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All you need to know about hamantaschen

How to make the perfect treat for Purim

February 14, 2013 14:00
Photo: Ilian Iliev
2 min read

With Purim approaching, our thoughts turn to colourful costumes, cocktails and baskets of edible goodies.

There are plenty of symbolic foods connected with the festival: vegetarian dishes packed with nuts and seeds in honour of Queen Esther’s diet in the king’s palace; the less healthy deep-fried dough fritlachs; anything with alcohol — as this is the one point in the year when we are encouraged to drink to excess — and hamantaschen, the small but perfectly formed triangular pastries.

What the hamantasch denotes is open to speculation. Not everyone calls them by the same name. For Ashkenazi folk, they are hamantaschen, Yiddush for “Haman’s pockets” — allegedly full of bribe money. In Israel, they are oznay Haman meaning “Haman’s ears” — which some sages say comes from the old practice of cutting off criminals’ ears.

Most will know that the three-sided treat is symbolic of the three-cornered hat believed to have been worn by Haman. Another explanation, though, is that the triangular shape represents the strength given to Esther by the three founders of Judaism — Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.