This article is about the Jewish pasta. For the puppet character used in Nestlé advertising, see 
Farfel the Dog .
   Farfel Type Pasta Main ingredients Egg noodle dough 
 A tray of matzah  and mushroom  farfel served on Passover    Farfel  (Yiddish : פֿאַרפֿל, farfl ; from Middle High German  varveln ) is small pellet- or flake-shaped pasta  used in Ashkenazi  Jewish cuisine . It is made from a Jewish egg noodle  dough and is frequently toasted before being cooked. It can be served in soups  or as a side dish . In the United States, it can also be found pre-packaged as egg barley .[ 1]   
During the Jewish holiday of Passover , when dietary laws pertaining to grains are observed, "matzah  farfel" takes the place of the egg noodle version. Matzah farfel is simply matzah  broken into small pieces. 
The Baal Shem Tov , founder of the Hasidic movement , is said to have eaten farfel every Friday night because the word was similar to the word farfaln  which means "wiped out, over and finished". He considered the noodles symbolic of the end of the old week.[ 2]   
 
See also   
References    ^   Nathan, Joan . Jewish Cooking in America , Knopf: New York. 1994 (Pp. 286-87)    ^   Jewish Soul Food: Traditional Fare and What it Means, Carol Ungar, Brandeis University Press, 2005, pg 25       
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