One well-known sweet item associated with Hanukkah is the foil-wrapped, coin-shaped chocolate known as gelt. What's the deal with this stuff, anyway? Candy money might seem like an odd holiday ...
Those game pieces could be items including chocolate Hanukkah gelt (chocolate wrapped in gold foil that looks like a coin), other candy, or any items the players choose to contribute. Each player ...
Hanukkah gelt (chocolate coins) are given to children, and sometimes gifts are exchanged. Families often play a game with a four-sided spinning top, or dreidel, whose four letters are an acronym ...
The "coins" in question are actually made of chocolate ... they are called "gelt." No. It is only in recent decades, the History Channel reports, that Hanukkah has exploded into a major commercial ...
It also will include a gelt (money) drop, a Hanukkah tradition of giving chocolate coins to children. The Palo Alto Fire Department is participating in the gelt drop this year, launching 100 light ...
Hanukkah gelt means ‘Hanukkah money’ in Yiddish. Families often give children chocolate coins as a small present each night, although some might receive real money or other gifts. Chocolate ...
During Hanukkah, some children's families give them gelt, which means money. It can be real money or chocolate coins. It's used in a game called dreidel, where you can win some more gelt or lose ...
Spoonful of Comfort Hanukkah Soup Package ($120) includes two quarts of soup or mac n’ cheese, along with dinner rolls cookies, a breakable chocolate dreidel with chocolate coins, and more.