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Food

Pick a pocket or two for a Purim treat

Hamantaschen are not just delicious but are also steeped in symbolism

March 16, 2011 12:59
Hamantaschen: a dish brought up to date with a jammy filling

By

Ruth Joseph

3 min read

Remember when we were children and Purim was looming? How excited we were, unable to sleep thinking about the Purim party, and the reading of the Megillah when we would be allowed to make a noise in shul with our parents' and the rabbi's permission; and the joy of dressing up as Esther or Mordecai.

When I was a child my mother would arrange tiny baskets of mishloach manot to give to all her friends. In those baskets were home-made sweets, marzipan fruits and - best of all - her own hamantaschen. It was always made from a yeast dough filled with a ground poppyseed base; the grinding took hours with a simple mincer and masses of elbow grease.

How fascinating to look at these ingredients and understand why we eat hamantaschen and why a poppy seed filling. It is intriguing the way the Jewish religion invites us to eat foods which are woven in symbolic mysticism? There are numerous reasons why we should eat hamantaschen and they stem from East European Ashkenazi origins. Mohntaschen in German comes from the word mohn meaning poppy seeds and taschen meaning pockets. Add on the wicked Haman and we have hamantaschen or Haman's pockets, supposed to be stuffed with bribe money.

In Israel they are called Oznei Haman or Haman's ears. This idea comes from the Midrash which describes Haman suffering pain and bent over with the humiliation of clipped ears, as he enters the King's chamber.

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