Chopped Liver

February 25, 2013

Author: Varda

Elizabeth wasn’t her real name. The daughter of Lithuanian immigrants, her Hebrew name was Hasia Leah. Her “greener” parents called her, “Lizzie.”

When it came time for Grandma to go to school, the teacher took the roll. When she came to “Lizzie Schaffer,” she told my grandma, “From now on, your name is Elizabeth.”

And so it was.

I didn’t have Grandma for very long. Grandma died when I was five. She had rheumatic fever as a child, and only later on did they discover that it had affected her heart.

She was always frail and spent a great deal of time in the hospital. One night, she told my mother, “I’ve had enough,” and in the morning, she was gone.

But I still managed to store up some treasured memories of Grandma. I remember how I used to love to ride around her apartment in her wheelchair (by that time, she was too weak to walk) and how she always had a china dish of nonpareils on a corner table in her living room. This was the only place I ever saw those chocolate discs adorned with the little white candy shots. Nonpareils are indelibly linked for me with my Grandma, she of the careworn face and hair that was whiter than snow. Only much later did I see nonpareils at a shop in Israel, where I now live, and immediately thought, “Grandma!”

Grandma used to save ribbons from gifts in a heart-shaped candy box, from some Valentine’s Day long ago. These, she took out whenever I came for a visit, and I would play with them. Today, the thought seems so odd and out of place to me, that a collection of ribbons could hold my interest. My children play with iPads and iPods. If I gave them a box of ribbons, they would be bemused, to say the least.

But for me, this was something so special, this box of ribbons. It was sheer luxury to run my hands through the satiny ribbons, to note the details that made one ribbon different from another, this one shot through with silver, that one silky, another one stiff and gauzy. And the colors! Every color a girl could love: orchid, candy pink, fuchsia.

I wish I knew more about my Grandma, but I don’t. So I filled in the blanks by asking my mother. “Did you learn to cook from Grandma?” I asked her. My mother laughed.

“Grandma gave us pasta with ketchup and never heard of garlic. But she made three things well: fudge, sugar cookies, and chopped liver. No one could make them like Grandma. And no one ever will. She never wrote her recipes down.”

“Grandma cooked the way people did in the old days. She put in half an eggshell of this, and a handful of that. That’s why no one will ever be able to duplicate those recipes. I miss her fudge!” my mother exclaimed.

I never got a chance to taste my grandmother’s cooking because she was already so fragile when I knew her. But at least my mother was able to preserve the simple Jewish recipes that my Grandma used to make for the holidays. I learned to make chopped liver just as my Grandma did, just as my mother did and does. Everyone who tastes it says it’s the best chopped liver they ever had. Even those who don’t like chopped liver love mine.

I once had a family over for Shabbos. The wife said she was on a diet, so she’d only have a taste of the chopped liver, liver is so fattening. She took a smidgen on her plate, declared it delicious and said, “Just another little taste.”

I discreetly watched as she slowly carved away a sliver at a time until there was a small neat square of liver in the center of the serving plate. It was now time to clear this course and bring out the next, the main course. But something told me to leave the liver on the table.

By the end of the meal, sure enough, she had polished off the entire plate of chopped liver. Well, we had helped. But most of it went to my lady guest, who talked the good talk about diet, but simply couldn’t resist my Grandma’s chopped liver. No one could.

It begins with schmaltz. You simply cannot make real chopped liver without a generous amount of schmaltz. Is it healthy? Of course not.

Do I have time to make schmaltz, with its necessity for long, slow simmering? Of course not—I’m a working mother, a communications writer at http://www.kars4kids.org

But personally, I wouldn’t want to die without having tasted chopped liver with real schmaltz and so I do from time to time, at least on holidays and special occasions. It’s well worth those extra minutes off my life. What would I do with them anyway? What’s an extra minute without having tasted chopped liver??

