Matzoh, meat, fish, vegetables, fruit, eggs, dairy products, most kinds of nuts, and most beverages. All beverages, meats and processed foods need to be labeled Kosher for Passover, with trustworthy supervision and not containing Kitniyos (legumes). Today there are thousands of canned and processed foods which have strict Passover supervision. Several decades ago, the answer would have been: buy veggies and prepare them yourself.
Not for Ashkenazim.
Due to the prohibition against unleavened bread, raw flour cannot be used during Passover. In order to be used for Passover, dough has to be thoroughly cooked within 18 minutes of the flour being mixed with water. When pasta is made, water is mixed with flour and the formed pasta is left to dry without being cooked and therefore is not allowed. There are kosher for Passover pastas that are made with potato starch/flour.
Only if it's certified kosher for Passover.
Garbanzo beans and their products are considered kitnyot. All kitnyot are prohibited by Ashkenazim on Passover, but permitted by Sephardim and Mizrahim.
For Ashkenazim: no, because they have a custom of abstaining from legumes, peas, seeds, rice (etc.) on Passover. For Sephardim: yes, if the label has a certification of being kosher for Passover.
It depends. If you are Ashkenaz, then you can't eat popcorn on Passover (Ashkenazim don't eat legumes on passover, and corn is a legume). If you are of a Sefard (who do eat legumes on Passover) origin, then you technically can eat popcorn on Passover, but it must have a reliable kosher for Passover certification.Correction:Corn is not a legume. The reason that corn isn't eaten during Passover is because of a naming error when it came to Europe and it became associated with one of the grains that the Torah forbids during Passover.
It means that you can't eat them during Passover.
Passover is not a time of fasting, so Jewish people can eat during the middle of the day during Passover.
Christians can eat whatever they wish during the 8 day holiday of Passover. Although Passover is a Jewish holiday, Christians also acknowledge it.
Lamb can be kosher for Passover. However, Ashkenazi Jews traditionally do not eat lamb during Passover.
I was told that soy contained wheat, and wheat has to be unleavened for Passover.
I believe so