Yes, it’s actually a “remake” of the early Church tradition where Christians would actually take Holy Communion HOME WITH THEM and keep it in their home chapels. They would partake of this Communion themselves with their families every morning after their morning prayers and before having breakfast.
St John Chrysostom later forbade this practice, owing to the “cooling of the fervour of the early Christians” but allowed Christians, instead, to take home particles of the Antidoron or Blessed Bread left over from what was not used in Holy Communion.
Eastern Christians keeps this Holy Bread in their home chapel/icon corner and partake of it in the same way - after morning prayers and before breakfast.
There is another way to partake of this Holy Bread for those who pray the daily Hours. There is what in the West would be termed the “Dry Mass” (and I don’t pretend know all about the Dry Mass). This is called the “Typika” in the East and is used by laity/non-ordained monastics in place of the Divine Liturgy (although one may say it even if one attended Divine Liturgy that day).
The Typika has the main prayers of the Divine Liturgy/Mass, reading of the Gospel, Epistle etc. At the end of it, one may partake of the Antidoron “in place of Communion” and/or Holy Water (which is also kept in the icon corner). One drinks of the Holy Water three times.
If a father of a family or leader of a prayer group is doing the Typika, then he/she will distribute the Holy Bread and Holy Water at the end of the service (which follows the Sixth Hour outside of Lent and after the Ninth Hour during Lent).
A Deacon, however, doing the Typika in Church (in the absence of a Priest) could distribute Holy Communion rather than Holy Bread/Water and I believe there are eparchies where Deacons have such permission in specific circumstances.
So that is our “Dry Mass.” One may aggregate the Hours so that Nocturns, Mattins and the First Hour (we did not abrogate that Hour - one of the benefits of not having the Pope as one’s immediate Patriarch with power over our liturgical matters!

, then, at noon or so, the Third and Sixth Hours together with the Typika - then later the Ninth Hour, Vespers and Compline.
Alex