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Food

A way with curds

There is nothing like a bit of cheesecake at Shavuot. But why do we eat it?

May 13, 2010 10:14
Say cheese: Shavuot has become known as the cheesecake festival

ByDenise Phillips, Denise Phillips

2 min read

Like most Jewish holidays, Shavuot is known by a variety of names: the Feast of Weeks, the Festival of Giving of the Torah, and, more recently, the Cheesecake Festival.

The most popular explanation for the tradition of eating dairy foods at this time is that when the Israelites accepted the Torah, they became obliged to follow the laws of kashrut. However, these laws were new and they were nervous about following them correctly. So to be on the safe side they decided the best option was to stick to dairy foods.

And what could be more dairy than a fine cheesecake to round off a celebratory dairy meal? Cheesecake, with its creamy, delicious, melt-in-the-mouth taste is one of the great comfort foods.

It is believed to have originated in ancient Greece when it was served to the athletes at the first Olympic games held in 776 BCE on the Isle of Delos. The secret of this divine dessert then fell into the hands of the Romans, who renamed it "placenta" or "libum" and baked it on a pastry base and used it as an offering at their temples to their gods.