Olde School wrote:It used to be SOP to have a mold of the bar mitzvah boy's head in chopped liver at the appetizer table.
At one relatively recent bar mitzvah at Temple Sholom, the after party/lunch was held in the recreational hall. When the temple administrators saw the caterer bring in thousands of dollars worth of shrimp that the family had ordered, they were turned away at the door, and the father couldn't understand why.
A friend of mine (not Jewish) attended a bar mitzvah party at the Ritz Carlton and asked me the next day if it was a little weird that the entree was lobster.
Yes.
jimwdavis wrote:
Rather than trying to finagle your way into a Bar Mitzvah – and having to sit through the service – I would suggest that you pick a weekend and come into the Chicago area, where LTHers can guide you to several restaurants that will send you home with the biggest case of heartburn you have ever had – and loving it. If you play your cards right, you will probably find that more than a few forum members will accompany you on your gastronomic rounds. Please let me know when you plan to be here.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
Living in Highland Park, when kids are of a certain age their social schedule for a couple of years are defined by Bar and Bat Mitzvahs. They quickly got used to lavish parties, getting bussed to destination parties and lots of party favors. They could have probably assembled an outfit with accessories all embossed with names of various celebrants.
There was one family who had an elegant catered party at home. My nieces commented the family was poor. My mouth dropped because they had no realization how much that dinner likely cost. It just didn't have the bells and whistles they were accustomed to.
When the girls were confirmed, they were all fired up to have a party akin to their Jewish friends. They were not very happy when we didn't agree to the plan.
Ironically I went to my first bat mitzvah just last year.
Regards,
razbry wrote:One last question...what does OP mean? Was I the OP? Thanks again!
Cathy2 wrote:Apparently the 18th letter of Hebrew is symbolic for life (I'm just parroting what I was told, so I could be wrong). Depending on your relationship with the celebrant, then you gift them $18 or multiples of $18 for a really good friend. He said he never heard of this practice in Israel.
eatchicago wrote:And, yes, this is entirely a Jewish-American custom.
and BTW maybe it's just me or the parties I've been invited to,
but I have never seen shrimp OR lobster at a Bar Mitzvah
(even tho I do not keep kosher and eat both happily.)
IMHO It's just inappropriate.
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irisarbor wrote:Bat Mitzvah cruise-too funny-
I'm actually invited to a Bat Mitzvah cruise on one of the Chicago dining boats later this spring...
looking forward to it-
Actually the Bar Mitzvahs that were the greatest paragons of excess were those of my east coast relatives,
followed closely by those of my LA relatives-
I remember one cousins in NY where the entree wasn't served untill nearly midnight after a hot hors d'oeuvre buffet (which included brains AND sweatbreads-my first exposure to either- I was 15)
They served creme d-menthe over a pareve (non-dairy) whipped cream like cool whippy substance as a between course palate cleanser...hideous!
Then as a prelude to the huge SWEET TABLE buffet
they rolled out a candy cart with oversized jumbo candied apples and lollipops while the band sang "Who can take a rainbow, sprinkle it with dew....the candy man can!"
The one cousins in LA required long gowns for the women and tuxes for the men but the real capper was when one of the guests had a heart attack and another guest (a doctor-nu?) performed CPR till the ambulance arrived.
Then we all went back to partying...
.
As for Bar/Bat Mitzvah food . . .