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rdfs:comment | - Latkes are often eaten for Hanukkah. They are not required by any religious law. The association with the holiday is just by custom. Latkes may be eaten at any non-fast time. Also, since they don't need any leavening, they can also be eaten for Passover.
- Various recipes for potato pancakes vary in the degree of fineness to which the potatoes are grated. Some are grated to long strips, others to a fine powder. Both latkes and potato pancakes bear a distant resemblance to the American dish, hash browns; however, hash browns are merely coarsely grated potatoes with no binding ingredients or flour.
* Latkes from the Wikibooks Cookbook—original source of recipe, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License
* Serves: 4
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abstract | - Latkes are often eaten for Hanukkah. They are not required by any religious law. The association with the holiday is just by custom. Latkes may be eaten at any non-fast time. Also, since they don't need any leavening, they can also be eaten for Passover.
- Various recipes for potato pancakes vary in the degree of fineness to which the potatoes are grated. Some are grated to long strips, others to a fine powder. Both latkes and potato pancakes bear a distant resemblance to the American dish, hash browns; however, hash browns are merely coarsely grated potatoes with no binding ingredients or flour.
* Latkes from the Wikibooks Cookbook—original source of recipe, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License
* Serves: 4
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