out so well that I always find what I need without digging through piles of stuff. I’m also on the shorter side, so I keep all the things I use most often on the lower shelves on both sides.
I wish it had smaller compartments for things like garlic or half peppers, but at one point I purchased some refrigerator organizers, which solved the problem. Another thing I don’t love about it is that before Shabbos and Yom Tov, we have to switch it to holiday mode, which is one more step to remember on an already very busy erev
M.L.
Mother of 8, grandmother of many
My side-by-side refrigerator and freezer is fabulous for organization purposes. It has great drawers and shelves, which help me always know what’s in them, and the shelves on the door are deep as well. I can fit mayonnaise and even my cornflake crumbs (yes, I keep that in the refrigerator — so much fresher!) on the door.
Nevertheless, as someone who cooks and hosts a lot, I find that I can use a refrigerator that can fit roaster pans or cookie sheets, and my model does not.
Working mom of 3 boys
One of my favorite things about the freezer on top and the refrigerator on the bottom is that the kids can easily grab their water bottles without schlepping chairs or asking for help. I also don’t have to worry about jars smashing onto the floor. When I pull frozen containers out of a top freezer, they sometimes come tumbling down, and I always wonder, “Would I have the same issue with jars if my refrigerator were on top?” Then again, maybe it has to do with overstuffing my freezer and not about the location of it as much.
Having the freezer at eye level is so much easier for organizing, too. It maximizes space and allows me to keep everything neatly sorted without having to crouch down or rummage through things.
Mother of 4 little kids
So, you want to hear about my freezer? Well, first, what kind of kids do you have? Mine are the hang-outin-the-refrigerator type. They open the bottom refrigerator and practically climb inside. If my freezer were on the bottom, they’d probably freeze!
That said, I do appreciate that they can grab a fruit or a drink on their own from a young age. Not everyone gives that kind of independence, but I don’t mind — for refrigerator items, at least. Frozen foods, like prepped suppers? That’s another story. Also, I’d rather save my bending down for picking up their toys (yes, I do wish they’d do it themselves).
One thing I dislike about my freezer is that everything gets an awful freezer taste practically within five minutes. I’m not sure whether this has to do with the freezer’s location, but for long-term freezing, I only use my deep freezer. I can prep stuffed cabbage for Simchas Torah and enjoy it on Purim. No freezer taste, ever.
Each pastry is individually wrapped for maximum freshness and minimum crumbling.
Available in all Kosher supermarkets
Nutritionist and mother of 3
I absolutely love this refrigerator and freezer combo. My favorite feature is the ice maker, which feels like a real luxury! A press of a button, and I have a coffee-shop-level cold cuppa. The refrigerator itself is really well-designed with wide shelves and two deep drawers, plus plenty of door storage for easy access to everything.
The freezer has two deep pull-out drawers, which are great for storing a lot of food, but they can be a bit tricky to keep perfectly organized due to their depth. Nonetheless, I highly recommend this configuration!
Teacher and mother of 8
Having gone through every type of fridge/freezer, I definitely prefer the freezer on the bottom. My refrigerator stays much cleaner and more organized, and since I use it way more often than the freezer, there’s a lot less bending down. I never bump my head reaching for things, and I always have a clear view of what’s inside, so I know exactly what we have and what we need. Plus, the little ones can’t just pull yogurts out whenever they want.
The downside is that with the freezer on the bottom, the kids can easily take things out of there, but this issue exists with a side-by-side option too. I do have to be mindful and keep the ices in a different freezer.
Also, the bottom freezer has two huge drawers, which can get a little messy and harder to keep neat. So I use it for big items like challahs, breads and cakes, and keep the smaller things in my other freezer that has more compartments.
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Occupational therapist, mother of 3 kids
I have a four-door with the freezer on the bottom. You can fit way more in the refrigerator when everything is at eye level! It stays so much more organized, and since I use my refrigerator way more than my freezer, it’s great that everything is easy to find.
The freezer is actually bigger than my standalone freezer, because this appliance is super deep. Another cool feature is that you can even convert a half of the freezer into extra refrigerator space if needed.
I will mention one downside: When making a sheet cake, I can’t freeze it without cutting it first, which can be pretty annoying.
Work-from-home
mother of 8 kids
I love, love, love my four-door! It’s super organized for both the refrigerator and freezer. Due to the amazing configuration, I find I can fit way more inside than other refrigerator/freezers the same size. The plastic parts are very strong, do not break and are a breeze to clean!
To help you make an informed decision, we reached out to Zalman Friedrich from Sucasa to gather insight on the different types of refrigerators and freezers available. Zalman is an industry expert with extensive experience in the appliance field.
Below are some of the key differences between the four types of refrigerator configurations:
Available in 36” and 33” sizes
Top sellers: GE, LG and Samsung
PROS:
Larger freezer capacity
Easier to organize freezer space
More shelving in the freezer compared to a French door freezer
Ideal for smaller spaces
Offers a sleek, functional design
CONS:
The divider reduces overall storage space
Limited shelf space for large items like baking pans
Extends further out into kitchen space due to greater depth
Most traditional, old style
Available in 30”/28”/24”
Cubic measure is 14’/18’/21’
PROS:
Long-lasting due to fewer components and features
Easy to organize, with easy access to the freezer
Freezer frosts less, requiring less frequent defrosting
Cheaper repairs and part replacements
CONS:
Fewer cubic feet
Standard kitchen refrigerator openings (36”) don’t align with top-freezers (usually 33”), leaving a gap
Harder to access items in the refrigerator.
Lower standard aesthetics
LG and Samsung models often have Shabbos mode issues, requiring manual checks.
Top sellers: GE and LG
PROS:
Refrigerator is easy to access and organize
Maximizes usable space
Aesthetically pleasing design
CONS:
Freezer is difficult to organize
Extends further out into kitchen space due to greater depth
Kids can easily access the freezer
Top sellers: Samsung, GE and LG
PROS:
Sleek and aesthetically pleasing design
Superior freezer compared to French door models
The fourth door can be converted into additional refrigerator space
CONS:
Some freezer space is lost due to the bottom divider
Expensive repairs due to mechanical complexity
High cost (almost double than that of a regular French door model)
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Approved by both moms and kids.
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Note: These chairs have all been covered in white chair covers, but your chairs can be beautified without them.
Upgrade your Seder table with these DIY additions to your chairs. These designate a seat for each family member and give the chairs a majestic and regal appearance in honor of Pesach. Choose the design that suits your style, or let your teen’s creativity grace your table.
• 12-inch-wide white satin ribbon
• 4-inch-wide white satin ribbon
• Plastic hanging propagation vases
• 4-inch acrylic discs
• 1-inch-wide white ribbon
• Cricut-cut sticker names of all family members (or any stickers)
• Flowers
• Scissors
These are all available on Amazon.
1. Unroll the 12-inch ribbon, and drape it across the back of your chair. Gather it to the side, and cvut the ribbon so that it hangs half an inch off the floor.
2. Take the 4-inch ribbon, and tie a knot to gather the hanging ribbons to the side of the chair. Leave it long enough to tie a bow.
3. Place the name stickers on the acrylic disc, and thread a 1-inch ribbon through the hole of the disc. Tie the disc and the propagation vase filled with flowers to the knot of the 4-inch ribbon.
4. Complete the bow of the 4-inch ribbon.
• White leather/vinyl fabric
• 4-inch-wide white satin ribbon
• 8x10-inch acrylic sheets
• 1-inch-wide white ribbon
• Cricut-cut sticker names of all family members and family name initial (or any stickers)
• Flowers
• Scissors
• Glue gun
These are all available on Amazon.
1. Measure the width and length of the back of your chair. Cut a piece of white leather fabric to the correct width and length so that it hangs over the back of the chair and falls evenly in the front and back. This will serve as the base of the chair pocket.
2. Cut a rectangle out of the white fabric. The rectangle should be the width of your chair and measure 7 inches tall. Glue the rectangle onto the bottom side of the base piece to create the pocket.
