The Best Passover Recipes & Fun Sedar Ideas (2024)

Passover is around the corner and we are always looking for new ideas to shake things up! These great Passover recipes and ideas for your sedar (not to mention sedar tablescapes and crafts) will have you looking forward to Passover this year!

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The Best Passover Recipes and Sedar Ideas

We love Passover, it is such a great time to bring the family together and celebrate the Jews exodus from slavery and Egypt. In the past few years we have tried to modernize our Passover sedar and make it a little more festive and fun! Afterall, this night is different from all other nights and it is time to shake things up a little!

What is Passover?

Passover is a major Jewish holiday that takes place in the Spring. Passover commemorates the liberation of the Israelites from Egyptian slavery, lasting seven (for Reform Jews) or eight days (for Conservative or Orthodox)

When is Passover?

Passover is in the Spring, usually sometime mid-March – mid-April

How is Passover celebrated?

Typically, Jewish families will begin Passover with festive meals, called sedar’s, the first two nights of Passover. A sedar is a festive meal that includes telling the story of the Jews exodus from Egypt to freedom.

What foods cannot be eaten during Passover?

This depends on how you observe Passover, but, most who observe, will not eat any food product made from wheat, barley, rye, oats or spelt that has come into contact with water and been allowed to ferment and rise. Instead, they eat matzah, an unleavened flat bread made from flour and water. (there are many other foods that cannot be eaten during Passover, but this is the biggie!)

Now, let’s check out some of the Best Passover Recipes and Crafts!

Passover Chocolate Chip Coconut Macaroons – these are one of my staples. They are super easy to make (only FOUR ingredients) and everyone loves them! They are not like those dry macaroons you get in the can, they are absolutely delicious!

This Cinnamon and Chocolate Chip Mandel Bread is one of my favorites! I could seriously eat it all year round.

It is amazing hot out of the oven, but is great all Passover long! I always make a double (or triple batch), trust me, it will get eaten. It is the best with a hot cup of coffee!

One of the other dishes that we always look forward to on Passover is Fried Matzah, or Matzo Brei. I never knew how to make it, until my mom was out of town for Passover and had to walk me through it over the phone.

I love to sprinkle sugar or cinnamon sugar on my fried matzo, but some people prefer syrup, apple sauce or they like to eat it plain!

Passover Table Decorations

We always like to have fun with our Passover sedar and that starts before the guests even arrive by making a fun and beautiful tablescape!

This Eggshell Bud Vase is perfect for your Easter or Passover table decor. They are easy to make and cost virtually nothing. Your guests will be delighted when they see this clever table decoration that you made all by yourself.

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This Passover Matzo House is just too adorable! Martha Stewart may not celebrate Passover, but she sure can make a super cute DIY!!

The Best Passover Recipes & Fun Sedar Ideas (6)Who says a Sedar Plate needs to be round and boring?

Why not take this great idea from Make.Com.Il? They used a painted piece of wood, but wouldn’t this be super cute with a chalkboard? See it here!

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Looking for some more fun things to do with Matzo? How about this adorable Matzo Vase? How cute with this be on the table and it is so easy to make!

The Best Passover Recipes & Fun Sedar Ideas (8)This may be my favorite tablescape of all time! The Parting of the Red Sea tablescape will surely impress and entertain your guests!

Using the mini Lego figurines is simply genius! See the full how-to instructions here!

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Candy 10 Plagues Seder Game

This free printable Passover placemat or coloring page is great to keep the kids happy during your sedar. In my family, we also have different items on the table that represent the 10 plagues and everyone needs to figure out which item goes with which plague. Download your free Passover placemat here!

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Here are the candies that we used:

  1. Blood – Red Hots
  2. Frogs – Gummy Frogs
  3. Lice – Snowcaps
  4. Beasts/Wild Animals – Gummy Butterflies
  5. Pestilence – Chocolate Lambs (from the Easter candy section)
  6. Boils – French burnt peanuts
  7. Hail – White Sixlets
  8. Locust – Gummy Worms
  9. Darkness – Dark chocolate covered almonds
  10. Slaying of the First Born – Peeps with the eyes “x’d” out with an edible marker

Do you like to arrange who will sit where at your Passover sedar? These Matzo Place Cards are made with a piece of matzo and some melted chocolate (your guests can eat them when they are seated!! BONUS)

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Need an easy centerpiece? This Matzo Floating Candle is easy to make and the items can be found at the dollar store!

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Don’t like the 2 hour Seder? How about the 2 minute version! Check out the 2-Minute Haggadah by Michael Rubiner (print it here!)

