Monday, December 27, 2010

Hanukkah Night

Okay, it's time to get caught up on the 2010 Christmas season. Kelly's working this week, so I'll be your tour guide. A few weeks ago, we decided to have a Hanukkah celebration (one night only though for this goyim family). We invited my brothers and their families over for the fun. Here's a rundown.

This was our centerpiece, prior to the lighting of the Menorah:

Here Norah is punching the holes out of the dough for the donuts.And these are the finished products, after Kelly fried them up in oil. Most traditional Hanukkah foods are fried in oil, to commemorate the legend of the miracle of the lamp oil in the temple. The donuts were good, but the donut holes were even better.

Here are some more of the foods. There is homemade apple sauce in the bottom left, which tasted much better than it looks in this picture (the picture almost looks like marinara to me). There are also some matzo crackers with cheese. We also had a beef brisket (not pictured) and some latkes.We forgot to take a picture of the latkes (fried potato pancakes), so we had to settle for this shot when there was only one left.

This is me telling the Hanukkah story to the kids. I think Norah got it pretty well, but the littler kids weren't too interested (probably due to my storytelling).
Each of the kids got to light some of the menorah candles. I'm helping my nephew Miles with one:
Miles and Isla (my niece) admiring the menorah after all the candles were lit:
It was a good night. The story of Hanukkah is part of the time between the Old and New Testaments, and understanding it is helpful to understanding the New Testament (the only reference to it in Scripture is in the New Testament, in John 10:22). It can be celebrated in a Christian way as well, remembering Jesus as the true light of the world. Also, all of the foods which we ate (some of which were new to us) were delicious. Hanukkah songs, however, while mostly fun, are even more repetitive than Christmas songs (at least judging by the selection on the Pandora Hanukkah station). And the dreidel game was basically a flop. All in all, though, it was a fun night. We'll probably do it again.

Here are some bonus videos.

This is Haddon, Norah, and Isla playing "Ring Around the Rosie" later that night. Notice Haddon taking a shot to a particularly painful location when they all fall down.

(It wasn't fake.)

And finally, here's Haddon's take on the dreidel song:

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