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    A Mediterranean Passover Seder

    Photo by: James Ransom
    Alice Medrich's New Classic Macaroons
    Alice Medrich, chocolatier and author of scads of baking cookbooks, is famously a little wild with her desserts. She developed this recipe ... more 
    Photo by: James Ransom
    Alice Medrich's New Classic Macaroons
    Alice Medrich, chocolatier and author of scads of baking cookbooks, is famously a little wild with her desserts. She developed this recipe not with the standard bag of sweetened, angel flake coconut in mind, but those wide, sloping unsweetened shavings, often called coconut chips and sold at health food stores nowadays. - Amanda & Merrill

    Makes about 22 cookies
    4 large egg whites
    3 1/2 cups unsweetened dried flaked, not shredded, coconut (also known as coconut chips) or 3 cups sweetened, dried shredded coconut
    3/4 cup sugar
    2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
    Slightly rounded 1/4 teaspoon salt

    1. Line 2 cookie sheets with parchment paper.
    2.Combine all of the ingredients in a large heatproof mixing bowl, preferably stainless steel because the mixture will heat faster than in glass. Set the bowl directly in a wide skillet of barely simmering water (if your bowl bobs in the water, simply pour some out). Stir the mixture with a silicone spatula, scraping the bottom to prevent burning, until the mixture is very hot to the touch and the egg whites have thickened slightly and turned from translucent to opaque, 5 to 7 minutes. Set the batter aside for 30 minutes to let the coconut absorb more of the goop.
    3.Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Position racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven.
    4. Using 2 tablespoons of batter, make attractive heaps 2 inches apart on the lined cookie sheets. (You can also make these small less 
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    Tue, Apr 3, 2012 1:14 PM EDT
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    Just as Passover is about the story of the Jewish peoples' exodus from Egypt, there is a (less epic) story behind this post as well. In putting together our Passover menu, we were hyper-aware of the fact that the Passover meal comes with many rules and rituals, and in the interest of getting it right, we sought help from a few of our practicing friends. Though the debate was friendly and genial, debate there was! Turns out, as with so many religious events, peoples' Passover traditions are both widely varied and closely held.

    This menu is a suggestion, a delicious idea -- we've stayed away from the mixing of meat and dairy, and of course, from leavened bread, but we've included a roasted meat, which is a no-no in some sects -- so take our menu as a starting point. Feel free to adapt it, to cherry pick, and tell us about your Passover traditions in the comments!

    • Check out more Passover-friendly recipes to whip up all week long.

    • Celebrating Easter? See our Springy Easter Dinner ideas.

    • Got a question in the kitchen? The Food52 Hotline is here to help!