Everything that would be used for regular bread.
Passover.
I ate the last piece of matzoh bread during Passover.
An afikomen is a matzoh eaten at a Passover seder.
Matzoh is the flat unleavened bread which we eat in Passover as commanded in the Torah (Exodus ch.12).
its called matzoh
A flat bread used in the Jewish celebration of Passover.
As long as it isn't during Passover.
It's used in place of regular bread.
Only if it's labeled as having had rabbinic supervision.
Yes, potatoes are actually a common staple during Passover.
Jews eat the Passover meal to commemorate what happen to them a long time ago. In the Bible, it explains that the Jews were taken out of Egypt, in a hurry. Their bread did not have a chance to leaven, and so they ate what they call "matzoh" Now Jews have a meal with "matzoh" in it, to commemorate it.
YES IT IS A JEWISH MEAL AT PASSOVER Answer No, there is no religious significance to matzoh balls. At Passover, the command is no levening in your house. You may have new flour (matzoh), but you can't bake bread because the definition of bread is flour and levening. The combination of matzoh and water yeilds unleavened bread. Matzoh balls are wheat dumplings which are boiled in chicken broth until done. Matzoh balls are made of eggs, oil, and matzoh meal, refrigerated, then boiled. Other than they fullfill the command for no levening in the house, there is no religious significance.