3. Line the top lip of the pocket with a piece of 1-inch white ribbon. Cut additional pieces of white ribbon, and fold them in smaller increments to create the bow design on the lip of the pocket.
4. Place the name stickers on the upper side of the acrylic sheet. Place the acrylic sheet inside the pocket on the left side, and glue a seam down right past the edge of the acrylic sheet to ensure the pocket does not sag.
5. Place the family name initial on the lower right corner of the pocket.
6. Glue a 4-inch ribbon on the inner sides of the pocket base at the height of the lip of the pocket where the 1-inch bow design was placed.
7. To secure the pocket to the chair, drape the leather pocket base over your chair, and tie the ribbons on each side
8. Fill the empty half of the pocket with your favorite flower arrangement. Place the flowers in water tubes to keep them fresh.
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Week 1: March 16 – 20
Getting started Bedrooms Linen closet
Week 2: March 23 – 27
Playroom Laundry room Bathrooms
Week 3: March 30 – April 3
Kitchen, Part 1 Dining room Coat closet
Week 4: April 6 – 10
Kitchen, Part 2 Car Outdoors
Wrap Up
Last-minute reminders
We’re back and ready to tackle another week of deep cleaning! Getting there is getting real…
There’s an expression many of us use that your average person on the street wouldn’t understand: “Did you turn over yet?” “When will we turn over?”
Turning over: the process of switching a kosher kitchen from chametz to Pesach, often accompanied by a 75-degree tilt of mess and stress.
My question to you is, does it really need to be that way? Does a house really need to feel like total chaos in order to get to Pesach?
(If you’re one of the lucky homemakers among us who has a separate Pesach kitchen, good for you! You might not feel Turn Over Syndrome as intensely, but I suspect a peek into your kitchen will reveal a fair share of mess anyway.)
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WEEK 1 WEEK 2 WEEK 3
Which brings to mind another famous expression: “Destruction is essential to construction.”
In many homes, this week is a great demonstration of that. In my house, for example, things that are generally inside my pantry are now outside, and you enter the kitchen at your own risk. Make sure not to trip over the vacuum cleaner.
Ironically, cleaning makes a big mess. But there must be ways to minimize the stress involved. How can we make the process more comfortable for ourselves and for all the people who share our home?
To me, one of the biggest challenges is having all helpers keep pace when working as a team. My kids might be great at emptying and scrubbing out the pantry closet, but I really want to (or need to) be the one to decide whether some of the things go back inside. So those things pile up, and working through all that clutter is a challenge.
So although you may be kneedeep in another project — perhaps in the Pesach kitchen, in the grocery store, or on the other side of your kitchen — try to devote some of your time to taking care of the loose ends inevitably left over by others’ involvement. Go through those things before they pile up too high.
If the house stays somewhat neat even while it’s being pulled apart, it will reflect positively on those around you, and give you a clearer and happier frame of mind as you keep on going.
So, let’s get started!
Back to the heart of the home — the kitchen!
WEEK 4 WEEK 5
I love this part. There’s something exciting about preparing to actually bring Pesach in. Once the heavy stuff is done, it’s so much easier to focus on cooking.
Since we’ll be using the fridge over Pesach, this is one place we want to clean really well.
Make sure to unplug or at least turn the machine off. Remove all drawers and shelves that can be taken out easily, and wash them.
Inside the fridge: Some suggest a paste of baking soda and water to treat tough stains. I personally prefer Soft Scrub to bleach down the interiors. Rinse well so not a trace of bleach remains to avoid having the odor seeping into your food.
It’s important to dry all surfaces after rinsing.
Use a damp cloth to wipe down the rubber seals around the door. You may want to use Q-tips or a toothbrush to get the crumbs out. Same goes for hinges or other hardware.
With the fridge done, we’ll be ready to bring Pesach groceries in!
The best tip for keeping your oven or stove clean is to wipe down spills after every use. Once hardened, it’s much harder to remove them. But practically speaking, how can you get rid of those stubborn stains and grime?
The self-clean feature is amazing — if you’ve got it. If you don’t, you’ll need to use a little more elbow grease.
First, you might want to try a DIY steam cleaning: Place a bowl of boiling water into the oven. Let it steam for a few minutes, and then wipe the oven clean. (My oven still needs a fair share of scrubbing afterward.)
Baking soda paste works wonders. Apply to the area, let sit (even for several hours), and then rinse. For a deep, pre-Pesach clean, you’ll probably want to use a commercial cleaner as well.
I use a magic sponge with oven cleaner since it isn’t abrasive and usually does the trick.
The easiest way to clean oven racks is by soaking them in a soapy solution for several hours before tackling the stains one at a time. (Hopefully there won’t be much grime left after that.)
Leave the oven on at high heat for about a half hour to get rid of all the fumes before using with food again.
If you plan to use your pantry on Pesach, you should be able to empty it and keep it that way. Clean it, line it, and you’ll be ready to unload your Pesach groceries!
Find alternate storage space to host any emptied or not-for-Pesach bins.
Some more heavy work! These will be used on Pesach together with food, so they require extra care.
Wash the table top and sides. Don’t forget to clean the legs or base!
If you’ve got little kids — even well-brought-up ones — you may be surprised by the stuck-on food remnants you’ll find on the underside of the table.
Vacuum chairs well. Use toothpicks, Q-tips, or a toothbrush, if you’d like, to get out the crumbs that made themselves comfortable between the seat and bars.
To get your chairs extra sparkling, spot clean stains, then wash and dry the rest of the seat and legs.
Upholstered chairs can be washed down with detergent or upholstery cleaners.
Don’t use hot water — it may set stains more deeply.
The only thing left is the floor! Perform a careful sweeping and/or vacuuming, with special attention to all corners, cracks and crevices, and then wash.
(If you have a willing crew, you can even try tackling the grout between tiles. I found that regular floor cleaner and magic sponge did wonders.)
You’ll need to give the floor a fresh wash right before Yom Tov, but the heavy work will be out of the way.
Don’t rub the fabric too strongly — it may get damaged or discolored.
Don’t use too much water — oversaturating can spread stains.
Don’t use heat to dry the area after cleaning.
Consider pretreating your fabric chairs with an upholstery protector, such as Scotchgard, to minimize stains.
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Cleaning the car for Pesach is the men’s department. Leave it to them, and if they’re too lazy to get it done, they can always hire someone to do it.
What needs to be done outside is individual to your home. If you use your porch for storage, you’ll find more to do here. The main thing is to make sure there’s no chametz present, though you can always use this opportunity to tidy up!
making
This was a heavy week, but the good news is that we’re just about done with the shmattes. Next week, we’ll be wrapping up all the last-minute details and get ready for the big day. CONGRATULATIONS TO
I completed Week 4 of The Monsey View’s Annual Pesach Cleaning Challenge!
Name: ______________________________________________________________________
Phone: ______________________________________________________
Please submit this form by Monday, April 21, for a chance to win $200 at Bais Hasforim!
Email: contest@themonseyview.com Fax: 845-600-8483
Enjoy our fresh, soft and delicious mini muffins and cupcakes on Pesach and year-round.
Comes in four different flavors:
Available in all Kosher supermarkets
This week and next week, extra crews will be out in full force — collecting garbage, sweeping streets, and keeping our neighborhoods spotless!
GARBAGE PICKUPS EVERY SINGLE DAY
LITTER PATROL ON THE GROUND
EXTRA STREET SWEEPING
Place your bulk items out NOW — don’t wait until the last minute! FINAL DAY to put out bulk items is Thursday, April 10th 6:00am.
Friday, April 11 –There WILL be regular garbage pickup.
Shabbos Hagadol (April 12) – There will be an extra special pickup.
Need to schedule a bulk pickup? Call Ramapo DPW: 845-357-0591 ext. 620
Or call Yossi Margareten at 845-357-5100 x433 or email Margarettenj@ramapo.org
PLEASE REMEMBER: Hazardous Household Waste including paints, batteries, cleaning products, pesticides, uorescent bulbs, and electronics — must be taken to the County’s Household Waste Facility in Pomona. TIRES may NOT be left out without a proper sticker from the Town Clerk’s Of ce.
