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  • Bluenoemi Jewelry Plate Bluenoemi Armenian Ceramics Pessach Plate for Passover Jewish Table Flowers and grapes
  • Bluenoemi Jewelry Plate Bluenoemi Armenian Ceramics Pessach Plate for Passover Jewish Table Flowers and grapes
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Pessach Passover Seder Plate Jewish Table Armenian Ceramic

Regular price $110.00 USD
Regular price Sale price $110.00 USD

Armenian Ceramic Passover Seder Plate

31 cm

Pessach plate for decoration and serving on the Passover Table.

The Passover meal, known as a Seder, is all about remembering Jewish history. Much of the food is deeply symbolic. Matzo - Matza represents the unleavened bread the Jews ate while fleeing Egypt, for example, and horseradish is a symbol for the bitterness of slavery.

Each of the six items arranged on the plate has special significance to the retelling of the story of Passover—the exodus from Egypt—which is the focus of this ritual meal. A seventh symbolic item used during the meal—the three matzos—is not considered part of the seder plate proper.

Symbolic foods


Passover Seder plate. Categories (with imaged examples in brackets): 
1. Zeroa (shankbone)
2. Beitza (roasted hard-boiled egg)
3. Maror /Chazeret (horseradish)
4. Maror /Chazeret (onion)
5. Charoset
6. Karpas (parsley)

Karpas can be any vegetable for which the blessing over fruit of the earth is recited. Parsley or another green leafy vegetable is traditionally used. Jews of Eastern European descent sometimes use potatoes as it was the closest to a green vegetable that was often available during Passover.

For maror, bitter herbs, use horseradish root or a bitter lettuce. Put enough on the seder plate for everyone as the maror will be eaten during the seder.

The zro'a, shank bone, is a reminder of the Passover sacrifice. According to the Talmud  vegetarians may substitute a raw beet, which also bleeds when cut. The zro'a is not eaten at the seder.

The beitzah is a roasted hard-boiled egg. It is included on the seder plate in remembrance of the holiday sacrifice offered at the Temple. It can also be seen as a symbol of creation and the cycle of life and death, as eggs are eaten by mourners after a funeral. The beitzah on the seder plate is not eaten or used during the seder.

The charoset is a mixture of wine, fruits, nuts, honey and spices that symbolizes the mortar with which the Israelites made bricks during slavery. Askenazi charoset is usually made of apples, nuts, sweet wine, honey or sugar and cinnamon. Sephardic charoset recipes contain dates, figs, apricots almonds and less or no wine. Make plenty of charoset, as it is always a favorite.

The sixth optional item on the seder plate is chazeret, a second bitter herb, which is added to the Hillel sandwich. You can use romaine lettuce or prepared horseradish for chazeret.