Ingredients:

Fat and skin (the choicest selection for this purpose is on either side of the chicken breast), about half a cup (I save it up as I cook chickens, freezing in plastic wrapped bundles until I have an amount sufficient to make schmaltz)

1 small onion, thinly sliced

1 small bay leaf

3 whole peppercorns

Pinch of salt

1 lb. kashered* calves liver

2 hardboiled eggs

1 small onion

Salt and pepper to taste

Preparation:

For the schmaltz, cut up the fat and skin into postage stamp-sized pieces. Place in small saucepan. Add rest of ingredients. Cook on very low heat, carefully swirling pan every so often to prevent the cracklings (griebnes) from sticking to the bottom of the pot.

Schmaltz takes long, careful cooking. It is done when the griebnes are almost brown. Pour the contents of the pot into a strainer over a heat-resistant bowl. Leave the pot inverted over the strainer to capture every last drop. Discard bay leaf and peppercorns from griebnes in strainer. Cool and then store schmaltz and griebnes separately in refrigerator while making the liver.

For the chopped liver, put the liver, eggs, and onion through a meat grinder. Grind twice. Add enough schmaltz to pleasantly moisten the mixture and make it spreadable. Add salt and pepper to taste (you won’t need much as the liver and schmaltz are already salty). Chill. Spread on a flat plate. Score with a knife into serving-sized squares. Sprinkle griebnes over the top and serve

Note: Griebnes are also delicious sprinkled over a bowl of chicken soup.

*Consult a rabbi on how to Kasher liver, if you cannot purchase liver already kashered. The kashering process involves broiling, so the liver is already fully-cooked after kashering and may be used in any recipe requiring cooked livers.

Varda Epstein is the mother of 12 children, a blogger at The Times of Israel and Judean Rose, and a Communications Writer for Kars4Kids http://www.kars4kids.org, the car donation charity.

 

Schmaltz

March 12, 2013

Author: Gloria Kobrin

My first memory of Schmaltz is my Great Uncle Bob entering our apartment almost every Friday night and exclaiming: Gloria, bring me some Schmaltz! I would happily go scampering off to the kitchen and take out rye bread, schmaltz and salt. I spread a thick layer of schmaltz on the rye bread, sprinkled it with salt and presented it proudly to my most favorite Great Uncle. So unhealthy you’re thinking. Definitely, but Great Uncle Bob lived to the ripe old age of 95.

Ingredients:

Fat from 1 large chicken

Optional: 1 small onion-peeled, halved and thinly sliced

Equipment

Small saucepan with cover

Strainer

Preparation:

1. Put the fat in saucepan with just a splash of water. Place it over low heat and cover pan. Let fat cook about 15 minutes or until it has completely melted. Add sliced onions at this point and let them fry in the fat. The onions are delicious and the fat is flavored by them. Strain the fat into a heat proof jar and cool completely until you can refrigerate it. The fat will congeal and can be used as a solid for meat sandwiches or as a liquid for frying. If the onions are not polished off right out of the pan, they are delicious sprinkled over meat or potatoes-or even vegetables.

Yield: ½-1 cup

 

Gefilte Fish Cakes with Horseradish Sauce

March 12, 2013

Author: Manischewitz

Recipe Courtesy of Quick & Kosher: Meals in Minutes by Jamie Geller (Feldheim 2010).

 

 

 

 

Ingredients:

1 jar Manischewitz® Mediterranean Gefilte Fish

½ cup diced red bell pepper

1 small red onion, diced

2 celery stalks, diced

1½ cup mayonnaise, divided

4 tablespoons chopped dill

½ teaspoon kosher salt

¼ teaspoon Freshly ground black pepper

1 egg

1 cup coarsely crushed Manischewitz® Mediterranean Matzos

1 cup canola oil

1 lemon, juiced

4 tablespoons prepared horseradish

Preparation:

Prep time: 10

Cook time: 20+ 30 minutes chill time

Ready time: 30 min

1. In a large bowl combine Manischewitz® Mediterranean Gefilte Fish, peppers, onions, celery, ½ cup mayonnaise, dill, salt, pepper, egg and Manischewitz ® Mediterranean Matzos and stir well to combine.

