During the Shabbat evening meal, the tradition is to have a large meal with at least two types of meat (unless the people are vegetarians). The prayers said are the blessings over the candles, the challah, and wine. After the meal the Birkat Hamazon is chanted to give thanks. There is no sacrifice.
Wine.
The head of the household says the kiddush blessing the sabbath (and similar prayers are said on Jewish holidays as well). These prayers essentially explain the background for the holiness of the day, and also include a blessing for the food which is about to be consumed. At every meal a (generally silent) prayer is said thanking G-d for supplying the food. Separate prayers are said before eating bread, other foodstuffs, fruit and wine. On Sabbath and holidays, the head of the household says the prayer over wine or bread symbolically to indicate the entire meal, and the appropriate prayers are repeated silently by all the other participants. Note that in Non-Orthodox households, there is no gender requirement for who says what blessing. Furthermore, in Orthodox households with only one gender (a widow with daughters, for example) there is also no gender requirements for who says what blessing.
it is called rubarb
There is no meal in Judaism designated as the last meal of the Sabbath. Shabbat is a time of enjoyment and plenty, and all of the meals served during Shabbat are special.
Which Jewish ceremony? Bris (circumcisioin)? Havdalah (the end of the Sabbath)? Kiddush (the blessing over wine and bread that starts a Sabbath or festival meal)? Candle lighting (at the start of the Sabbath or a festival)? Tahara (the washing of a corpse before burial)? There are many many more.
No.
Everyone
Prayers aren't recited during a meal (you don't pray while eating food). However, the standard prayers that relate to the foods about to be eaten (bread, wine, etc) are recited right before eating.
It's a meal with kosher dairy products.
Several meals have a special name in Judaism. On Passover night, the meal is called a 'Seder'. On the Sabbath, 3 meals are eaten, on at night and two during the day. Generally, only the 3rd meal is referred to specially as the '3rd meal' .
A meal that someone Jewish would consider special really depends on the individual and what foods he or she likes.
i am assuming that you mean the eucharist, which is God, and we eat him, catholics belive this and are the only ones to, if not then i am sure it is the sabbath meal or sater meal.