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Rosh Hashanah In Los Angeles: Dinners To Welcome 5771

  First Posted: 09/08/10 02:16 PM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 06:35 PM ET

Thanks to Chowhound and Twitter, we've got the skinny on Los Angeles-area restaurants that are offering special Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur menus this week. Gather up the apples and honey, pomegranate, and challah from your local grocery store and take a break from cooking by ordering Clementine's house-cured gravlax, beef brisket from Lunch, or matzo ball soup from Art's. L'shanah tovah! Here's to a great 5771.

Akasha
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Akasha serves up the classics with a locavore twist: See Canyon apples with honey and pomegranates and Finley Farms green beans and roasted carrots. Check out the rest of their special Rosh Hashanah menu.

Akasha
9543 Culver Blvd.
Culver City, CA 90232

Cost: a la carte

Photo via Flickr: wonderyort.
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Thanks to Chowhound and Twitter, we've got the skinny on Los Angeles-area restaurants that are offering special Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur menus this week. Gather up the apples and honey, pomegranat...
Thanks to Chowhound and Twitter, we've got the skinny on Los Angeles-area restaurants that are offering special Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur menus this week. Gather up the apples and honey, pomegranat...
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Aaron Cogan
Your Mom's micro-bio is empty.
04:45 AM on 09/09/2010
To my goyim friends; It's, "L'shanah tovah tikatev", not SHA NA NA Rikki-Tikki-Tavi.
Oy.
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01:51 PM on 09/08/2010
A Yom Kippur catering menu at Joan's? I think they meant "Yom Kippur break-the-fast catering menu"!!! No wonder there's no byline on this article. Oi vey, who does the fact-checking here?

That said--and as great as these options may be--there's nothing that beats sharing and eating this holy meal with family or friends, in a home. The smells and sweet melodies of Rosh Hashana are inimitable, and I can only imagine eating one such meal at any of these places will be lonely and depressing, no matter how delicious they may be. If you don't have a place to eat your Rosh Hashana in a haimish atmosphere, contact your local Chabad RIGHT AWAY and they'll accommodate you. A small fee of $18 or $36 to help defray their costs may be acceptable after the holidays.