2. Using slightly wet hands, scoop ¼ cup and form into patties.

3. Place on a sheet pan and refrigerate for 30 minutes before frying.

4. Heat oil in a large sauté pan over medium high heat.

5. Fry patties in batches for 3 to 4 minutes per side or until golden brown. (Can be kept warm in the oven at 250° F.)

6. In a small bowl, combine remaining 1 cup mayonnaise, lemon juice and horseradish and stir.

7. To serve, plate 2 cakes on a small plate and garnish with a tablespoon of horseradish sauce.

 

 

Chremsels

March 12, 2013

Author: Gloria Kobrin

chremselswithhorseradish.JPG

My Mother made chremsels for Passover every year that I can remember. When my husband and I started taking our family away for Passover, she used to freeze a few for me to eat when we got back. My mother hates to cook; but for some reason this was a recipe to which she was committed.

Warning: these chremsels are not crepe like or even pancake like. They are dense and relatively heavy but full of flavor. This recipe has been handed down from my Great Great Great Grandmother Ida who was born in Russia. I’ve adjusted it a bit-but have retained the integrity of the original recipe.

Ingredients:

6 eggs

1 cup sugar

1 teaspoon salt

8 ounces water

4 tablespoons melted schmaltz plus ½ cup schmaltz for frying

3 cups matzah meal

Equipment

1 medium mixing bowl

1 skillet

1 cookie sheet lined with parchment paper

Preparation:

1. Beat eggs in mixing bowl. Add sugar, salt, melted fat and water. Mix well. Stir in matzah meal. My forebears say that the consistency should be “thick-but not too thick-like mustard”. Chill mixture for one hour.

2. Preheat oven to: 350 F.

3. Place two tablespoons schmaltz in skillet over medium heat. Wait until fat starts to sizzle a bit and then drop chremsel batter into fat with a wooden spoon. Scrape all the batter off the spoon and then flatten chremsels a bit with a metal spatula. Fry about two minutes on one side and then flip chremsels to the other side. Make sure chremsels are golden brown on each side even if you have to turn them again. As chremsels are browned, place them on parchment paper.

4. Place browned chremsels in oven and bake for 20 minutes. Serve hot.

Note: My family eats them plain. My husband’s family eats them with white horseradish.

Yield: 24

Posted in Appetizers

Tags: Chremsels, eggs, Gloria Kobrin, matzah meal, matzah, Passover, salt, schmaltz, sugar, water

Hilda’s Irish Stew

November 10, 2011

Author: Adam Clyne

 

 

Hilda Seddon was born in 1925 in Belfast, Ireland and lived there until her early twenties where she moved to Manchester, England and married the love of her life, Asher. She brought with her the recipe of the perfect Irish Stew – a recipe traditionally used to make a huge pan of dinner that would feed large Irish families and subsequently used to feed Jewish grandchildren. The recipe is made from basic ingredients but the combination is truly delicious. She would make it for us when it was cold outside or when you were feeling a bit under the weather. It warms the heart and reminds me of my grandma who unfortunately passed away in September 2008.

Ingredients:

2 lbs Diced Stewing Steak (kosher is best)

1 whole Onion Peeled

4 Whole Carrots Peeled and sliced thickly

1 whole Celery 1 stick only

5 Whole Potatoes peeled and cut in half

1 tablespoon Gravy powder

1 pinch Salt & Pepper

2 Tablespoons HP Sauce (secret sauce)

 

Preparation:

Wash the beef quickly and then put in a large pan with the carrots & whole onion.

Add salt & pepper cover with water( pan should be about half full with liquid) which has had the bisto powder added carefully to it so it is a smooth liquid

Season & add a dash of HP sauce.

