View allAll Photos Tagged hamentashen
Director of International Education Larry Boetsch defends the hamentashen in the great Latke-Hamentashen Debate, in Hillel House.
Associate Dean of Students Tammy Futrell and Assistant Professor of African History T.J. Tallie defend the latke in the great Latke-Hamentashen Debate, in Hillel House.
It's Purim and a few of my cousins have been e-mailing recipes for holiday cookies, especially hamentashen (little triangular filled cookies). Oh, the recipes have been making me so hungry! No time to bake, but I decided that there is more than one way to make hamentashen. Tonight I used Painter to sketch little triangular cookies, and they began to dance as I added some colors: apricot, cherry, and plum! Now I will send these little digital cookies out as holiday greetings to friends and family.
Yesterday I posted my little digital drawing of hamentashen for Purim, created with Painter's digital pastel. I also used Painter to "capture" the image as a pattern, and then used the pattern to make the image I am posting here tonight, of many happy hamentashen, which are filled cookies for the the holiday. The dough is cut in circles, and then the edges are folded over to make a triangle. These are just digital cookies, but I would say that the filling is cherry. . . .
Hamentashen nose, Elizheva Hurvich
Courtesy of Elizheva Hurvich.
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California Dreaming explores Jewish life in the Bay Area from the Gold Rush to the present. This participatory exhibition tells the story of how Jews settled in the area and made lives for themselves in the spirit of independence, renewal, and entrepreneurialism.
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Hamentashen for Purim or for your everyday enjoyment :)
Prune, Cherry, Apricot, Lemon, & Raspberry available daily.
Chocolate or poppyseed filled by order only.
Regular size $2.10 each, $11.95 hald dozen, or $22.70 a dozen
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It's Purim, and time for Hamentashen! I love to eat these little triangular cookies, but it also makes me happy to look at them! This is a digital sketch that I created tonight with my Painter program, using digital pastel. I will use this little image to send greetings to friends and family. While I was at it, I created a pattern from this image, and I plan to post it here tomorrow.
Graham Donhowe making hamentaschen during The Little Minyan’s March Family Education program. Families made mishlo'ach manot bags, filled with a special “Values Trail Mix” and hamentaschen, that were passed out to community members in attendance at The Little Minyan’s Purim celebration.
To celebrate Purim this year, Josh and I made what I call "Hammertime" cookies, but are actually "Hamentashen". What? "Hammertime" is more fun to say? I agree.
We used three different types of jam and then they exploded in the oven. We covered them with fresh berries and all was well.
Tonight I was trying to make a design in Painter using kaleidoscope mode (which divides the canvas into six sections and whatever is drawn in one section is replicated in all the others). As I was creating an abstract design, I realized that I had accidentally drawn a hamentashen (filled triangular cookie eaten on Jewish holiday of Purim). So I opened a new image and started over, this time drawing a hamentashen on purpose, and here it is, perfectly symmetrical thanks to Painter's kaleidoscope mode. I also used this image to create a pattern, which I plan to post here tomorrow.