I suggest instead to simply hide ten pieces of paper that say "hametz" on them. ❋ Unknown (2007)
Every year before Passover starts I super-clean my kitchen, taking everything out of the cabinets and drawers, wiping out the cabinets and drawers, washing whatever was in them, throwing out the old stuff, moving the "hametz" to the basement, and then re-organizing it all as I put it back in. ❋ Alta Price (2010)
Eric: I would say “hairinate,” since the first part of the word derives from “chametz” (pronounced, and sometimes spelled, “hametz”). ❋ Unknown (2010)
March 28, 2010, 9: 47 pm byomtov says: pronounced, and sometimes spelled, “hametz” ❋ Unknown (2010)
Eric: I would say “hairinate,” since the first part of the word derives from “chametz” pronounced, and sometimes spelled, “hametz”. ❋ Unknown (2010)
The Israelis even used codenames like bi'ur hametz. ❋ Unknown (2009)
If you want to make it for Passover, use matzo meal in the dough, as semolina is hametz. ❋ Mercedes (2008)
The house is all cleaned of hametz, and spring cleaned as well. ❋ Unknown (2008)
Some laws of selling hametz on Passover -- clearly not practically relevant to prisoners on the verge of death in a work camp. ❋ Unknown (2008)
What determines hametz status is whether the presence of water enables fermentation of the grain. ❋ Unknown (2007)
The Jews have a term, hametz, to denote leavened items, which are barred during Passover. ❋ Unknown (2007)
The Jewish tradition dictatates that all leavened foods hametz must be removed from the home and that no eating utensils should come into contact with hametz. ❋ Unknown (2007)
Passover Game: A traditional Passover game is to hide ten pieces of bread around the house so that when you go searching your house to remove all hametz, you make sure to find these pieces of bread. ❋ Unknown (2007)
A drop of a non-kosher ingredient that falls into a pot of kosher food is nullified one in sixty; a drop of hametz on Passover defiles any food or utensil that it has touched. ❋ Unknown (2006)
The prohibition against eating hametz is in many ways stricter than the laws regarding non-kosher food. ❋ Unknown (2006)
Other laws regarding the holiday are equally complex -- the laws of selling and destroying hametz, kashering utensils and searching the home. ❋ Unknown (2006)
And then we do the closest thing you can do to simulating a move from place to place right in your own home -- we empty cupboards of hametz food and dishes, move them to another place in the house, and replace them with our Passover food and utensils, reliving to some small degree the ancient drama of our ancestors packing their belongings and setting out from Egypt towards the Promised Land. ❋ Unknown (2006)
Am also being very careful to try to eat all the hametz in the house, which leads to these horrible concessions like having to make pad thai and such. ❋ Unknown (2006)