Let’s work together to make Ramapo shine this Yom Tov!
There is a Halachic difference between the prohibition of eating chometz and the prohibition of owning chometz.
The prohibition of eating chometz is very stringent. It is forbidden to eat even the tiniest amount of chometz. And on Pesach itself, batel b'shishim doesn't apply. However, food that is prepared before Pesach does have the leniency of batel b'shishim, where chometz is nullified when dissolved in food that is sixty times greater in volume. This is one reason many people like to do as much cooking as possible before Pesach.
The prohibition of owning chometz is far less stringent.
According to Torah Law, the prohibition of owning chometz requires us to verbally nullify all chometz belonging to us or to remove chometz which is a k’zayis or larger. (A k’zayis is around ⅓ oz –1 oz in weight or approximately the volume that would fit in a small matchbox.) According to Rabbinic Law (D'Rabbanan), we must do both, nullify the chometz and remove chometz which is a k’zayis or larger. The prohibition of owning chometz does not require us to remove chometz smaller than a kezayis.
(Chometz the size of a k’zayis which can't be removed and is inedible to a dog is not considered chometz and does not need to be removed. “The requirement for chometz to actually be inedible to a dog only applies to a k’zayis.” (Magen Avraham; Mishnah Berurah).
Chometz that is smaller than a k’zayis but larger than a crumb i.e. an identifiable food (ex: a wafer, a half of a cookie, a small pretzel) should also be removed.
Chometz crumbs, according to the Gemara, are inherently nullified (Pesachim 6b). Removal of chometz crumbs is required only when there is a fear that a person may come to eat them, such as where the crumbs could get into the Pesach food or onto the table, or adhere to one's hands or be picked up by a young child or crawling toddler.
There is no need to clean places where chometz is not brought in during the year.
Books: Books that will be brought to the table on Pesach must be thoroughly cleaned of crumbs and sticky residue – or should be
new. (Since siddurim are often kept on the table during the year, many people like to buy new siddurim, which they use only on Pesach). If seforim or books are not brought to the table, they do not need to be cleaned or inspected at all. One who davens or learns on Pesach from uncleaned seforim should clean their hands before handling food.
Zemiros/Bentchers: Zemiros and bentchers that were used together with chometz often have crumbs in them and should not be used on Pesach. They should be placed in a closed closet. (There is no obligation to clean or sell them, but rather to put them away so that they do not contact our food on Pesach).
Toys & Games: Toys and games that will be used on Pesach should be cleaned thoroughly so that no crumbs or sticky residue gets on our hands. If they will not be used on Pesach, it is enough to place them in a closed closet.
Clothes: Clothes that will be worn should have their pockets checked for crumbs. Clothes that won't be worn on Pesach, but that occasionally have chometz in their pockets, need a quick check to see that they do not contain larger pieces of chometz. Since they are not going to be worn, any small crumbs do not have to be removed (since there is no prohibition to own them during Pesach).
Light switches/Door handles: Light switches and door handles may need washing/wiping as needed, because people often touch them after handling food. The same applies to (hair brushes) pens, phones, etc.
Toaster: Since it is not used on Pesach, it is enough to just shake out the loose crumbs and put it away in a closed closet together with the other chometz utensils.
Pots: There is no obligation to scrub them. They can just be placed in a closed closet. Some have a minhag to clean their pots more thoroughly. (According to halacha, chometz smaller than a k’zayis that is stuck on a pot is nullified to the pot and considered part of the pot.)
Floors: Floors should be swept or vacuumed. Vacuuming a carpet cleans it sufficiently (since any remaining crumbs are not fit for eating).
The Chazon Ish (122:8) quotes the Vilna Gaon that crumbs caught between the floorboards do not have to be removed. Even if there are many crumbs that add up collectively to a k’zayis, they are not a problem halachically, because they are dried out and unappetizing.
The following is written in Shulchan Aruch Harav (433:19):
“The main reason to physically remove chometz, even though one is going to nullify it, is to prevent a person from eating it.”
All these instructions should not be taken to exempt family members from helping to make the house clean and shining, as well as kosher for Pesach. It is indeed part of the signature of Pesach to have a home that is extra-special clean. The wholehearted participation—without criticism—of family members makes a big difference and brings much joy to the Yom Tov.
It is a heilige minhag throughout the generations to clean the house more than it is obligatory. At the same time, each person must be very careful to do so in accordance with his or her strength and ability. Each person must do so only up to where it does not take away from health, safety, and joy in the Yom Tov.
May we be zoche to prepare for Pesach without any stress or fear, but with anticipation, and with happiness and excitement. May we merit the coming of Moshiach, speedily in our days, Amen. Wishing everyone a Kosher and Happy Pesach!
(The above information is based primarily on the writings of Rabbi Elozar Barclay and Rabbi Yitzchok Jaeger, authors of Guidelines – Over Five Hundred of the Most Commonly Asked Questions About Pesach (Menucha Press) and Rabbi Zev Smith of Irgun Shiurei Torah.)
Reviewed and Approved by Rabbi Yitzchok Jaeger
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I THINK WE’VE HAD ENOUGH BOOMBOOMS FOR TODAY.
ZUSHA… WERE WE MEANT TO FIND OUT YOU’RE ALIVE ONLY TO LOSE YOU AGAIN?!
RECAP: PEDRO AND ZUSHA FIND THEMSELVES TRAPPED UNDER THE RUBBLE. PEDRO GLOATS OVER THE TREASURE HE FOUND… UNTIL HE REALIZES IT CONTAINS ONLY A GEAR.
ZUSHA! IS THAT REALLY YOU? HOW?! RIBONO SHEL OLAM! HOW?!
ARE YOU PLANNING TO CAUSE TROUBLE AGAIN? TRY TO TAKE THE HOUSE? OR BLOW IT UP? BECAUSE NOW THAT YOU ALREADY DID BLOW IT UP, IT’S NOT EXACTLY YOUR HOUSE ANYMORE. …BUT NEW REALIZATIONS LINGER.
I’LL TELL YOU ON THE WAY HOME. I’D LOVE TO SEE OUR NEW HOUSE.
YOU MEAN MY HOUSE. YOU TOOK MY HOME AWAY FROM ME.
SHEVY HOLLANDER
A woodpecker has a very long and barbed tongue that both helps it extract insects from trees and protects its brain from concussions by wrapping itself around the back of its skull when it pecks.
The word quinoa is pronounced with a long e sound (KEENwa), although many incorrectly use the short i sound (as in KINwa).
Use the following letters to list 5 words, each using 7 letters and up. Only the center letter must be used, and letters can be repeated. Bonus points for pangrams (words that use all seven letters).
R L T G I E H
Find a common factor for this group of four words
1. Vowels
2. Stars
3. Senses
4. Great Lakes
Fly Geyser in Nevada is an unusual sight, with multiple openings and extraordinary surroundings.
Algae (which flourish in moist and hot environments) have colored the rocks in these brilliant hues. MARK
SNAPSHOTS OF THE WORLD’S BEAUTY
I’M A SIX-LETTER WORD. MY FIRST THREE LETTERS REFER TO AN AUTOMOBILE, AND MY LAST THREE LETTERS REFER TO A HOUSEHOLD ANIMAL. MY FIRST FOUR LETTERS ARE THE NAME OF A FISH, BUT I’M FOUND IN YOUR HOUSE. WHAT AM I?
Answer: Carpet.
THINK OF THE LINK
Find a common factor for this group of four words:
1. Tie
2. Fan
3. Kerchief
4. Lace
These are all words that can follow the word “neck.”
PANGRAMS:
Where in Tehillim can you find a word that has five מs?
Jentacular is a pretty cool and somewhat useless adjective whose definition is “pertaining to breakfast.” I think coffee is, hands down, the most popular jentacular beverage.
The state of Wyoming has only two pairs of escalators, both in the city of Casper. Vermont is not too far ahead, with just four pairs of escalators in the entire state. SO RANDOM!
