Easter Egg
About Easter
Easter Egg
Egg Decorating | Egg Rolling | Chocolate Egg
Easter eggs are specially decorated
eggs given out to celebrate the
Easter
holiday. The oldest
tradition is to use dyed and painted chicken eggs, but a modern custom
is to substitute eggs made from chocolate, or plastic eggs filled with
candy such as jellybeans.
Ukrainian Easter eggs, or
pysanky.
Chocolate Easter eggs
Candy Easter eggs can be any form of confectionery such as hollow chocolate
eggs wrapped in brightly-colored foil. Some are delicately constructed of spun
sugar and pastry decoration techniques. The ubiquitous jelly egg or jellybean is
made from sugar-coated pectin candy.
These are often hidden, supposedly by the
Easter
Bunny, for children to find on Easter morning.
Decorated eggs are much older than Easter, and both eggs and rabbits are
age-old fertility symbols. The Passover Seder service uses a hard-cooked egg
flavored with salt water as a symbol both of new life and the Temple service in
Jerusalem. The Jewish tradition may have come from earlier Roman Spring feasts.
Easter egg origin stories abound — one has an emperor claiming that the
Resurrection was as likely as eggs turning red (see Mary Magdalene); more
prosaically the Easter egg tradition may have celebrated the end of the
privations of Lent. In the West, eggs were seen as "meat", which would have been
forbidden during Lent. Likewise, in Eastern Christianity, both meat and dairy
were prohibited during the fast, and eggs were seen as "dairy" (a foodstuff that
could be taken from an animal without shedding its blood). One would have been
forced to hard boil the eggs that the chickens produced so as not to waste food,
and for this reason the Spanish dish hornazo (traditionally eaten on and around
Easter) contains hard-boiled eggs as a primary ingredient.
Sorbian Easter
eggs
Easter eggs are a widely popular symbol of new life in Poland and other
Slavic countries' folk traditions. A batik-like decorating process known as
pisanka produces intricate, brilliantly-colored eggs. The celebrated Fabergé
workshops created exquisite jewelled Easter eggs for the Russian Imperial Court.
A 27-foot (9 m) sculpture of a pisanka stands in Vegreville, Alberta.
There are many other decoration techniques and numerous traditions of giving
them as a token of friendship, love or good wishes. A tradition exists in some
parts of Britain (such as
Scotland)
of rolling painted eggs down steep
hills on Easter
Sunday. In the U.S., such an
Easter egg roll (unrelated to an
eggroll) is
often done on flat ground, pushed along with a
spoon. The most well-known egg roll is done at the White House. An Easter egg
hunt is a common festive activity, where eggs are hidden outdoors (or indoors if
in bad weather) for children to run around and find. This may also be a contest
to see who can collect the most eggs.
When boiling hard-cooked eggs for Easter, a nice tan colour can be achieved
by boiling the eggs with onion skin.
Deep-fried chocolate Easter eggs are sold around Easter time in Scottish fish
and chips shops. The idea was invented in a northeastern Scottish takeaway as a
sequel to the extremely popular deep-fried Mars Bar.
See also
External links
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