kitniyot

Mar. 9th, 2002 11:39 pm
cellio: (moon)
[personal profile] cellio
Pesach is in a few weeks, and this week at services Rabbi Freedman gave his kitniyot rant (as he described it).

Kitniyot is a class of food that isn't, strictly speaking, forbidden during Passover, but the Ashkenazi world has a long tradition of banning it as a fence. This includes foods such as rice, legumes, corn, peanuts, and their derivatives. (This is, for example, why you'll be able to find special Coke in the stores in a couple weeks. Corn syrup is kitniyot, but some bottlers produce Coke with real sugar for Passover. Even if you don't keep kosher or care about kitniyot, this is a score for taste reasons.)

Rabbi Freedman believes that kitniyot has made things so complicated that less-committed Jews just throw up their hands and don't try to do kosher-for-Pesach at all. So he is encouraging people to eat kitniyot and focus the energy they save on the real issues, the 5 grains and leavening. Eat the peanut butter and don't worry about the Coke, but really clean out the bread and cakes and beer. A worthy goal; I wonder if anyone who was there will actually follow up.

My personal practice thus far has been to not stress about kitniyot but not offer it to guests (in case they keep that stringency). And I avoid "deliberate kitniyot" -- that is, corn syrup in the Coke is ok but I probably won't actually cook up a pot of rice and beans.

(no subject)

Date: 2002-03-10 09:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jeannegrrl.livejournal.com
Well, I'm half and half - my Mom was Ashkenazic and my Dad's Sephardic. But I wasn't brought up with anything. Hillel's all Ashkenazic, but would go along with me if I wanted to keep a Sephardic Passover kitchen. Though with that said, in our 5 years together, I haven't done it. I'm not 100% sure why. Maybe partly because I want others who observe the kitniyot thing to be able to eat in my home. Maybe because part of me likes to go the extra step. In anycase, this year, the first night's seder's at our home, and just to be on the "safe" side, there will definitely not be kitniyot at the table, and I'm absolutely fine with that - for the sake of our guests if nothing else. But I'd be a liar if I didn't admit that sometimes the fences get annoying (you don't get me started on mixing chicken w/ dairy!)

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags