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Surprise!
Trumpeter Blowing the Shofar at the Time of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur
Giclee Print
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The Star of David with a Shofar Coming out of the Center
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Man Blowing Shofar for Rosh Hashanah
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Star of David
Photographic Print
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Old Books I
Art Print
Belkovskij, Igor
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La Belle Cuisine
In Honor of the Jewish High Holy
Days
Rosh Hashanah:
September 8, 2010/Tishrei 1, 5771
Yom Kippur:
September 17, 2010/Tishrei 10, 5771
Feast of
Tabernacles/Sukkot:
September 22, 2010/Tishrei 15 - 21, 5771
Shofar Horn for Rosh Hashanah Near Apples
Photographic Print
Moskol, Sally
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Our Seven Favorite Jewish Cookbooks
"Books that span the
culinary spectrum, from traditional
Ashkenazi to Sephardic, from New York to
Israel, including
baking and healthy specialties"
by Irene Sax,
Epicurious
"When I think of Jewish
food, I think of brisket and latkes. To someone else,
the words may evoke lamb tagine and rice with lentils, while to others—even
the most observant—it could
include foods as varied and unexpected as beef
jerky, eggplant Parmesan, and
chicken tikka masala. We tend to divide Jewish
cooking into two categories:
Ashkenazic from Middle and Eastern Europe, and
Sephardic from the Mediterranean
and stretching eastward to the Middle East
(including Spain, Portugal, and North
Africa). But in truth, there are as many
varieties of Jewish cooking as there
are places in the world where Jews have
settled, from Buenos Aires to Shanghai
to Brooklyn, New York. The only re-
quirement is that the dishes follow the rules
of kashruth ("kosher" in
English),
such as separating milk and meat, and
eschewing pork and shellfish.
And that's
why you'll find such a rich variety of
flavors and stories in some of
our favorite
Jewish cookbooks. Evoking a place
and time from long ago, and
sometimes pro-
viding a new perspective on the
present, these books make for
great reading."
Editor's Favorite
From My Mother's Kitchen
by Mimi Sheraton (Harper Collins)
"A personal favorite, not only for its impeccable recipes but for its loving
tribute
to a mother and the memories of a bygone New York City, this book is
about
the wonderful food eaten every day in the "Austro-Polish-Rumanian-Jewish"
household in which New York Times restaurant critic Mimi Sheraton grew
up.
Although the family did not keep kosher—she gives recipes for Manhattan clam
chowder and fried-egg and bacon sandwiches—most of the foods are classically
Jewish-American, with plenty of "kosher-style" dishes such as cabbage soup
and
blintzes, stuffed cabbage, mandelbrot, and a thin, crisp potato kugel that
will
let you celebrate Hanukkah without standing over the stove frying
latkes
while
everyone eats. Besides, how can you not love a book with a chapter on
"The Joys
of Being Sick in Bed"? Now out of print, this book with close to
300 recipes is
worth searching out in the public library or in a second-hand bookstore..."
Mimi Sheraton's Knaidlach!
Best for Ashkenazi Cuisine
Jewish Home Cooking: Yiddish Recipes Revisited
by Arthur Schwartz, copyright © 2008
Published by Ten Speed Press
Photo credit: Ben Fink © 2008
"This is what most of us think of as Jewish cooking:
Ashkenazic cooking
transmitted through the American immigrant experience. That
means bagels
and stuffed cabbage, kugel and
blintzes. It includes the heavy, memory-laden
dishes that these days mainly show up in the matzoh kugel and pot roast at the
Passover seder, or the herring in sour cream and nut-studded coffee cakes we
eat when we break the Yom Kippur fast. Food maven Arthur Schwartz contends
that these foods (and there are nearly 100 recipes) are too good to reserve just
for the holidays. Rather, we can enjoy this way of eating year round, given a
little editing to lighten the dishes. Ask anyone who has sipped a cool glass of
beet borscht in summer or made an entire supper of that one-time appetizer,
stuffed cabbage (holishkes), in winter. Teeming with history and anecdotes,
like that of the quietly disappearing New York beverage the egg cream, the
book is frankly and unabashedly centered on the New York Jewish-American
experience. We'd expect nothing less from Schwartz, a native New Yorker
whose previous book was New York City Food."
