Holidays

CELEBRATE EVERY HOLIDAY WITH FLAIR AT OVO AT THE ALTAIR

From Major Holidays to Rosh Chodesh and special Shabbatot, our doors are open. Join us for divine Kosher feasts and create unforgettable memories for every sacred occasion. Your table for joyous celebrations awaits – reserve now for a spiritually and gastronomically enriching experience!

Available for Catering

MAJOR HOLIDAYS

PASSOVER PROGRAM

Days Until

Rosh Hashanah

Oct 2 – 4 W – F
Days Until

Yom Kippur

Oct 11 – 12 F – Sa
Days Until

Sukkot

Oct 16 – 23 W – W
Days Until

Shmini Atzeret

Oct 23 – 25 W – F
Days Until

Simchat Torah

Oct 24 – 25 Th – F
Days Until

Chanukah

Dec 25 – Jan 2 W – Th
Days Until

Purim

Mar 23 – Mar 24 Sa – Su
Days Until

Pesach

Apr 22 – 30 M – Tu
Days Until

Shavuot

Jun 11 – 13 Tu – Th
Days Until

Tish’a B’Av

Aug 12 – 13 M – Tu

MINOR HOLIDAYS

HOLIDAYS
Tu BiShvat
Purim Katan
Shushan Purim
Days of the Omer
Pesach Sheni
Lag BaOmer
Leil Selichot
Tu B’Av
2023
Feb 5 – Feb 6 Su-M
Mar 6 –Mar 7 Mon evening-Tue
Mar 7–Mar 8 Tue-Wed
Apr 6– May 25 Thu-Thu
May 4,– May 5 Thu evening-Fri
May 8– May 9 Mon evening-Fri
Sept 9 Sat
Aug 1– Aug 2 Tue-Wed
2024
Jan 24 – 25 W – Th
Feb 22 – 23 Th – F
Mar 24 – 25 Su – M
Apr 23 – Jun 11 Tu – Tu
May 21 – 22 Tu – W
May 25 – 26 Sa – Su
Sep 28 Sa
Aug 18 – 19 Su – M

modern holidays

HOLIDAYS
Yom HaShoah
Yom HaZikaron
Yom HaAtzma’ut
Yom Yerushalayim
Yom HaAliyah
Sigd
2023
Apr 17–Apr 18 Mon evening-Tue
Apr 24– Apr 25 Mon evening-Tue
Apr 25 – Apr 26 Tue-Wed
May 18–May 19 Thu evening-Fri
Mar 31–Apr 1 Fri evening-Sat
Nov 12–Nov 13 Sun evening-Mon
2024
May 5 – 6
May 12 – 13
May 13 – 14 M – Tu
Jun 4 – 5
Apr 17 – 18
Nov 29 – 30 F – Sa

MINOR FASTS

HOLIDAYS
Tzom Gedaliah
Asara B’Tevet
Ta’anit Esther
Ta’anit Bechorot
Tzom Tammuz
2023
Sep 18 M
Dec 22 F
Mar 6 M
Apr 6 W
Jul 6 Th
2024
Oct 6 Su
Doesn’t Occur in 2024
Mar 21 Th
Apr 22 M
Jul 23 Tu

ROSH CHODESH

HOLIDAYS
Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan
Rosh Chodesh Kislev
Rosh Chodesh Tevet
Rosh Chodesh Sh’vat
Rosh Chodesh Adar
Rosh Chodesh Adar II
Rosh Chodesh Nisan
Rosh Chodesh Iyyar
Rosh Chodesh Sivan
Rosh Chodesh Tamuz
Rosh Chodesh Av
Rosh Chodesh Elul
2023
Oct 14 – 16 Sa – M
Nov 13 – 14 M – Tu
Dec 12 – 13 Tu – W
Jan 22 – 23 Su – M
Feb 20 – 22 M – W
6–Oct 8 Fri-Su
Mar 22 – 23 W – Th
Apr 20 – 22 Th – Sa
May 20 Sa
Jun 18 – 20 Su – Tu
Jul 18 Tu
Aug 16 – 18 W – F
2024
Oct 31 – Nov 2 Th – Sa
Nov 30 – Dec 2 Sa – M
Dec 30 – Jan 1 M – W
Jan 10 – 11 W – Th
Feb 8 – 10 Th – Sa
Mar 9 – 11 Sa – M
Apr 8 – 9 M – Tu
May 7 – 9 Tu – Th
June 6 Tue
Jul 6 – 5 Fri – Sun
Aug 4 Su
Sep 2 – 4 M – W