WALTER ORTHMANN, A 100-YEAR-OLD BRAZILIAN MAN, HAS BROKEN THE GUINNESS WORLD RECORD FOR THE LONGEST TIME A PERSON HAS WORKED AT ONE COMPANY. HE HAS BEEN EMPLOYED AT THE SAME TEXTILE COMPANY, RENAUXVIEW, FOR 84 YEARS.
We welcome town trivia, historical facts and photos, and Torah-themed riddle submissions. We’d also love to hear if you have additional answers to our puzzles! Email comments@themonseyview.com to add your very own bits of wits. Please include your name and contact information.
Thank you to the hundreds of readers who sent in beautifully colored pages! Keep coloring!
1. Gather round the table to play a family game of Boggle, using this Boggle board.
2. Once you have a winner, fill out the form below in its entirety
3. Email the form to comments@ themonseyview.com or fax to 845600-8483 by Sunday at midnight.
4. Two winners will be drawn each week, each of whom will win a pastrami sandwich and a can of soda!
Find words on the board containing four letters or more. Letters of a word must be connected in a chain (each letter should be adjacent to the next either vertically, horizontally or diagonally), and each letter can only be used once in a given word.
The following are not allowed in Boggle: Adding “s” to a word • Proper nouns • Abbreviations • Contractions • Acronyms
POINTS
4-letter words: 2 points | 5-letter words: 3 points | 6-letter words: 5 points | 7-letter words: 7 points | 8-letter words: 9 points | 9+ letters: 12 points
HINT
Each Boggle board hides a word of nine letters or more!
N D O E V A H T P R
L K B C T P E R S E
G M A U L
Full mailing address:
Full name of winner:
Amount of points:
Full names of competing players:
List some words only the winner found:
WINNER 1
FAMILY NAME: Rubin, 845-xxx-5788
NAME OF WINNER: Meir Rubin
AMOUNT OF POINTS: 111
NAMES OF COMPETING PLAYERS: Eli, Yitzy, Meir, Daddy, Mommy
SOME WORDS ONLY THE WINNER FOUND: wash, hard, water, lice THE LONGEST WORD FOUND ON
straw
thaw
WINNER 2
FAMILY NAME: Gross, 845-xxx-5479
NAME OF WINNER: Chany
AMOUNT OF POINTS: 60
NAMES OF COMPETING PLAYERS: Sruly
SOME WORDS ONLY THE WINNER FOUND: clash, water, share, steal THE LONGEST WORD FOUND ON THE BOARD: water
Filling in lines with
as
Grab a pack of color pencils or gel pens to find out why coloring isn’t only for children!
DOONA STROLLER
Doona Stroller, multiple colors avail.cll/txt 1-201-6144045
NEOCATE/BABY FORMULA
Neocate $46.99 per can. Kendamil Similac L’Mehadrin in stock!! We buy off any formula for a good price and trade as well. Call for other types of formulas. New! Option of shipping case of 6 Kendamil directly to you from England. Formula Trade 347.369.4886
BEBE ORGANIC SET
Looking to sell a natural color bebe organic set, size 3 mths, with matching bonnet and blanket, beautiful for vachnacht. Please call 347 382 0905
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
A local pizza shop up for sale, located in the heart of Monsey (on route 59). Call 516-780-1145
MUTSY EVO STROLLER SALE
Brand new, Mutsy EVO European gray strollers- Only $125! Regular $400. (Must remove the seat from frame to fold.) Dozens of satisfied customers. For more info/pics Text/call- 845-521-6871
Brand new furniture, toys, Yiddish comics books, books, storage containers, household items all in brand new condition! Please call 845-371-6063
Wiesner Dry Goods 312 Roeblling St. 718-3840649, or 718-384-4383. 10% off lkuvid Yom Tov, free delivery with Fedex. Ladies’ hosiery and children’s tights not included. Sales ends Choidesh Iyyar
BUSINESS FOR SALE
Power washing business for sale. Great opportunity. Willing to train. Call/ text 845-499-3536
FURNITURE SALE
Beautiful hand painted junior dining room set for sale with matching curio. Please call or text 917-2397572
APARTMENT FOR RENT
Location: Wolfe, Bedrooms: 3, Bathrooms: 2, Contact: 347909-3879. Comments: Brand new 9 ft ceiling fully above ground $2800 plus utilities
APARTMENTS FOR RENT
Two semi-basement, 2-bedroom apartments
available for rent. Centrally located on Francis Place. 12-month lease. Rent: $1,500–$1,800. Call 845-579-2352
WEST PALM BEACH APT. FOR SALE
Century Village-Golf Edge, 1 ½ bedroom apt. 2 baths, Brand new appliances, Ready to move in now. Price $200K or best offer. Call: 845.325.0500
WEST PALM BEACH FOR SALE
Wellington M, 2 Bedroom apt. Ground Floor FOR SALE. Call: 347.760.0639
HOUSE FOR RENT
House for rent in dexter park! 2 bedrooms 1 bath, extended porch, beautiful backyard, conveniently located near a shul. Available immediately. For more info text 8453047090
SUZANNE / MAPLE
Brand New 4 Bedroom Duplex Apartment, Ready to move in for Pesach. Playroom, 2 full bathrooms, Sec 8 approved.845.352.4348 X 107
SPACIOUS AIRMONT HOUSE - RENT
Freshly renovated private 5 Bedroom house for rent in
Airmont with Large private backyard. Please reach out to office@ycwmanagement.com or 845-918-8005 Ext 101 with serious inquiries.
+
for
RETAIL BUILDING FOR SALE
Retail building in haverstraw on rt 9w 4,000 sf, asking $999k, great location, text or call 845.203.1120
FOR RENT
Office cubicles for rent on Francis. Internet and Wifi included. Only $100 a month! For more information call/ text: (845) 232-0676
OFFICE ROOM
Spacious office room available in old Nyack turnpike area- coffee room and internet included. Please call 845-232-0424 or email office@triplemny.com for further details.
PRIME OFFICE SUITE AVAILABLE!
Ready-to-move-in spacious office suite for rent in a professional building in the heart of Monsey. Rent: $3,000. Call 845-579-2352.
Insurance Sales Agent
$250k NY/NJ
Social Media Manager
$75k-$150k Wayne, NJ
Email: RickyR@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Industrial Mechanic
$120k-$170k Newark, NJ
HR Director (Healthcare)
$125k-$150k Monsey
Account Manager (Manufacturing)
$100k-$150k Clifton NJ
Sr Bookkeeper
$100k-$130k Cherry Hill, NJ
Insurance Underwriter
$80k-$130k Upstate
Production Mechanic
$80k-$120k Newark NJ
Mechanical Maintenance Manager
$80k-$100k Monsey, NY
Program Coordinator (Supplemental
Social and Health Support Benefits)
$80k+Bonuses Monsey + Travel within the NYS
Salesperson (Exp Required)
$60k-$80k + Commissions NJ
Life Insurance Underwriter
$60k-$90k Monsey
Physicians Assistant (Spanish Speaking)
$70-$75/Hourly Long Island
Email: Yisroel@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Sales Manager (Flooring)
$125k-$150k Wayne NJ
Amazon Advertising Specialist
$100k-$130k BOE Manhattan
Product Developer (Manufacturing and Distribution/ Flooring)
$85k-$135k Wayne, NJ
Packaging Designer (E-Commerce)
$90k-$115k BOE Manhattan
E-Commerce Graphic Designer
$80k-$110k BOE Manhattan
Amazon Account Manager
$75k-$115k BOE Manhattan
Customer Service Manager(ECommerce)
$60k-$80k Manahattan
Sales Position (ABA Services)
$50k+Commissions Monsey/Monroe
Email: ChanaG@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Tax/Audit Manager
$125-$180k New York
Email: Fay@SwiftStaffingGroup. com
Salesman (Retail Construction)
$90k Nanuet
Email: TobyF@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Asset Manager (F/T)
$80k Jersey City, NJ
Creative Marketing Director
$60k Jersey City, NJ
Social Media Marketing & Events Coordinator
$60k Jersey City, NJ
Asset Manager (P/T)
$40k Jersey City, NJ
Email:Abbie@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
CFO (NON Profit)
$150k-$250k Monsey
Quality Assurance (Food Packaging)
$125-$175k Long Island
Production Manager/Signs (4+ Years Exp)
$130k-$150k Monsey Area
Quality Control Manager (Food Packaging)
$90k-$110k Newburgh, NY
Kitchen Space Planner
$60k-$100k Monsey
Department Manager (Healthcare) (all female office)
$50k-$100k Monroe
Kitchen Designer
$75k+ High Commissions Monsey, NY
Medical Biller (Female Office)
$40k-$70k Monroe
Sales Rep (All Female Office)
$40k-$70k Monsey
Salesman (Plumbing)
$40k-$60k + High Commission Upstate NY
Saleslady (Women’s Fashion)
$28-$30/Hourly Monroe
Email ChanaF@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Experienced Auditor
$65k-$85k Remote
Email: Sophia@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Capital Markets Leads
$120k-$160k + Commission Remote Within the USA
Sr Team Leader (Tech)
$130k-$150k Monroe
Email: HindyS@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
Purchasing Manager (Lighting)
$75k-$110k Haverstraw, NY
Director Of Operations/ office Manager
$70k+ Great Neck NY
Loan Processor
Pay BOE Monsey/Monroe
Executive Assistant (RE)
$30+/Hourly Monsey
Loan Processor (Entry Level)
$23-$25/Hourly Monsey
Email: Peri@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com
1031 Exchange Coordinator
$90k-$130k New City/Remote
Email: Hindy @SwiftStaffingGroup.com
MONSEY VACATION/ SIMCHA RENTAL
Beautiful fully furnished Shabbos equipped 6 bedroom 4 bath house Highview/ College. Call/ whatsapp 718541-0292
SUMMER RENTAL
6 bedroom new construction home in New City available for rent for July and August. Full summer only. Option for over-ground pool. Call/text 8454227292
NEW ON THE MARKET!
