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1. Seder Table Decorating
What’s the first step to any home decorating project? Choosing a focal point or
an inspiration object. You know that from watching design shows!
Do you want your Seder Table to look like a professional set it? Here’s how you
can achieve the look you want.
Have you seen a picture of a table setting in a magazine that you would love to
duplicate? Or do you have a religious object that you just love using year to
year? Choose an inspirational object to focus your table around.
When you choose an object to set your table around, your table will look classic.
Your table will look intentional. All the rest of the pieces on your table will
compliment your special object. No, your table will not look coordinated in the
boring, predictable sense. Elegant and beautiful in the “WOW” sense! Clean,
streamlined, and inspiring.
Next, what color is your object of choice? Any kind of designer typically works
with 2, 3, or 4 colors in any type of design project-graphic or interior.
You can do the same with a table. Pick at least 2 colors to start with. What colors
are in your inspirational object? Or in the picture you’ve cut out?
And the next question is: what other items do you have to go with the color
scheme? No you don’t have to go out and buy more pieces. Just inventory what
you have and write it down so you know right away how to set the table.
In my own palm pilot, I have a list that looks like this for my Sabbath table
settings.
4 color combination
Brown, White, Green, Silver
-silver bowl
-brown meat dishes
-chrome pedestal bowl
-white china teapot
-silver coaster
-brown everyday meat mugs
-green salad bowl
3 color combination
Blue, Gold/Amber, and Red
Blue Shabbat China
Amber color glasses
Blue Kiddush cups
Amber Chargers
Amber Water Pitcher
Red cake stand
Here’s a blank chart for you to create for your Passover Seder Table setting.
Seder Table Color Combinations
1. _________ + _________+ __________
Pieces that fit into the collection:
______________________________________
______________________________________
______________________________________
______________________________________
One year, I happened to cut out a picture of a beautiful, traditional table setting
that utilized all white dishes and red roses at each setting. I knew it would work
for me because my Passover china is all white. I purchased 8 small bubble bowls
and stuck in a red rose at each person’s setting. I purchased red cloth napkins to
match.
A guest asked me what color flowers to bring. I asked her to make sure there
was red in the bouquet. My centerpiece.
On Passover, if you stick with the same color scheme year after year, you will not
feel bored. If you set your table the same way every Shabbat, then boredom
might surmount. But on Passover, just taking out your tableware will instill fond
memories and an excitement for the Seder!
Knowing what your table will look like for every Seder year after year, actually
puts things on autopilot and works for you not against you. I’ll talk more about
this a little later.
2. Seder Meal Planning
I mentioned the word “autopilot”. That is my secret word for observing Passover.
The more things you can put on AUTOPILOT the better. Why? Because we
forget how to do it year after year! Talk to a woman who is cleaning her entire
house. If she has a plan for how to do it year after year, she is not nervous. But
for someone who has no clue where to start, that is when stress can really
mount.
(Pesach Perfectly Organized talks about how to make Pesach from start to finish
with a schedule of what to do every week and day for 6 weeks leading up to
Passover. Cleaning, cooking, shopping, you name it. Talk about putting tasks on
autopilot!)
Let’s put your meals on autopilot. Come up with a list of recipes that you have
used in the past. Not only meals you made on Passover but for Shabbat meals,
or Thanksgiving meals. What did you make? What did people love? What do you
know how to make by heart?
Write down your recipes. Put them in a binder organized under categories“Soup”, “Salads”, “Poultry”. You can create your meal plans from these recipes.
Designate a separate Passover binder and use it year after year.
No more guesswork about what to make. Put your meals on autopilot. Even if
this is your first time making an organized Pesach this will work for you. If you do
not know what you made last Passover, start thinking about what you made last
week for Shabbat. Or for Wednesday night dinner? Can you convert it into a
Passover recipe? Write down recipes, put them in your new Passover Binder and
begin again now.
3. Take Notes!
Make notes BEFORE and AFTER Passover (and during the preparation stages)
about what worked and what didn’t work. How many bottles of wine and matzah
you bought. What kitchen items you would have liked to have.
I do this the MINUTE Passover is over. You know why? Because I will forget.
Guaranteed. Last year I wrote in my Post Pesach notes that I would have liked to
vacuum my strollers earlier. And I would have liked to invite my guests earlier.
I would not have remembered this had I not made notes last year. And you know
what? If you do this, you will have an INSTANT Passover guide for your needs.
Good luck and Happy Pesach! If you’d like further assistance or have any
questions about how you can organize your Passover, please visit
http://www.jewish-life-organized.com. |