Take The DIRECT Route To SAVINGS! 41P/o410% OFF EVERYDAY! I Childrent Special (Up To Age 16) Your Choice of an Eye Exam 1 Pair of Eye Glasses I or 2 Pair of Eye Glasses CHOOSE FROM I OVER 400 FRAMES! I COMPLETE . • Expires 11/30/96 I Includes Includes Frame, Single Vision Scratch Coated lenses 8 Year Limited Warranty IN= MN MIN I ■ Disposable Contact Lenses I COMPLETE 1 Year Supply (2 Mo. Lens), Eye Exam, Care Kit and Follow-up Appoinfrnenls - MIS Your Choice Eye Exam & 1 Pair of Eye Glasses or 2 Pair of Eye Glasses CHOOSE FROM OVER 400 FRAMES! COMPLETE Single Vision Lenses Expires 11/30/96 =III INNS ranee Progressive Lenses No Bifocal Line or DC a . COMPLETE with frame 5139 Expires 11/30/96 =NI IEEE Nom Nom ANY COMPLETE PAIR OF EYEGLASSES *Dinner for one at either EC. Nicks, W. Bloomfield or New Man- g darin Chinese, Farmington Hills or The Ground Round, Royal ' Oak or Signof the Beet Carver, Royal Oak. THE APPLETREE •: • 4 Minimum purchase of 5159 Coupons not good for prior purchase. Coupon must be presented at time of sale or delivery. Some restrictions apply to all coupons offers. st Mon., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 No Tues. & Thurs. 9-8 Sat 9-3 31531 W. 13 Mile Rd. • Farmington Hills SW Corner of Orchard Lk. Rd. • Westbrook Shopping Center ----- ;Mg The Ubiquitous 'Aruchat Eser' 1:3 DIANE SCHAEFER SPECIAL TO THE APPLETREE arents in America aruchat eser is an integral part of may tear their hair the child's education, with chil- out trying to think of dren being taught from an early what to put in their age to wash, say Hamotzi and children's lunch boxes, but par- Grace After Meals. ents in Israel are faced with an The basic requirement is a additional challenge: aruchat sandwich, drink and possibly eser, literally translated as the fruit, but every child has his or "10 o'clock meal." her preference. Hadas, 10, says The lavish Israeli breakfast that in the winter she likes to served in all classes of hotels, take an orange and a sandwich complete with 10 filled with types of cream 9 percent Yehudah's cheese, three Mini-Pita Pocket kinds of eggs Pizzas: and a large vari- 1) Open the pita by slic- ety of vegetable ing through the edge of and fruit But the pocket with aruchat eser (pro- a sharp knife. nounced a-roo- 2) Spread the in- chat es-er) is side with ketchup probably more fa- or tomato paste. miliar to most of white cheese the natives. It is an 3) Place yellow — the Israeli cheese inside. institution that has version of cream permeated many cheese. Her 4) Toast in the segments of the toaster oven until the brother, Ishai, 12, working world and cheese is melted. also likes to take all segments of the an orange and 5) Enjoy! school system. white-cheese sand- For parents and wich, but likes olives on their school-aged children, the cheese. aruchat eser is a serious matter. When Yehudah, 4, started For parents, it is a chance to chederlast year, his mother sent supplement a breakfast that along peanut butter-and-jelly might consist of a few cookies sandwiches and an apple — eaten on the way out the front like any normal, American-born door. Or, though schools active- mother. The jelly was soon ly encourage parents to feed deleted from the sandwich at their children breakfast, aruchat Yehudah's request, and all was eser often replaces breakfast al- fine for several months. Then together. In religious schools, one day, Yehudah refused to eat peanut butter in public. The rea- son: His table mates, good Is- raelis all, said it looked yichksa. He switched to white-cheese sandwiches, or his all-time fa- vorite, mini-pita pocket pizzas, until one day during the new school year. Then, the refrigera- tor nearly empty, his mother snuck a peanut butter-and-jelly (strawberry only) sandwich into his backpack. He ate the whole sandwich and has been taking peanut 0.0 butter-and- jelly ever since. Some mothers prefer to send plain water in a miner- al water (bottle, while oth- ers send pete4 the Is- raeli version of Kool Aid. Sara, the mother of 11, uses fresh rolls for her children's sandwiches on Rosh Chodesh (the New Moon). Naomi, the mother of four, likes to give her children sandwiches filled with chocolate spread — considered by many Israeli parents to be a real food — as a special Rosh Chodesh treat Aruchat eser continues through high school, unless the school has a kiosk on the premises. And, as the children are older, they often pack two or three sandwiches, saving some of them for lunch. 4 Diane Schaefer lives with her husband, Akiva, in Neve Yaakov Mizrach. When not caring for her two small children, Mts. Schaefer works with computers at an international company based in Jerusalem.