SPECIAL SHABBATOT

HOLIDAYS
Shabbat Shuva
Shabbat Shekalim
Shabbat Zachor
Shabbat Parah
Shabbat HaChodesh
Shabbat HaGadol
Shabbat Chazon
Shabbat Nachamu
2023
Sep 22 – 23 F – Sa
Feb 17 – 18 F – Sa
Mar 3 F
Mar 10 – 11 F – Sa
Mar 17 – 18 F – Sa
Mar 31 – Apr 1 F – S
Jul 21 – 22 F – Sa
July 28 – 29 F – Sa
2024
Oct 4 -5 F – Sa
Mar 8 – 9 F – Sa
Mar 22 F
Mar 29 – 30 F – Sa
Apr 5 – 6 F – Sa
Apr 19 – 20 F – Sa
Aug 9 – 10 F – Sa
Aug 16 – 17 F – Sa

JEWISH HOLIDAYS AND FOOD

Shabbat

Each week, the Sabbath is an opportunity for us to pause our too-busy lives, rest, re-focus and re-connect with family and friends – whether observing the Sabbath strictly with prohibitions on work and other areas of our lives or simply enjoying a meal with dear ones, whether at home or in a restaurant. Friday night blessings over candles, wine and challah can quickly immerse us in the spirit of Shabbat shalom (peace) by involving all of our senses while special traditional foods often get modern twists – gluten-free challah, vegetarian or vegan main dishes instead of chicken or brisket and the addition of exciting flavors from around the world.

Rosh Hashanah

Often called “the Birthday of the World,” Rosh Hashanah is a time of discovery, introspection and new beginnings. Wishes for a sweet new year are expressed in foods such as crispy autumn apples dipped in honey, tzimmes (sweet stew usually of meat, carrots, sweet potatoes and prunes), rich honey cake and Sephardic tispishti (a walnut cake with sweet syrup). Other foods, such as carrots cut into rounds like coins and black-eyed peas are eaten for prosperity while round challahs symbolize long life and eternity. On the holiday eve, Sephardic Jews sit down to a special “seder” to welcome the new year with seven symbolic foods and blessings.

Yom Kippur

A holiday known more for its lack of food, Yom Kippur – the Day of Atonement – is a time to reconcile with each other and with God. Prayer and fasting force us to suspend our daily existence; physical abstinence deepens us spiritually with greater appreciation for our everyday life. The evening break-fast is often a light meal of dairy foods such as sweet noodle kugel, cheesy blintzes, eggs, salads, bagels and fish such as herring, whitefish and lox. For Turkish Jews, the traditional first break-fast taste is delicious homemade preserves of quince and other fruits served with a rehydrating glass of water.

Sukkot

Beginning just four days after Yom Kippur, Sukkot coincides with the harvest when workers in Biblical times would live in temporary huts in the fields. It also commemorates the 40 years the Israelites lived in temporary shelters while wandering in the desert. Sukkot is a joyous eight-day celebration when we build and eat (and sleep!) in temporary outdoor structures, decorated with fresh fruit, gourds and other decorations hung from roofs of branches open to the stars. Fall foods such as pumpkin and squash are served along with cabbage, grape leaves, peppers and other stuffed vegetables symbolic of a “full” harvest.

Simchat Torah

Falling the day after Sukkot, Simchat Torah – Rejoicing with the Torah – celebrates with humor, joy and song the completion and immediate beginning again of the yearly cycle of reading the Torah, Jewish written law. Children are given honey so they “taste” the sweetness of the Torah. An Ashkenazic tradition is eating kreplach (aka Jewish wonton), dough stuffed with meat filling then boiled and served in chicken soup or fried and served as a side dish.