8 bedroom waterfront house for rent in seagate. Available for shabbosim, weekly or daily. For more Information call, text or whatsapp 7188099355
LINDEN LUXE
New Pristine Cathedral Ceiling House. 6 bedrooms. 3 bathrooms, jacuzzi. Sleeps 20+. Stocked Playroom. Swing Set. Trampoline, gameroom. All Amenities. 5 min to shul. 3 blocks to grocery/ pizza store. Avail for Shabbos/ Weekday. call/text 718989-1406.
WEST PALM BEACH
For the best Real Estate deals, Call: Mrs. Debby Schwartz 203.667.2785
LAKEHOUSE VILLA
Luxurious 3 bedroom lake house villa in Case Grande Arizona. Private pool fully stocked kosher kitchen. 520.251.4459
HOLLYWOOD FLORIDA
Beautiful private villa. 4 Master suites with kosher kitchen, huge living area, pool. Walking distance to Shul/ Kosher shopping. Call/ WhatsApp 718-541-0292
BEAUTIFUL VILLA RENTAL
Beautiful villa in serene area outside Monroe. 9 couple rooms, teen room 8 beds and many kids mattresses. Huge private pool with stunning grounds. New!!! Jacuzzi Hot tub. Pictures at hotelfifteen. com .still avail for sukkas 845 837 5662
NORTH MIAMI
AVAIL PESACH
Beautiful 3 bedroom 3 bath villa with inground heated pool and hot tub available in North Miami, Price per night $339. Pictures available. Call/ Text 845-327-7153
NORTH MIAMI FL RENTAL
2-bedroom, 2-baths with private heated pool and spa. Feb. all booked. $325 per night. Call/Text: 917-3824810, email: 1752nmb@gmail. com www.themangotreat. com
MIAMI BEACH FLORIDA
Carriage Club North, beautiful 2 bedroom, 2 bath, ground floor, for rent. Call: 347.499.0031
MIAMI BEACH FLORIDA
Collins Ave. Beautiful ocean view. 1 bedroom apt. for rent. 347.760.0570
NORTH MIAMI FL.
Couples Only· Kosher Vacation House · Private Heated Pool· Warm, Relaxing, Dreamy · Beautiful Patio· 5 Min walk to a Shul. Contact chany for more details @ 845-570-2341
VACATION RENTAL
In Chester, 17 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms available for Pesach. Call or text 845-2760370 leave message.
FEMALE BOOKKEEPER
Local management office seeking full-time female bookkeeper. Must be detail oriented and have experience in QuickBooks and Excel; Rent Manager a plus. Please send your resume to officejobm1@ gmail.com
JOBS AVAILABLE
Part-time & Full-time jobs available. Email TopPartTimeJobs@ gmail.com
JOIN OUR CREW!
Bais Yaakov Elementary seeking afternoon JH permanent sub for immediate hire. Email resume to resumes@ baisyaakovelementary. org
FULL TIME NANNY
Seeking full time live out nanny, please contact 845 293 2312
FULL TIME SECRETARY
Property management is looking for a Full time secretary. Data entry, customer service and collection skills required. Please email resume to rcmanageoffice@gmail.com or text 845-828-6781
SECRETARIAL POSITION
FT project management secretary position available in a multi-girl office specializing in NYC DOB expediting. Competitive pay with opportunities for advancement. Prior relevant experience is preferred. Strong organizational and communication skills are required. Email your resume to office11249@gmail.com
WORK FROM HOME
Great opportunity to manage your own business from home. No experience needed, no computer necessary. Huge potential to grow big. Call: 438.529.1216
HELP WANTED
We are looking for a full-time receptionist (9-5) to join our team! If you’re organized, friendly, and have great communication skills. Please email your resume at jobssuffern@gmail.com
For any issues such as:
• Garbage pickup issues
• Street light outages
• Construction concerns
• Unauthorized road closures
• Road hazards like potholes, etc.
please don't hesitate to contact our community liaison, and your concern will be resolved in the most e ective manner.
