The fine stores & shops of Lincoln Center wish everyone a Happy, Healthy Passover LINCOLN CENTER Matzah: a favorite Pesach food Greenfield at 10 1 /2 Mile Pesach and some do not. Here's why. Years ago, Ashkenazic rabbis ruled that rice and beans, corn, peanuts and peas could be used to make flour, which would'closely resemble chametz. This, they declared, could be confusing. So these particular veg- etables and legumes, known as kitni- yot, are not eaten in Ashkenazi homes. Sephardic rabbis had no problem with these food items, so Sephardi families regularly enjoy everything from pea- nut butter to corn-salad on Pesach. • A number of families on Pesach shun gebrokts, any matzah product cooked with water. According to some rabbinic sources, gebrokts foods are not permitted (specifically during the seders) because when the matzah mixes with water it could accidentally become chametz. • Pesach has a charity of its own called maot chittim, or "money for wheat." This fund, to which one should give in addition to (not in place of) donations to tzedakah, helps families who otherwise would not be able to provide for all the items neces- sary for a seder. •Virtually all seder plates are round, yet there are no regulations about how to make this plate, providing it has room for all the necessary seder items. • Some Jews have the tradition of placing a piece of matzah on their walls as a constant reminder of the Exodus, as stated in Deuteronomy 16:3: "Seven days shalt thou eat unleavened bread ... to remember the day when you came forth out of the land of Egypt all the days of your life." • On Pesach, we are obligated to drink four cups of wine (or at least one cup of wine followed by grape juice). But what constitutes "a cup"? The rabbis determined that "one cup" of wine on Pesach means at least 3.3 oz. or 5.2 oz., depending on your source. • Some Jews observe the Fast of the First Born before the first seder. This recalls the plague in which the firstborn sons of the Egyptians were slain — the plague that finally forced Pharaoh to free the Jews. Today, Jewish firstborn sons fast because they were spared this fate. But there's a catch. If there's a special meal, called a seudat mitzvah (literally, a commanded meal), in honor of a celebration — a bris or wedding, for example — then the fast need not be observed. And if there's no bris or wedding on this day, a siyyum- Torah, completion of \read- ing a tractate in the Talmud, also obli- gates one to eat the seudat mitzvah. • It's traditional to hide 10 pieces of chametz to be "found" by chil- dren, scooped up with a feather and burned the night before Pesach. While Judaism is filled with a great many "10s" (think 10 Commandments, 10 Tribes), and certainly some see pow- erful connections in numbers, no one knows why it is that the number 10 is used in this case. • The first square matzah appeared in 1875. Until then, all matzah had been round and handmade. The square matzah was produced on a machine made in England. • Some Jews wear a long white robe on the holiday, representing a life free from bondage. It's called a kittel, and . it's also often donned at a wedding or on the High Holidays. ❑ • Advance America • A.J. Wright • Aldi • Ashley Stewart • Baskin Robbins • Book Beat • Bread Basket Deli • Brenda's Beans & Greens • Budget Uniform • Dillman Chiropractic • Dollar Castle • Dots • Errol Sherman Footcare • Eyes Right Optical • Glory Jewelers • Jackie's Fashions • Kmart • L.A. Insurance • Lincoln Barber Shop • Lincoln Medical Center & Skin Care • Magic Touch Beauty Salon • Metropolitan Dry Cleaners • Payless Shoe Source • Radio Shack • Rainbow Apparel • Rite Aid • Secretary of State • Strickley Kosher Meats • T Nails • White Castle/Church's Chicken 1101110 WISHING YOU A HAPPY & HEALTHY PASSOVER! • 27659 Woodward Ave. Berkley, MI 48072 (248)547-1000 21755 Michigan Ave. Dearborn, MI 48124 (313)274-6100' • 14925 Middlebelt Livonia, MI 48154 (734)524-1000 21770 Michigan Ave. Dearborn, MI 48124 (313)278-3815 1102880 iN April 6 • 2006 35