Bring to the boil and then simmer with a lid on.

If there is a lot of ‘scum’ on the top of the liquid skim some away.

After about an hour add the whole potatoes.

Simmer gently until all the meat is tender at least another hour.

Check seasoning & taste.

Add more salt, pepper & Hp if needed.

Remove the onion before serving.

 

Posted in Soups and Stews

Tags: carrot, carrots, celery, gravy, gravy powder, HP Sauce, Irish, Irish stew, onion,onions, pepper, Potato, potatoes, salt, Sauce, steak, stew, stewing steak

 

Mother’s Chicken Escarole Soup with Matzo Balls

July 16, 2012

Author: Joan Nathan

My ninety-eight year old plus mother loves order and hates chaos. She is precise and unwavering about everything – the way she runs her family, her house, her kitchen. And for her, there is only one way to prepare for holidays: she cooks a week, two weeks, sometimes a month ahead, freezing the rugelach, the chicken, the plum pies, but never, never the matzo balls.

Just before she turned 90, my mother switched from using a whole chicken, to chicken legs in her chicken soup because she finds more flavor in the legs, and besides, the legs are often on special in her supermarket. From an Italian restaurant in Providence, she learned to swirl in escarole at the last minute, before she adds her matzo balls.

Ingredients:

6 whole chicken legs

20 Cups water

2 celery stalks sliced into 2 inch chunks

2 whole carrots cut into 2 inch chunks

1 large onion peeled and quartered

1 parsnip cut into 2 inch chunks

2 Tablespoons chopped fresh dill

2 Tablespoons chopped fresh flat leaf parsley

Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

8 Ounces escarole

 

Matzo Balls

3 Tablespoons chicken fat or vegetable oil

6 Large eggs, separated well beated

1 teaspoon salt

1/4 teaspoon grated nutmeg

1 3/4 Cup(s)s matzo meal

1 tablespoon chopped fresh flat leaf parsley

12 Cup(s)s water

Preparation:

To Make the Soup:

1. Put the water in a soup pot, add the chicken legs and bring the water to a boil Simmer slowly for 2 hours, uncovered, skimming off the fat and foam as they rise to the top of the soup.

2. After 2 hours, add the celery, carrots, onion, parsnip, dill and parsley. Continue cooking slowly, uncovered, for another hour.

3. Set a strainer over a large bowl and strain the soup. Season it to taste with salt and pepper. Refrigerate the soup, covered, overnight.

4. The next day peel off the layer of fat that has formed on the soup’s surface. Bring the soup to a boil in a large pot (or freeze it for another day). Before serving, swirl in the escarole and add the matzo balls (recipe follows), cooking for a few minutes.

To Make the Matzo Balls:

1. In a medium bowl, mix the chicken fat or vegetable oil with the eggs, salt, nutmeg, matzo meal and parsley. Refrigerate for a few hours or overnight.

2. Bring the water to a boil in a large pot. Take the matzo mix out of the refrigerator and, after dipping your hands into a bowl of cold water, gently form balls the size of large walnuts. Add salt to the water, and drop in the balls. Simmer slowly, covered, for about 20 minutes, remove from water with a slotted spoon, and add to the soup.

 

 

 

 

 

Shiitake Mushroom and Barley Soup

December 26, 2012

Author: Akasha Richmond

Akasha is a self-trained chef and artisan-style baker who has been cater­ing events in Los Angeles and other parts of the coun­try for over twenty years. She began her pro­fes­sional career at the Golden Temple, a now defunct but once pop­u­lar veg­e­tar­ian restau­rant in Los Angeles. It was in this kitchen that Akasha dis­cov­ered her pas­sion for mak­ing deli­cious dishes with good-for-you ingre­di­ents. After the Golden Temple she became Michael Jackson’s per­sonal and con­cert tour chef. AKASHA is her first restau­rant ven­ture, the result of a vision she has had for many years.

