Eating this election: A recipe for world peace
First there was the taco bowl.
First there was the taco bowl.
More Americans in Israel voted for Donald Trump than for Hillary Clinton in the presidential election, but the number of Republican votes plummeted from four years ago, according to a poll released Thursday.
Admittedly, I am not what you would call a “sports enthusiast.” Although I loved playing basketball in high school, I rarely follow sports statistics and never purposefully schedule time to watch events on television.
The eating habits of Israelis are well known. Many popular kosher cookbooks, representing all the Jewish ethnic groups (‘edot) — Iraqi, Yemenite, Kurdish, North African, Ethiopian (Beta Yisrael), Palestinian, etc. — are published and become best-sellers.
Jewish parents interested in home schooling their children may find the process of implementing the religious, cultural and language elements of Jewish education to be daunting.
Because of our holy books, Jews are used to navigating long, complicated legalistic texts. But nothing could have prepared us for the 224-page voter guide that arrived in the mail this election cycle, asking Californians to weigh sometimes sweeping and often obscure changes to its legal code.