Anne Whiteman's Birthday Kugel
Epicurious | September 2008
"Anne Whiteman was the mother of Michael Whiteman, a Brooklyn
native and
the business and creative partner of the legendary Joe Baum in
designing and
operating many restaurant projects, among them the food services
of the World
Trade Center, including Windows on the World, and the restoration
and
operation of the Rainbow Room.
If this is the kind of food Michael grew up eating, then it's no wonder his palate
is so finely tuned. This recipe is typical of highly evolved dairy noodle kugels,
in that it is dessert-sweet and topped with corn flakes, although it doesn't call
for the canned crushed pineapple that so many less refined recipes
do. Here,
the cottage cheese is pureed with the sour cream, milk, and eggs to
form a
silken custard to hold the noodles. Michael and I are not certain how his
mother arrived at the odd amount of sour cream, but I have decided not to
change
it. It is called "birthday kugel" because his mother made it mainly
for those
celebratory occasions."
Yield: Serves 12
6 eggs
1 1/2 cups 4-percent-fat cottage cheese
(small or large curd, or
California-style)
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sour cream
3/4 cup sugar
2 1/4 cups whole milk
3/4 cup raisins
6 tablespoons butter, melted
2 1/4 teaspoons vanilla extract
1 teaspoon grated orange zest
1 teaspoon grated lemon zest
1 tablespoon salt
18 ounces wide, preferably
flat egg noodles
Topping
1 cup coarsely crushed corn flakes
2 tablespoons butter, melted
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
To make the kugel, in the bowl of a food processor fitted with
the metal
blade, whirl together the eggs. Add the cottage cheese, sour cream,
and
sugar. Process until smooth. Pour into a large bowl and stir in the milk,
raisins, melted butter, vanilla, and orange and lemon zests.
In a large pot, bring at least 5 quarts of water to a boil
over high heat,
salt, and cook the noodles until just before they are fully
cooked, about
5 minutes, but check package directions for exact timing. Drain
and stir
the noodles into the egg-cheese mixture, then refrigerate, tightly
covered,
overnight. (I think this step of preparing ahead was mainly for
conven-
ience. I have baked the pudding immediately, and it turns out lighter; the
noodles don't absorb as much of the custard.
Lightly butter a 9- by 13-inch baking dish. Preheat the oven
to 350
degrees F.
To make the topping, toss together the corn flakes, melted
butter, and cinnamon in a small bowl. To bake the kugel, pour the noodle mixture
into the baking dish and sprinkle evenly with the topping. Bake for 35
to
40
minutes, until lightly browned. Let stand at least 10 minutes
before serving.
Best for Israeli Cuisine
Foods of Israel Today
by Joan Nathan
(Knopf)
"Joan Nathan, an expert on Jewish
cooking in America, has a friendly voice made familiar by her cookbooks, PBS TV
series, and articles in The New York Times.
But in this book she leaves America to write about the fascinating and multi-
faceted cuisine of Israel. Nathan moved to Jerusalem as a young woman to work
for Mayor Teddy Kollek, and quickly discovered how thrilling Israeli food could
be. Since then, she's been back many times, talking to Christians and Muslims as
well as Jews from places as widespread as Austria, Russia, Ethiopia, and Yemen.
It's a polyglot community that gave rise to political tensions but also gave
birth
to a true fusion cuisine, where everyone eats eggplant, lentils, dates, and
olives,
just differently. Even the famous Israeli or kibbutz salad of diced tomatoes,
peppers, and cucumbers becomes the Arab fattoush once you add pieces of dried
pita bread. A historical and personal account which is also a 300-plus recipe
cookbook and a travel guidebook, this is Nathan's love letter to a tumultuous
country and its flexible, innovative cooks."
Click
here for recipe.
But wait! There's more...
Featured Archive Recipes:
(Work in progress!)
Tradition! (Chanukah)
Brisket (Gail Zweigenthal's
Mother's)
Cheese Blintzes
Cheesecake, New York
Kugel,
Noodle, Mrs. Stern's
Kugel,
Potato, Klein
Kugel, Vegetable-Noodle, Judy's
Latkes (The Latke King)
Matzoh Ball Soup
Scrambled Eggs with Lox
and Cream Cheese
Our all-time favorite cookbooks
Food and Art (Artist's
Cookbooks)
Recipes from out-of-print (or hard to
find) cookbooks
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