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There are also some traditional Passover seder plate ingredients we’re highlighting here, like horseradish (maror), hard-boiled eggs (beitzah), or beets (zeroah, in lieu of a shank bone).
Maror/Chazeret (horseradish) 4. Maror/Chazeret (onion) 5. Charoset 6. Karpas (parsley) Zeroa (Hebrew: זרוֹע) is a lamb shank bone or roast chicken wing or neck used on Passover and placed on the Seder plate.
Pair these with Chinese hot mustard, a staple dipping sauce at dim sum restaurants alongside soy sauce and chile oil. The horseradish-like flavor tickles your nose and its heat balances the ...
Maror and Chazeret [2] – Bitter herbs symbolizing the bitterness and harshness of the slavery that the Hebrews endured in Egypt.In Ashkenazi tradition, fresh romaine lettuce or endives (both representing the bitterness of the Roman invasions) or horseradish may be eaten as Maror in the fulfilment of the mitzvah of eating bitter herbs during the Seder.
Karpas (here parsley), on a Seder table, along with matzo (unleavened bread), maror (bitter herbs, here horseradish) and charoset 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)
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Maror/Chazeret (horseradish) 4. Maror/Chazeret (onion) 5. Charoset 6. Karpas (parsley) Maror is one of the foods placed on the Passover Seder Plate and there is a rabbinical requirement to eat maror at the Seder. Chazeret (Hebrew: חזרת) is used for the requirement called Korech, in which the maror is eaten together with matzo.
• Maror (something bitter, usually horseradish) • Zaroa (a shank bone, which symbolizes the ancient practice of sacrificing a lamb) • Chazeret (a second green, such as lettuce)