Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My in laws are old school Jewish and serve Maneschewitz with Thanksgiving. Even the flavors. I am from the south and these are the wines (they are sweet and fruity) that the low end grocery store carries in bulk and was considered “trashy” growing up for me.
DP here. The first Hanukkah I dated my Jewish DH I taught myself to make latkes and bought Maneschewitz. He was so appreciative of my thoughtfulness but later nicely told me Jewish people don't actually drink Maneschewitz! We still laugh about that 20 years later!
My former IL buy it for the kids’ table on the high holidays! It is a right of passage for the kids fasting the first time ever to misjudge the impact on an empty stomach. They’ve been drinking a half-glass watered since they were toddlers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My in laws are old school Jewish and serve Maneschewitz with Thanksgiving. Even the flavors. I am from the south and these are the wines (they are sweet and fruity) that the low end grocery store carries in bulk and was considered “trashy” growing up for me.
DP here. The first Hanukkah I dated my Jewish DH I taught myself to make latkes and bought Maneschewitz. He was so appreciative of my thoughtfulness but later nicely told me Jewish people don't actually drink Maneschewitz! We still laugh about that 20 years later!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I now REALLY want some Ruffles and onion dip.
+1. I might actually serve this now bc of this thread. What's a holiday without some retro/kitschy dishes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is a run-off between:
-Ruffles with dip. This is the only day of the year we eat this. It is all we eat before Thanksgiving dinner.
-Orange salad made with cottage cheese, marshmallows, cool whips, orange jello mix. Again, only day in the year we eat this and it's weird but sooooo good
Oh and canned mandarin oranges too for the orange salad
Is this a jello mold type consistency? I don't think I've had anything like this made w cottage cheese . Hey, you've included a protein!
It's basically this, though growing up I thought my family was the only one on earth who made it
https://iwashyoudry.com/orange-fluff-salad-recipe/
We are vegetarian so we use marshmallows and jello powder that is gelatin-free.
It's a fluffy consistency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I now REALLY want some Ruffles and onion dip.
+1. I might actually serve this now bc of this thread. What's a holiday without some retro/kitschy dishes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I now REALLY want some Ruffles and onion dip.
+1. I might actually serve this now bc of this thread. What's a holiday without some retro/kitschy dishes?
*I was thinking more of a spinach dip, though. I can add some raw vegetables with it...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I now REALLY want some Ruffles and onion dip.
+1. I might actually serve this now bc of this thread. What's a holiday without some retro/kitschy dishes?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is a run-off between:
-Ruffles with dip. This is the only day of the year we eat this. It is all we eat before Thanksgiving dinner.
-Orange salad made with cottage cheese, marshmallows, cool whips, orange jello mix. Again, only day in the year we eat this and it's weird but sooooo good
Oh and canned mandarin oranges too for the orange salad
Is this a jello mold type consistency? I don't think I've had anything like this made w cottage cheese . Hey, you've included a protein!
It's basically this, though growing up I thought my family was the only one on earth who made it
https://iwashyoudry.com/orange-fluff-salad-recipe/
We are vegetarian so we use marshmallows and jello powder that is gelatin-free.
It's a fluffy consistency.
Anonymous wrote:I now REALLY want some Ruffles and onion dip.