Mr. Yossi Margareten
He can be reached at: 845.357.5100 ext. 433 | Margarettenj@ramapo.org
• Head of Multifamily Real Estate Asset Management, seeking a seasoned leader, specializing in multifamily real estate. Portfolio optimization & valueadd strategies, financial performance improvement, Underwriting, market analysis & capital planning, some travel required, Proven leadership experience building high-performing asset management teams, 250k+, Monsey
• Director of Workplace Risk Management, proven track record of success in managing workplace injuries and claims, to develop and implement comprehensive risk management strategies and oversee workers’ compensation claims management, 225k – 275k, Monsey/hybrid
• Director of Program Operations & Development, Behavioral Health Services, research/analyze programs, ensure compliance, develop training, supervise staff & provide analytical insights, knowledge of behavioral health required, strong analytical/research skills & leadership experience, 175k – 200k, Monsey
• Information Technology Service Manager - 5+ years of managerial experience in an IT environment, Excellent communication, project management, and problem-solving skills, Process-driven with ability to multitask and manage time effectively, Monsey, 150k - 200k
• Nursing Home Controller, 2+ yrs. nursing home industry experience required, Financial Planning and Budgeting, Audit and Financial Statement Preparation, strong analytical, problem-solving, and communication skills 160k – 200k, Monsey
bookkeeping management, 120k – 150k, North Jersey
• Risk Manager for Commercial insurance and risk management company, worker’s compensation loss control experience and commercial loss control experience required (non-workers compensation). Proficient in the New York State/jurisdiction, 135k, Monsey
• Project Manager - Lighting Systems, 5+ years of experience in Construction/Electrical project management, lighting design/layout expertise, and strong knowledge of lighting control systems, proficient in Lighting Load Calculations & Dimming Systems, 90k120k+, full benefits package, Monsey
• Buyer/Procurement Specialist - Real Estate Construction Company, construction knowledge/experience required, Manage purchasing, sourcing & supplier relationships. Negotiate with vendors, build relationships & utilize 2020 Design software for kitchen layouts, 90k - 120k, Monsey
• Microsoft Fabric Data Engineer with ETL, data modeling, and T-SQL skills to design and implement a centralized data lake, 80k – 120k+, Englewood, NJ
• Payroll Compliance Specialist, ensure compliance w/ payroll laws and regulations, manager payroll operations, support benefits administration, 80k – 110k, Monsey
• Implementation Manager, experience in UKG software (formerly Kronos) to lead and manage the deployment of UKG solutions, 80k – 100k, Monsey
detail-oriented, analyzing data and financial information to assess risk, utilize Excel to model and forecast financial outcomes, humble and collaborative team player, 70k - 90k, Monsey
• Real Estate Title Coordinator, 1+ yrs. experience required, 70k – 80k, Monsey
• Yeshiva Administrator, oversee daily operations, manage new registrations and tuition collections, Coordinate payroll and benefits, ensure seamless daily operations (food, cleaning, maintenance,) secure additional funding through fundraising and government programs, 75k+, Monsey
• Accounts Payable for nursing home facilities, experience in accounts payable, strong communication and negotiation skills, and proficiency in related software and Microsoft Office, full-time, 65k - 80k, Monsey, NY
• Accounts Payable for construction company, maintain accurate records to produce status reports for jobs in progress. Paying bills and communicating with Vendors. Accounts Payable and QuickBooks experience required, Construction company experience a plus, full-time, 65k – 80k, Monsey
• Support/Client Implementation Specialist for a Software company, be detail-oriented w/ strong organizational skills. Proficient in computer literacy and software applications. Quick learner w/ ability to adapt to new technologies and processes. Excellent communication skills for effective interaction with colleagues and clients. Previous experience in a support or client implementation role a plus, 75k – 85k, Monsey
• Bookkeeper, in-office position, female office, 25 hours+ weekly, client billing, cash flow, bank reconciliation, expense oversight, payroll management, commission/ bonus tracking, expense/ subscription management, 4+ hours daily, 50k – 80k [depending on work hours and experience] New City
• Accounts Payable, Real Estate company, reviewing and enter invoices, submit invoices for payment, relevant experience required, full-time, female office, 65k – 80k, Monsey
• Skilled Nursing Home Billing Specialist - Medicaid Tracker, relevant experience required, full-time, 60k – 80k, Monsey/ Hybrid
• 1031 Exchange Officer, oversee and facilitate the process of 1031 exchanges, managing the 1031 docs, client communication etc., 65k – 75k, Monsey
with high-volume phone work, and able to multitask and have excellent organizational skills. 9am – 3pm, 50k, Pomona
• Licensed Social Worker for local agency, male population, $65/hr. - $90/hr., based on experience, Monsey
• Landscaping Sales Rep, Rockland County, NY (serving Rockland, Westchester, Bergen, & Passaic counties), Develop sales strategies, build relationships, and grow a landscaping business, 50k + commissions, Monsey
• Outside Sales Rep for custom poly bags manufacturer, 40k + commission, North Jersey
• Outside Sales Rep for Commercial LED Lighting & EV Charger Stations, 40k + commission, Monsey
• Leading Commercial Real Estate Mortgage Brokerage firm, seeks motivated and ambitious individuals to join their team as Real Estate Finance Advisors, develop relationships with real estate owners and developers to arrange financing. Learn to analyze and underwrite deals, 40k + commissions, Monsey
• Sales and Marketing Strategy Manager for workers comp insurance company, oversee ongoing sales activities, ensuring KPIs are met. 3+ yrs. required experience in sales, marketing, and business development. Proven ability to lead teams, manage multiple initiatives simultaneously. Experience with digital marketing tools and analytics platforms. Optimize paid advertising campaigns and generate leads effectively, 150k – 200k, Monsey
• Sales Manager - Established trucking brokerage company seeking seasoned Sales Manager to drive revenue growth. Proven sales expertise in logistics/trucking industry. Strong leadership skills to motivate and manage sales teams. Proficiency in CRM software to track sales performance and customer relationships, 150k - 180k+, Monsey
• Nurse Practitioner/Physician’s Assistant for Skilled Nursing Facilities, 125k - 150k + full benefits package, travel to Bronx and NYC
• Controller for Food Manufacturer, oversee financial operations, ensuring accuracy, compliance, and strategic management of all finances. Financial reporting, budgeting and forecasting. Experience with ERP systems, Microsoft Dynamics 365 and
• Full-Charge Bookkeeper for Real Estate Management Company to oversee all bookkeeping functions, full-time, 80k –100k, Monsey
• Inside Sales, FULL-TIME position, IN-OFFICE, Ideal candidate to possess a tenacious and hungry approach to driving sales growth, with excellent communication and interpersonal skills. Comfort with highvolume phone work and cold introductions is essential, as is the ability to thrive in a fast-paced, dynamic environment, 70k –90k, North Jersey
• Construction Crew Manager, construction experience required, oversee deliveries and construction installations, including scheduling, coordinating w/ team and ensuring seamless execution of projects, travel required, 75k – 90k, Monsey
• Warehouse Manager, relevant experience and team leadership required, be attention to detail, multitasking in a fast-paced environment, supervisory tasks include, picking orders, processing returns, preparing FBA shipments, receiving purchase orders/ containers, 70k – 90k, Middletown, NY
• Office Admin position for Article 16 OPWDD Clinic, 75k – 85k, Monsey
• Office Secretary / Bookkeeper, full-time, phone calls, emails, write estimates, invoices, A/R and A/P, excellent phone skills and knowledge of QuickBooks required. 60k – 75k, Monsey
• Graphic Designer/Marketing Specialist, FULL-TIME, position IN-OFFICE, Graphic design of packaging, ads, management of social media marketing platforms, strategy, ad spending etc., 70k, North Jersey
• Customer service rep, female office, full-time, experience required, computer proficient, be tech-savvy, multi-task, 60k70k, Monsey
• Mashgiach / Supervisor for commercial bakery, Hours: Sunday 10am-4pm. Mon thru Thursday, 10am-6pm, Friday 10am until 3 hrs. before zman, 65k, Monsey
• Male Client Advocate Case Liaison, advocate for individuals and families in need, supporting their access to community resources and services, intake assessments and create service plans, collaborate with social service agencies to ensure comprehensive support, 50k - 65k, Monsey
• Behavior Therapist (LMSW, LCSW or MHC) $65/hr. per client session, Monsey/hybrid
• Mental Health Therapists, Interns positions, Medical Assistant, Phlebotomist, salary based on experience, Monsey
• Service Provider Customer Service Rep, have excellent phone and computer skills, previous experience required, proficiency in Microsoft Office. Strong problem-solving skills and customer-focused approach. Fulltime or Part-time, minimum 5 hours daily, $30-$35/hr., Monsey
• Nursing Home Transition and Diversion (NHTD) Service Coordinator, coordinate services for individuals with traumatic brain injury or who require nursing home level care, BA required, flexible hours, $35/hr.+, Monsey
• Admin Assistant, quick learner with strong technical skills, a passion for business, and a drive to learn new tools and information., $25/hr. - $35/hr., part-time or full-time, Upper Saddle River, NJ
• Assistant to Head Bookkeeper, female office, QuickBooks experience required, detailoriented, 10am - 3pm, $30/hr., Monsey
• Female Health/Early Intervention Care Manager - BA or Equivalent degree required, relevant experience preferred, part-time or full-time, $30/hr.+, Monsey
• Insurance Claims Admin, process and manage insurance claims. Organize claimrelated documents, communicate with clients and insurance companies, ensuring accuracy and completeness of claim information, $30/hr., full-time, Monsey
• Workers Comp Admin, manage large volume of emails, ensuring accuracy in data entry. Be proficient in Excel, skilled in creating task lists, have prior office experience handling high email traffic, $30/hr., full-time, Monsey
• Front desk secretary, Full-time, $25/hr., Monsey
• Direct Support Professional, Male or Female, provide 1:1 assistance to individuals w/ mental health fragilities, ages 1-21 in daily living activities such as meal preparation, mentoring, personal training, social skills building, tutoring, sports coaching, art therapy or housekeeping, Experience working with individuals with developmental disabilities (preferred). $25/hr. – 40/hr. based on experience and level of degree. High school diploma required, Monsey
• Junior Underwriter Real Estate, advanced Excel skills required, highly analytical,
• Real Estate Secretary, be highly organized and detail oriented. Excellent phone skills, proficiency in Google Suite and Microsoft Office. Strong communicator, comfortable
• Entry-level Accounts Payable and Receivable positions, full-time, female office, strong attention to detail, organizational skills, and the ability to manage multiple tasks efficiently, $28/hr., Monsey
150+ JOB OPENINGS!