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The Best Passover Recipes & Fun Sedar Ideas (2024)

FAQs

How do you make Passover Seder fun? ›

Enjoy Seder Fun:
  1. Set the table up with your children's craft projects from past years. ...
  2. Act out the story of Exodus. ...
  3. Create a special “Four Questions” singalong complete with hand gestures, claps, and banging on the table. ...
  4. Go Ten Plagues crazy. ...
  5. Passover Trivia and games.
Apr 4, 2017

What do you eat at the Passover Seder? ›

The actual Seder meal is also quite variable. Traditions among Ashkenazi Jews generally include gefilte fish (poached fish dumplings), matzo ball soup, brisket or roast chicken, potato kugel (somewhat like a casserole) and tzimmes, a stew of carrots and prunes, sometimes including potatoes or sweet potatoes.

How to make a Passover Seder meal? ›

It's common to begin the Seder meal with matzo ball soup, gefilte fish and maybe a salad. Some people top their soup with farfel, or crushed matzo. Alongside the main course, there will likely be vegetables as well as matzo recipes like Passover popovers or one of these other Passover side dishes.

What are 3 examples of traditional Passover foods? ›

In addition to the foods included on the Seder plate, Passover typically involves a delicious meal for all to enjoy. The menu may differ depending on family tradition, but some popular choices include brisket, roasted chicken, gefilte fish and potato kugel.

What is the basic Seder menu? ›

12 Passover Dinner Ideas for Your Seder Meal
  • 01 of 12. Bubbie's Chopped Liver. View Recipe. ...
  • 02 of 12. Matzoh Ball Soup. View Recipe. ...
  • 03 of 12. Raw Beet Salad. ...
  • 04 of 12. Carrot-Sweet Potato Mash. ...
  • 05 of 12. Old Fashioned Potato Kugel. ...
  • 06 of 12. Roasted Brussels Sprouts. ...
  • 07 of 12. Easy Elegant Baked Fish. ...
  • 08 of 12. Juicy Roasted Chicken.
Mar 26, 2024

What are the 6 symbolic foods of Passover? ›

There are at least five foods that go on the seder plate: shank bone (zeroa), egg (beitzah), bitter herbs (maror), vegetable (karpas) and a sweet paste called haroset. Many seder plates also have room for a sixth, hazeret (another form of the bitter herbs).

Why is an orange on a Seder plate? ›

The next year, Heschel put an orange on her seder plate and shared that she chose the orange “because it suggests the fruitfulness for all Jews when lesbians and gay men are contributing and active members of Jewish life.” The seeds of the orange, like other items on the seder plate, symbolize rebirth and renewal.

What not to eat during Passover? ›

During Passover, Ashkenazi Jews traditionally stay away from not only leavened foods like bread, namely barley, oats, rye, spelt, and wheat, but also legumes, rice, seeds, and corn. The ban has been in place since the 13th century, but it's always been controversial. In fairly recent history, it's been overturned.

What does Seder mean in English? ›

Order and ritual are very important in the seder—so important that they are even reflected in its name: the English word seder is a transliteration of the Hebrew word sēdher, meaning “order.” The courses in the meal, as well as blessings, prayers, stories, and songs, are recorded in the Haggadah, a book that lays out ...

How long does a Seder dinner last? ›

Which means the seder can range from under 30 minutes (followed by a leisurely meal) to literally all night long. Traditionally, the seder has two parts: readings and rituals for before the meal is served, and readings and songs that follow the meal.

What does the lettuce represent on the Seder plate? ›

A second bitter item, which is sometimes left off the Seder plate entirely, romaine lettuce symbolizes the fact that the Jewish stay in Egypt began soft and ended hard and bitter (look at the two ends of a piece of lettuce). How it's used: Some families do use the chazeret and the maror interchangeably or together.

Can you eat asparagus on Passover? ›

Sautéed Asparagus

A simple spring side dish is just what you need to make your Passover meal complete. If you're serving meat, just be sure to leave off the parmesan cheese.

What not to do at Passover? ›

During the first two and last two days of Passover, many traditionally observant Jews will abstain from most of the same activities they avoid on the Sabbath — no driving, working, using electricity, lighting fires or spending money.

Do you say happy Passover Seder? ›

Should I say “Happy Passover” or other greetings? If you want to greet a loved one who is celebrating Passover, “Happy Passover” is an appropriate sentiment. You could also say “chag sameach,” which means happy holiday in Hebrew, or chag kasher v'semeach, which means have a happy and kosher Passover.

Do you wish someone happy Passover Seder? ›

Do you say Happy Passover? First of all, yes, you can — and should — wish someone a happy Passover during the holiday. If you're most comfortable sticking to English, "Happy Passover" is perfectly acceptable, and your Jewish friends and loved ones will appreciate the sentiment.

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