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Fast-breaking with tradition

Do you end Yom Kippur with a four-course feast or a light soupy supper?

October 6, 2016 14:58
06102016 iStock 48931690 LARGE

By

Victoria Prever,

Victoria Prever

3 min read

We're united in the pain of Yom Kippur's 25-hour deprivation. The breaking of that fast, however, can cause marital disputes.

Challah or honey cake with "a nice cup of tea" (or coffee) is universally popular, but we're split over what comes next. When two become one, family traditions may not always tally. Some families feast and others keep it light.

"My grandmother in South Africa cooked for our breaking of the fast - until she was 89," says Jan Gold from Finchley. "She'd make a massive hot meal with bulkele (small yeasted rolls made with cinnamon and sweet bulke dough) and we'd eat several courses."

When Gold married English husband, Daniel Gold and joined his family for Yom Kippur it was more subdued. "My husband's family was small and my first year with them was a big shock. It was just me and his immediate family, and we ate a light deli meal - egg and onion, smoked salmon, light salads. It felt like they weren't making much of Yom Kippur, but they didn't feel comfortable eating a big huge meal," she explains. "When I told them what we eat in South Africa, they thought we were nuts!" Over the years, Jan has come around to her in-laws' way of thinking. "I've given in," she laughs. "It does make more sense to eat less and I'd find it hard to go back now."