Sketching Out Blog: Sketches of art, watercolor, photos, recipes, books, interviews, Jewish topics, and Highland Park, New Jersey

Shabbat Favorites with Watercolor

Shabbat watercolor with challot, candles, and kiddush cup
Shabbat watercolor with challot, candles, and kiddush cup; watercolor by Leora Wenger, 2012

Every week traditional Jews around the world celebrate a holiday. As one of my friends said, we prepare Thanksgiving dinner every week! Well, maybe not turkey. In the painting are two challot (plural of challah, the traditional braided bread), two candles (we are not allowed to light new flames on Shabbat, so we light candles before the day begins; I actually light five, one candle for each family member) and 1 kiddush cup (filled with wine or grape juice). The two loaves of bread symbolize the fact that when the Children of Israel were in the desert, they would pick double the bread (actually, it was manna) the day before and rest on Shabbat. Kiddush means “sanctification” – it’s the special prayer said at the beginning of the Friday night and Shabbat lunch meals. We also say a version of kiddush on Jewish holidays like Passover or Sukkot.

I asked a few of my blogger friends to tell me some of their Shabbat favorites. Enjoy the responses!

Laura of Pragmatic Attic:

My favorite zemer is Mizmor L’David.
My favorite things to eat on Shabbos are freshly baked challah and potato kugel (which always tastes best at the shul kiddush).
A favorite pastime on Shabbos is reading, but I also really enjoy spending time with family and friends (without the usual distractions of telephones, television, etc.).
Least favorite part of Shabbos? When it ends of course! (and we have to clean up and go back to the usual routine).

Risa also known as Isramom wrote about her grandfather David and his closed shop on Saturday. In Yiddish: שבת געשלאסען

“In New York there were laws that forbade opening stores on Sunday so in order to keep Shabbat an orthodox Jew had the choice of keeping his store closed two days every week or to open on Sunday and if a policeman passed by pay a fine. My grandfather did a little of both. So what was only a marginally profitable business in the dark days of the Great Depression became even more marginal.”

And in this post From Generation to Generation Risa talks about her mother and shares how she is one of a long chain of women who have lit candles for Shabbat.

Batya talks about how she and her husband eat on Shabbat: lots of vegetables! Her Shabbat every week also has Torah – she regularly attends a women’s class called Shiur Nashim (class for women).

Ilana-Davita enjoys planning her Shabbat menus in advance of the day and reading and napping on Shabbat. Traveling back in time to 2008, she posted Quick Shabbat Dishes with Asian Touch.

Mirj of Miriyummy writes:

Favorite zemer: Dror Yikra, sung in an authentic as possible Yemenite accent.
Favorite Shabbat food: my husband makes these amazing roast potatoes. He parboils them and then roasts them in a hot oven in shmaltz!
Favorite parsha: I love parshat Beshalach because of Shirat Hayam.
Favorite dvar torah: My husband has a dvar torah for parshat Noach where he compares Noach to Avraham and Moshe. I never get bored or tired hearing that one (every year!).
Favorite Shabbat past time: kiddush hopping! Some whisky, some kugel, lots of friends!
Favorite Shabbat blog: my own post: The Story of Noah — Good Friends in High Places — where friends of ours helped us when God and the weather made it uncertain that we would get Shabbat on the table in time.
Favorite Shabbat image: my challot after they come out of the oven.
Mirj miriummy challot
Least favorite part of Shabbat: clearing the table. I don’t mind washing dishes, I just hate the whole clearing up after a good meal. I just want to sit at the table and savor the meal, instead of getting busy clearing everything away.

• • •

If you keep Shabbat/Shabbos, what are your favorites? Songs, food, parsha? Anything else?

Mrs. S. says

What a beautiful painting! I love how the golden challot reflect the golden flames!

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leoraw says

Thank you!

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Michelle says

I also love the painting and I really appreciate the information. I am going to visit the other blogs as I always enjoy learning. Funny I never thought about the problem of Sunday store closings and what a problem it might be for others...I am going to ask my MIL about my husband's great-grandfather's store in NY and see what she has to say...Michelle

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leoraw says

Michelle, you leave such interesting insights on my posts! Love hearing from you.

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Raizy says

Beautiful painting, Leora. I love the blue background.

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leoraw says

Nice to hear from you, Raizy. Glad you enjoyed my painting. It was my Washington's Birthday Weekend treat to myself - painting in my dining room.

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Jewaicious says

What a beautiful water color, so filled with mood and cherished moments.

I enjoyed the responses. Thank you for this heart-warming post.

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leoraw says

Glad you enjoyed - I like hearing from people on a topic like this one that touches so many.

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Batya says

Thanks for the mention. Shabbat Shalom and chodesh tov!

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leoraw says

Happy Adar!

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Ilana-Davita says

Lovely painting! It is the sort of post I would have liked to come across when I became observant. Thanks for mentioning my own post.

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leoraw says

I wish I could have written it for you then. But maybe someone else out there who is newly observant or considering becoming observant will enjoy the post.

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Ilana-Davita says

Exactly what I thought!

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Robin from Israel says

Lovely painting, it's got a beautiful sense of balance.

We'd be a good pair at dinner - I don't mind clearing but I hate washing dishes!

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leoraw says

Oh, that was part of Mirj's comment - maybe it's not apparent that the challah photo and the clearing are hers?

But I will take full credit for the painting - thank you so much for your comment.

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Felisol says

I so love to read about the wholehearted way you weekly celebrate the Shabbat. Honoring God and keeping your family together with such devotion. I read your niece's blog how she sat alone one Friday Evening, lit a kindle and sung Kiddush,- alone. It moved me to tears, as do your blog, because I feel how far away from living close with God I've come. I try, but my mother always did the Sunday celebration in a much more genuine and uncompromising way. A preacher once said, "it's not about how far away from God you can live, but how close you can come".
I guess I revolted so hard against the many Christian don'ts that I lost valuable ways of worshiping. I think I take the freedom to show the link to young Hannah's post. If it is wrong, you can delete it.
http://nestledmountainfjord.blogspot.com/2012/02/profaning-sacred.html
I so appreciate your and her posts. They are making me a richer person.

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leoraw says

Glad you are enjoying my niece's posts! She seems to be having the time of her life. Hope Toronto isn't a disappointment after all her adventures in Norway. There are a lot more Jews in Toronto, however, so she won't be doing Friday nights alone, I'm sure.

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Risa says

First of all, I love the painting. Of all the talents I don't have, being able to paint a picture is the one that is the most 'missing'. (I can't dance or sing either.) You are truly blessed.
Thanks for asking me to participate and thank you for linking to two of my favorite posts.
Shabbat Shalom and Hodesh Tov!

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leoraw says

Risa, thanks for the encouragement. I would like to do even more artwork. Must make time for it. So glad you participated in this post.

Shabbat Shalom and Happy Adar!

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Laura says

Love the painting--I like how you worked in stars. It reminds me a little of the summer salad painting you did with stars on the bowl.

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Please leave a comment! I love to hear from you.

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