Unleavened flatbread in Jewish cuisine; an element of the Passover festival.
Sinònims
Examples for "matzoth"
Examples for "matzoth"
1Soak four matzoth in cold water and press them after being thoroughly saturated.
2Sift together one-half cup of matzoth meal and one-fourth cup of potato flour.
3Then pat in enough matzoth meal so that it may be rolled into balls.
4Beat three whole eggs well, fold the matzoth in lightly.
5Fold in a cup of matzoth flour, sifted very fine.
1I'm gonna show you guys how to make a savory matzo cracker.
2Many recipes use a lot of flour or matzo meal as a binder.
3I don't think anybody who's had matzo would recognize them, these matzo crackers.
4But the old woman who remembered the matzo did, more than anybody else.
5Combine drained potatoes, onion, eggs, matzo meal or flour and salt; mix well.
1Aside from matzoh or challah, few Jewish foods were as ubiquitous.
2But we broke it, and the matzoh went in crumbs on the ground.
3And he shared a bowl of matzoh ball soup with her.
4I had made this myself; no store-bought matzoh for me.
5Pasta, wine, matzoh, and pickles were also produced in the tenements, foods made by immigrants for immigrants.
1The matzah and wine were flown in from Israel.
2And it happens a lot where like people just, it's like oh wait, we always matzah some how for passover.
3This Matzah occurs in an Italian manuscript of the fourteenth century.
4In the Haggadah the question is asked, "Why do we eat this Matzah?"
5The Crawford Haggadah, now in the Ryland library, Manchester, pictures a round Matzah through which a pretty flowered design runs.
1The water is used to prepare matza, the traditional unleavened bread eaten during the upcoming Jewish holiday of Passover.
2The water is used to make matza, the traditional unleavened bread to be eaten on the Jewish holiday of Passover which starts on Monday.
1Friendly relations were established with the chiefs of the Iberi, Sauro-matse, Golchi, and even with the tribes settled on the Cimmerian Bosphorus.