Stop wasting your time going through all the jobs classifieds. Simply email your resume to Info@ SwiftStaffingGroup.com to explore your options & maximize your career. Or Call/Text/ WhatsApp 732-800-7633 Strictly confidential & completely free.
BCBA POSITION
ABA Riders is looking to hire a BCBA. Well-paid, flexible hours. Contact Rikki 347930-9736/info@abariders. com.
BOOKKEEPER
Local Monsey office looking for F/T bookkeeper. Must have exp in QB & Excel. email chayav@polarishcs.com
SUBSTITUTE NEEDED
BYCC is looking for a 3rd Grade Kodesh Substitute for maternity leave needed after Pesach. 8:45am – 12:45pm. Competitive Compensation! Email: 44camphillroad@ thejnet.com or call: 914-2614772.
THE JOB YOU’RE LOOKING FOR!
Want to have money flow into your pocket? Call/text 845324-5182
YSV - BOYS
BS”D we are expanding in the lower grades. Teaching positions available for the coming year IY”H. Competitive salaries. Monday to Thursday, 12:45-4:00 PM. Send your resume to gss@ yeshivaspringvalley.org.
Growing ABA company in Monsey looking to hire an Intake/Admin Assistant. Salary based on experience. Please email info@ bigdreamersaba.com or text 347-585-6050.
Is seeking a bright, responsible, detail-oriented female with strong computer/ phone skills. Full-time, Monday to Thursday 10:00 – 4:00 and Friday 10:00 – 12/1 pm. To apply send your resume to cjkaplan@ chesed247.org Compensation is contingent upon experience.
Is seeking an enthusiastic, personable, mature woman, with excellent computer skills, to work Part-time 10-2:30 Monday to Thursday & Friday 10 – 12/1. To apply send your resume to Cjkaplan@chesed247.org. Compensation is contingent upon experience
Looking for a compassionate and qualified counselor to assist a 24-year-old female, who is non-ambulatory and nonverbal, at a sleepaway camp for 6 weeks. If you have a passion, to radiate warmth to others Please send your resume to dsp@hcsny.org or call 718-854-2747 ext.1507.
Great Opportunity! Multi girl office is looking to hire an efficient fulltime secretary with good communication skills. No prior office experience required, full training provided. Email resume to jobopeningtoday58@gmail. com
Looking to hire a coordinator with a minimum of two years’ service coordination experience to coordinate services for babies/toddlers with developmental delays and their families. Flexible full-time/ part-time hours. Many great benefits! Email resume to Positionopen34@ gmail.com
Looking for a full-time girl/ woman for a fast-paced office position to process and submit transactions efficiently. Must be organized, detail oriented and be able to multi-task. Please email resume to jobs@ ezdriveny.com.
Amazing opportunity for the right candidate! Office in Monsey is looking to hire Care Managers to join our thriving team! BA or equivalent required. Training provided. Opportunity for growth. Email your resume to recruitmentdepartment845@gmail.com
Do you enjoy working with kids? One-Of-A-Kid is Looking to hire para’s for our ABA center. Flexible hours— full-day or after-school positions available. Please email your resume to suri@ kidsfirstservices.com
Vitality Article 16 Clinic, a division of Yedei Chesed, is expanding services for OPWDD eligible individuals of the ages 7 and up. The following positions are available: *PT for our male population- $70+/hr. *PTA$40+/hr. *OT- $65+/hr. *OTA- $40+/hr. *LCSW for our woman population- $70+/ hr. *SLP- $60+/hr. Salaries are based on experience and qualifications. All positions are part-time with flexible hours. To apply, please send your resume to HR@Yedei. org.
Seeking a Part-time Office Admin for a one-girl office. Must have experience in customer service, bookkeeping & marketing. $35+ hr, first raise at 90 days. Please email TopCareerNY@ gmail.com
DIRECTOR OF HR
Lead HR strategies & operations. Recruiting, employee relations, compliance, training, & team management. Email resume aklaver@aylondon.com
Seeking HR admin to lead onboarding, ensure compliance with policies and regulations while providing administrative support, payroll processing, and tax documentation help. recruiting@elevateny.org
SALES/OFFICE
Seeking an experienced female sales/office Manager with a successful track record. Will paid + solid bonuses structure. GreatMonseyJob@Gmail.com
HR/RECRUITING
Have HR/recruiting experience? Earn $65K+ part-time! Email ProRecruiterNY@gmail.com to apply.
SALES & OPERATIONS LEADER
Seeking an experienced female Sales & Operations Leader to drive performance and optimize operations parttime or full-time in Monsey. Email: TopCareerNY@gmail. com
GREAT OPPORTUNITY
Seeking motivated, experienced woman (ages 35+) passionate about helping others excel in their careers. Unlimited income potential, PT/FT. TopCareerNY@gmail. com
ATTENTION GRADUATES!
Join Alley Valley’s summer program staff to work with children in an exciting, wonderful environment. Must be 18 and have high school diploma by the summer. Excellent pay! Please call 845-351-0300 Ext. 312
HELP WANTED
Looking for a full time Coordinator to assist our CFTSS department. Needs to be a quick learner, able to multi-task, and have good communication skills. All women office. Email resume to rmuller@alleyvalley.com
HELP WANTED
Alley Valley is seeking an HR Coordinator to join our staff. Please email: HR@ alleyvalley.com
GREAT OPPORTUNITY
Seeking yiddish-speaking women/girls to work 1:1 with children during the day or in the evenings. Must have a high school diploma. Please email: HR@alleyvalley.com
THERAPIST POSITION
Agency in Monsey is looking for a therapist for the male population. This is a fee for service position. LMSW, LMHC, MHC-LP required. Positive environment, individual and group supervision offered. Email your resume to: recruitmentdepartment845@gmail.com
WARM BABYSITTER ON BATES
One slot available for 3-6 month old baby. Please call 845-826-2185
EREV PESACH PLAYGROUP
Treat your little one to Funschool! Age 18m- 3 years on April 8-9. Hours 9:153:45 (South Cole area). Call Teacher Gitty 845-356-2046 (Optional transportation home)
EARPIERCING
12 years experience. Wide selection. Call/text: 845-5387986
Assembly of all types of furniture & Furniture
Repairs -Installation of Blinds,Shades,Shelves,RodsServicing Monsey Area Chaim- 347 416 1027
PAYROLL SERVICE
Complete Payroll Services, $35.00 Per Month (Covers up to 5 employees) 718-5139689 - info@YMFpayroll.com
Mendy Friedman CEO
IN-HOME OT
In-home occupational therapy with 10+ years of experience in elderly care. Specializing in arthritis, tendonitis, and carpal tunnel. Call Rifka 718-5014708.
IS YOUR CHILD STRUGGLING?
Socially, with fears and anxieties, or other issues, and you think you tried everything? With Hashem’s help Energy Therapy can be the Yeshuah for your child. 15 minute free consultation. Call 845445-8252, or email chany@ rapidrecoverycoaching.com
RESIN ART CLASSES & EVENTS
BAS-MITZVAHS, Birthdays, VACATION days, Shuls, families, schools & camps- All ages! Community-Classes located in Pomona. Transportation provided. RESINARTMAGICBYSHIRA. COM 845-204-3929
MASSAGE THERAPY
--In The Comfort of Home-*Swedish *Deep Tissue *Lymph *Craniosacral Therapy Call Sarah: 845596-1373
CLARINET RENTAL
Clarinet rental for $18 per week. Comes with MP3 lessons in Yiddish or English. 718-435-1923
AYIN HORAH
The renowned Rebetzin Aidel Miller from Yerushalayim will remove Ayin Horah over the phone. Call till 5:00 PM: 718.689.1902 or 516.300.1490
PETTICOATS FOR RENT!
