Menorah Collection
Menorah Collection
A blue and white satin keepsake box unfolds to present three tiers of our Signature and Seasonal Truffles, and four created exclusively for this collection. The truffles number twelve; one for each of the eight days of Hanukkah, plus four more to honor the four matriarchs: Sarah, Rebekah, Leah, and Rachel.
FLAVORS INCLUDE: Sufganiyot (Strawberry Donut), Olive-Date Caramel, Halva, Pomegranate, and more
Shipped to deliver just before Hanukkah - let us know if you prefer earlier delivery!
NEW THIS YEAR: select your size - 12pc or 27pc below
Created for this collection:
OLIVE OIL CARAMEL
It was the miracle of olive oil that burned for eight days - instead of one -which inspired the creation of this truffle. Olive oil and caramel - strength and sweetness. In this truffle we see how successful can be the balance of these two life elements, seemingly opposites, but, in truth, two sides of the same shekel. You donโt have to be Jewish to delight in this truffleโฆbut it doesnโt hurt!
HALVA
โHalawaโ means โsweetโ in Arabic. Especially popular in Israel, where itโs enjoyed as breakfast, snack, and dessert, halvahโs centuries-old origins are claimed by nearly every Middle Eastern culture. How wonderful thereโs at least one thing the entire Middle East can agree on! Like Israeli halvah, our Halvah Truffle is made of tahini, but is sweetened with low-glycemic coconut sugar, and is ensconced in our dark chocolate.
SUFGANIYOT
Eaten in Israel - and around the world - during Hanukkah, sufganiyot are a pillowy blend of beignets and donuts, deep-fried in oil, filled with jam or custard, and then topped with powdered sugar. Gnosisโ update on this millennia-old favorite: strawberry jam enveloped in a nourishing cashew-based custard, and our storied dark chocolate replacing the traditional powdered sugar topping. A new and inspired (re)creation that will have you and yours kvelling!
Surely, we all kvell as the menorah glows brighter each night, illuminating our rapt faces gathered โround, and conjuring up visions of the Hanukkah miracle.
That glow also generates a spiritual, electric charge that binds children, parents, and grandparents together we recount the miracle of the oil and the Maccabees and get in touch with the wonder of the past, of the present, and of life itself.
Just as surely, we all recall Hanukkahs of years past: candles (and who got to light them!), family, food, presents, gelt, spinning the dreidel...all of it. And we will gather later this month to retell the story and renew the tradition. This year, the Chanukah tradition has a new element: Gnosis brings us another Hanukkah miracle - on a smaller scale, to be sure! - but also quite memorable: the Menorah Collection.