Her cook­book HOLLYWOOD DISH includes tales of Hollywood’s 100-year pas­sion for organic foods and healthy lifestyles and sto­ries of her favorite cook­ing expe­ri­ences: mak­ing hol­i­day din­ners for Billy Bob Thornton, cater­ing par­ties for Pierce Brosnan, pro­duc­ing events at the Sundance Film Festival, and work­ing as a pri­vate chef for Barbra Streisand.

She lends her time and exper­tise to groups such as Share Our Strength, Environmental Media Association, Common Threads and Pediatric Aids. She has appeared on The Food Network (The Best Thing I Ever Ate), Access Hollywood, Entertainment Tonight, Planet Green, and nation­wide news programs.

Ingredients:

2 cups water

2 ounces dried porcini or other dried mushroom

1 tablespoon butter or olive oil

1 large onion, finely chopped

1 large or 2 small shallots, finely chopped

2 leeks, pale green and white parts only, cleaned, and finely chopped

8 ounces shiitake mushrooms, stems wiped clean, trimmed and sliced

2 quarts chicken or vegetable stock

2 celery ribs, finely chopped

1 large carrot, diced

1 large parsnip, diced

1/2 cup whole barley

1 bay leaf

1 teaspoon fresh thyme leaves

Kosher salt to taste

Freshly ground black pepper to taste

Chopped flat leaf parsley, for garnish

Preparation:

Bring the water to a boil in a 1-quart saucepan. Add the porcini mushrooms, turn off the heat and cover.

Let sit for 20 minutes or until the mushrooms are soft. Drain, reserving the liquid, and finely chop the mushrooms.

Heat the butter in a large stockpot over medium-high heat. Add the onion, shallots, and salt. Cook for

about 5 minutes or until the onions are translucent and fragrant. Lower the heat to medium, add the

leeks, and cook for another 3 minutes. Add the shiitakes and the soaked porcini and cook another 5-8

minutes, stirring often, until the mushrooms are well cooked.

Add the stock, celery, carrots, parsnips, barley, bay leaf, and thyme. Bring to a boil, and then reduce to a simmer. Cook for one hour or until the barley is tender. Season with salt and pepper to taste. Garnish with the chopped parsley.

Tinola, Filipino Chicken Soup

December 28, 2012

Author: Karena Higgins

My mom can’t cook. She certainly can’t cook Filipino food. My experiences of Filipino food were through other members of our family or the “Y’ayas” and the “Titas”. The Y’aya is equivalent to the American version of a nanny, except they often stay and transition with the family until they are older. Tita is a term for auntie, although they are not always related. These ladies were in charge of not only the household, but the heart of the home, the kitchen. Their meals were often dishes they had brought with them from the homeland i.e. Adobo and Sinigang. They adjusted certain cooking methods and substituted ingredients when need be. They even learned new recipes, hamburgers and pancakes, but they always had their specialities and we had our favorites. One of my favorites, especially during the chilly months, was and still is chicken Tinola. Tinola is the perfect remedy for a cold or just a cold day. It is fragrant soup served with chicken and chunks of papaya or chayote (I prefer the pear shaped, fruit like plant). Mulunggay leaves are added for its legendary health benefits, along with garlic, onions, ginger and patis aka fish sauce. The broth is full bodied and soothing with a hint of heat. It’s a tasty cure.

