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Forum
-> Household Management
Do you always eat dairy Thur night
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Not more than any other night |
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42% |
[ 88 ] |
About 50% of the time |
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5% |
[ 12 ] |
Most of the time |
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25% |
[ 53 ] |
Always |
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26% |
[ 55 ] |
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Total Votes : 208 |
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kitov
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Yesterday at 7:46 pm
Always pizza and fries. Always.
I'm already sweating over the shabbos meals, there's no way I'm also cooking dinner.
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Fox
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Yesterday at 8:26 pm
Always dairy or pareve on Thursday night unless there's a special occasion.
What's funny is that my kids all do this in their own homes, but they had no idea why. I guess I never explained it, and it never came up at school.
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Rutabaga
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Yesterday at 8:56 pm
We have set meat and dairy nights, with exceptions for Yom Tov or other special occasions. Mondays and Wednesdays are meat dinners and Tuesdays and Thursdays are pareve or dairy. Sundays can go either way.
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mommy3b2c
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Yesterday at 10:22 pm
chocolate moose wrote: | I'M NOT SURE what 24 hours signify but sometimes I even have a cold cut sandwich friday afternoon when time is tight. don't tell your dad!!! |
And in my house standard Friday lunch is fried chicken , kilbasa wrapped in dough and chicken soup .
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questionanswer
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Yesterday at 10:45 pm
devorah1231 wrote: | Growing up my father was pretty makpid that didn't eat fleishigs 24 hours before Shabbos with rare exceptions only.
My husband was not makpid but we do easy dairy dinners Thursday night because it's easier and we like pasta. |
What circles?
While the vast majority of people I know eat milchigs Thursday and its almost a religious thing in my house and my parents house........ I never heard its actually an inyan!
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devorah1231
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Today at 12:16 am
questionanswer wrote: | What circles?
While the vast majority of people I know eat milchigs Thursday and its almost a religious thing in my house and my parents house........ I never heard its actually an inyan! |
Litvish with chadsidish roots. I have no idea where it came from, maybe his parents,.maybe his yeshiva. He never said the hours thing, just not to eat fleishigs day before Shabbos to make it more special on Shabbos. And I am sure there were exceptions like weddings or whatever.
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