Complete your look! Adult & kids petticoats for rent, Beautiful floral wreath & crown headpieces for rent, Adorable kids jewelry, and more! Call 845-5020153 leave msg or 845746-7248
ARROWSMITH
Is your child still in the same place after all that tutoring?Join Arrowsmith, a research based program that strengthens the brain and eliminates learning disabilities. Call Mrs Feuer 914-260-6449
CUSTOM PHOTO ALBUMS
We specialize in custom Photo Albums, Chosson, Wedding, etc. Also professional Photo Editing, many years of experience. Special rate for photographers. Call: 347.563.5153
WHOLESALE FISH
Buy by the case & save. Baby & Regular Salmon. Hashgucha Volove Rav. Free delivery to your home. Call Eli: 516-270-6755
MONSEY SWIM SCHOOL
Swim lessons, Lifeguard & CPR courses. Private pool, jacuzzi & sauna rentals. Separate public swim for men & women in an Olympic-sized, heated indoor pool. Learn to swim at Monsey’s most established swim school. Call (845) 578-1888
FACE PAINTING
Events, day camps. parties ,and more… to book call Chany at 845 641 1990 and leave message
PHOTO EDITING
Professional photo editing, many years of experience. Special rates for photographers. Also specializing in Custom photo albums Chosson, wedding, etc. Photo Dreams 347.563.5153
NEW WEBSITE?
Get your Beautiful, Fast, SEO-Friendly Website done in 14 days, guaranteed. Email efraim@rapidquill.com
PHOTO EDITING
Professional photo editing, many years of experience. Special rates for photographers. Also specializing in Custom photo albums Chosson, wedding, etc. Photo Dreams 347.563.5153
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Experienced graphic designer available, offering creative, high-quality designs at competitive pricing. Get in touch for more details! 845.587.4477
GARTLECH
We fix knitted & crochet Gartlech & make beautiful professional fringes. Please call: 845.494.1796
LASER IN NYACK
Unbeatable price, flawless results! Get a full-body laser hair removal session for just $350 at Laser by Tako in Nyack, NY. Don’t just take our word for it—read our glowing reviews! Call/Text 551-2865509
RESUMES
Professional Resumes 10% Off + Free Job Placement! Email TopCareerNY@gmail.com
FEMALE LIFEGUARD
Female Lifeguard available call 845-521-2281
WINTER SOLUTIONS!
Dry face? Chapped hands and lips? Try Forever Living amazing moisturizers and lip balm! Call R. Tessler 845.596.9933
SUPERPATCH SUPPORT
WANT MORE ENERGY, STRESS RELIEF, FOCUS before Pesach? Natural, Drug Free, Chemical Free, Pregnancy Safe! TESTIMONIALS. INTERVIEWS. TRY NOW! CALL 929-992-4453 Option 2,2,3. First time customers 25% off. $69 same day pickup available.
FOREVER LIVING
Yes it’s this ad again…. But have you tried it yet?? See amazing results with our all natural products! Call R. Tessler 845.596.9933
GARTLECH
we fix knitted & crochet
Gartlech & make beautiful professional fringes. We also teach how to knit & crochet. call: 917-414-3281
SELL YOUR BUSINESS
TODAY
$$$ Sell Your Business For Top Dollar! Email: LocalBusinessBrokers@ gmail.com $$$
WHITE GOWN
Looking to sell a size 2-4 white gown for sister of the bride, please call 347 628 9586
SISTER OF BRIDE
Gorgeous gowns for sale: Olive Green size 2-4, Hunter Green size 0-2,
Grey size 4-6, Blush size 4-6, Ivory size 4, Grey/ Taupe Winter size 12, Ivory kids size 12-14. 845.502.6491
MATERNITY GOWN RENTAL
Georgeous selection of maternity gowns affordable prices all sizes...New! Also accepting gowns on consignment. Please call/ text 8458622799
MECHUTANESTA GOWN
Beautiful Taupe Gown for sale. size 16. 845.502.6491
Lost something? Found something? The Daily Return: Call/text: 845-538-0193, Email: monseydailyreturn@gmail. com
Flip phone March 10 in car ride from Bais David 845521-4601
pair of earrings in Arrive taxi 3/24, 845-395-4898
Ebel white diamond watch 845-659-9482
bais hasforim bag with 2 new tzittis 347-409-0151
In Frankels shoes a black bag with 2 nightgowns 845-2639376
Black IBIS size 16 (or 14)
Boys coat with beige fur, By Hopscotch this past Friday 845-354-7181
Canon SX740 Camara with some memory cards(845)704-9393.
silver links bracelet (845)7049393.
Tallis with name Yosef Weinberger in taxi 347-3040825
Blue Amex card in Arrive taxi with name Malky Banda 929-420-3692
Purple umbrella and Medium bottles of wine in Shoppers Haven 845-6599482
Airpods 845-828-6060
Little girls heart necklace shortcut by Nesher & Spruill Ct Shabbos Zucher 845-4455020
charmast battery chargerviznitz/kasho beis medrash on Suzanne 347-409-0151
set of 4 porcelain dishes 845837-9924
Armoire good condition 9176352760
Due to moving: 12 dining room chairs, China closet, Antique style master bedroom set, White formica kitchen table with 8 chairs, boys brown dresser set 845352-5130
due to moving: two bookcases, one fabric recliner, master bedroom set, 30 inch gas range, refrigerator, wall fixtures, verticals for porch doors,
2 mechetanista wedding dresses, call:1845-270-9426
4 door china closet 845 354 0840
Antique binded yiddish licht, lv msg 845-425-7315.
Inyan Magazines October 2018-August 2024, Ellish Neil area Call/text 845-274-7508
About 18 plywoods and some 2x4’s 845 587 0621
fridge and freezer in good condition call 8457202226
MOMMY’S NIGHT ACTIVITY
Did you have a baby within the last 6 months? Escape the chaos, bond with your baby, and find yourself. Night activity for postpartum mothers by Yitty Ganz 845444-6181
Monsey based Nursing Home operator looking to hire a controller. Nursing Home experience a plus. Please send resume to hr@ zahavahealthcare.com
Beautiful Italian 48” headboards with matching nightstand in perfect condition to give away. Text only 929-699-2307
North Miami Beach, FL
• Private Heated pool for year-round enjoyment.
• Cozy and serene patio, perfect for relaxation quality time.
• Secluded escape designed for couples.
• Just a 5-minute walk to Shul.
• Clean, fresh, quiet, and relaxing. Contact Chany: 845-570-2341
Call/Text: 845-402-0903 | Email: Ldav6908@gmail.com
Join our vibrant cooking and baking community classes, where flavors meet fun! Discover new flavors and techniques.
Bake, Decorate, Delight: Unleash your sweet tooth with our baking classes. Learn artisanal bread-making, cake decorating, and pastry design.
Hands-On Learning: Our expert instructors guide you through interactive, hands-on sessions. No experience necessary!
Community Connection: Meet fellow foodies, share recipes, and make lasting friendships.
Sunday to Thursday, 3pm to 6pm Class Rate: $150 per hour
Located in Spring Valley NY Sign Up Now!
Crafted and intricately illustrated by Italy's most esteemed artists - Júlio Castro and Maxim Usik, Dorfmane` scarves are meticulously woven from the highest quality silks and hand-finished to achieve perfection, resulting in exquisite heirloom pieces.
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My story:
Hello! I’m Esti and I’m 14 years old.
Until went to sleep away camp, I had no idea that not everyone cuts out tags. I was amazed that people are actually comfortable in all types of clothes, even ones with starched collars, elastic on the sleeve and scratchy materials. And did you know that most kids don’t even notice the toothbrush scraping or their brush yanking on their long hair? I had no idea!
So I asked my mother to help me and she took me to OTB. My therapist there used these manual techniques and I learned to be less sensitive. Now I have time to focus on the important stuff like hogging the phone and going out with friends!! Oh wait! I meant to say doing my homework ;)
Our therapists are all college educated and NYS licensed. Additional Training can