Hanukkah

The first recorded holiday celebrating religious freedom, Hanukkah commemorates the rededication of the temple in Jerusalem, wrecked by idol worshippers and recaptured by the Maccabees and their followers around 165 BCE. Only one day’s worth of sacramental oil for the Eternal Light was found, but miraculously it lasted the eight days needed to prepare more. Thus, Hanukkah is known as the Festival of Lights – with one more candle on the nine-branched menorah lit each night – and also the festival of fried foods! It’s a good excuse for parties and eating potato latkes and foods fried in oil. Sephardim enjoy bimuelos, fried doughnuts sprinkled in cinnamon and sugar or coated in honey. Israelis popularized sufganiot, gooey jelly doughnuts, to Hanukkah festivities.

Tu b’Shevat

Around the time the sap begins to flow and fruit of trees begin to form, this New Year of the Trees is an early recognition of environmental awareness. Today it’s a kind of Arbor Day when people plant trees or donate money to environmental causes. A special “seder” focuses on three symbolic groupings of fruits and nuts as well as four cups of wine! The groups include those with pits (cherries, apricots, olives, dates, plums), those with outside shells that must be discarded (pomegranates, almonds and other nuts) and those that are totally edible (figs, grapes, apples, pears, berries).

Purim

Costumes, carnivals, plays, parodies and the consumption of liquor make Purim quite popular! In the synagogue, the Megillah is read, re-telling the story of how wicked Haman’s plot to kill all the Jews of ancient Persia was thwarted by the lovely Esther and her wise uncle Mordecai. There is the holiday custom of giving gifts of fruit and sweets, mishloah manot, to friends as well as the mitzvah (commandment to do good deeds) of donations to the poor. Hamantashen, Purim’s popular tri-cornered cookies filled with poppy seeds or preserved fruit, are said to represent Haman’s triangular-shaped hat.

Passover

A springtime holiday, Passover (Pesach) celebrates the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt with themes of liberation and rebirth that are at the heart of the re-telling of the Biblical story during the ritual holiday meal, the seder. The seder table is full of symbolic foods including charoset, which has nearly as many varieties as there are Jews, with the Eastern European apples-walnut-wine version perhaps most popular in the US. The many symbolic foods as well as the prohibition on eating hametz (leavening) – a reminder of the hasty departure from Egypt when the bread dough had no time to rise – make food intrinsic to this holiday perhaps more than any other time. Matzah and its by-products plus fresh vegetables and fruits (especially spring’s bounty of asparagus, leeks and strawberries) take their place at holiday tables along with favorites like matzah ball soup, brisket and mina, Sephardic pies of matzah with vegetable or meat filling.

Shavuot

Seven weeks after the second night of Passover, Shavuot connects the Israelites rebirth during the exodus to the redemption of receiving the Torah from God at Mt. Sinai during their wanderings. The 49-day period leading up to the holiday is also the time of the spring growing season and harvest in Israel. Along with staying up all night to study and show our eagerness to learn Torah, the custom is to eat grains, fresh fruit and dairy foods during Shavuot, making it a feast of blintzes and cheesecake.

Tisha b’Av

Few days in history associate such disasters with one people – beginning with the devastating destruction of the first and second Temples in Jerusalem in and exile of the people, to the association with Spain’s edict of expulsion in 1492 and beyond into modern times. A day of fasting and lamentation, it also represents the need for tikkun, repair of our incomplete world. In preparation, some maintain a simple, all-dairy diet for the week preceding the Tisha b’Av.

NOTE: The Jewish calendar uses the moon for basic calculations and then makes adjustments for the solar seasons so that certain holidays always occur in a particular season. Because of this, the actual dates for the Jewish holidays, which go by the Jewish months and days, move from year to year when compared to the strictly solar Gregorian calendar used in today’s world.