Ingredients

2 tablespoons cooking oil

1 onion chopped

4 cloves garlic

4 slices of fresh ginger

4 tablespoons fish sauce

4 chicken wings

2 chicken breasts

3 chayote sliced and cut into pieces

small bunch of spinach

Mulunggay leaves optional

salt and pepper to taste

1 cup chicken broth

8 cups water

Preparation

Chop chicken breasts and set aside. Heat the oil in a large pot over medium heat; toss in the onion and cook til translucent. Add ginger in the hot oil until fragrant. Quickly stir the ginger, add garlic. Cook garlic til fragrant and add fish sauce into the onion, garlic mixture. Add chicken wings; brown the skin and cook together for 5 minutes. Add chopped chicken breasts. Pour the chicken broth and water over the mixture and bring to boil. Simmer for 30 minutes. Add the chayote to the mixture and simmer, about 10 minutes more. Season with salt and pepper. Add the spinach; cook until spinach is just wilted, 1 to 2 minutes. Serve hot.

Posted in Soups and Stews

Tags: broth, chayote, chicken, chicken breasts, chicken broth, chicken soup, chicken wings, cloves of garlic, cooking oil, Filipino, fish sauce, fresh ginger, garlic, garlic cloves, ginger, mulunggay leaves,oil, onion, pepper, salt, Soup, spinach, water

Ida Richman’s Poor Man Soup

February 6, 2013

Author: Alan Richman 

 

 

Ingredients:

• Two six-ounce packages Manischewitz or Streit’s Split Pea Soup Mix (Beware of other brands, the ones where the peas are not finely cut and don’t get soft enough.)

• Four or five beef shin bones, 1-2 inches thick, with marrow

• Two medium yellow onions, grated

• Two medium carrots, grated

Preparation:

1. Bring nine cups of water to a boil. (The Manischewitz recipe calls for 5 cups for a six-ounce package. The Streit’s recipe calls for 4 cups for an identical six-ounce package. If you were adding only the ingredients of the packages, Streit’s would be more right than Manischewitz. But you’ve got more going into the pot, so up it a little.)

2. Add the peas. Stir.

(Each package comes with a little cellophane packet of seasonings. They are to Jewish soup what MSG is to Chinese food. The Streit’s directions call for the contents to be added after 45 minutes of cooking, 15 minutes before the soup is done. Manischewitz says to add the contents during the last 10 minutes of cooking. I can’t believe my mother was that patient. My guess she added them at the start. Here’s what I do. After about a half-hour, I add the seasonings, but not all of them. It’s too much. If you think the soup needs more salt or pepper, add to taste. Anyway, an hour isn’t nearly long enough to cook this soup. It requires two hours, minimum.)

3.Add the soup bones, the grated onion, the grated carrots. Stir well. Cover. Lower temperature to simmer.

4.After about an hour, if you’re hungry, remove the bones. Dig out the marrow. Serve on white toast, with coarse salt. After the bones have cooled, give them to your dog.

5. Eat the soup when the peas are dissolved and the broth is creamy, about two hours, sometimes more. Stir well before serving.

This post was submitted by Alan Richman. (His mother, Ida, is second from left in the photo.)

 

Pressure Cooker Stew for Sukkot: Oxtail Soup

April 9, 2013

Author: Kitchen Tested

Originally published in Kitchen Tested.

 

 

 

Ingredients:

2 lbs. beef oxtail

6-8 marrow bones

1 package frozen mixed vegetables

2 large carrots, chopped

2 stalks celery, chopped

1 parsnip, chopped

1 turnip, chopped

1 onion, chopped

1 bunch fresh parsley

1 bunch fresh dill

1/2 cup barley

1/4 cup split peas

1/4 cup elbow macaroni

2 potatoes

2 Tbsp onion soup mix

2 tsp salt

1 tsp sugar

Preparation:

In a pressure cooker, place the frozen mixed vegetables, carrots, celery, parsnip, turnip, onion, parsley and dill.

Rinse the barley and split peas and add to the pressure cooker.

Add all remaining ingredients and cover with water. Close the pressure cooker.

Bring water to a boil (should take around 20 minutes) then cook for 15 minutes.

Note: if you don’t have a pressure cooker, you can make this soup in a regular pot. Just boil the soup for 1-2 hours.

 

 

 

Lentil Soup

June 11, 2013

Author: Gefiltefest

This gorgeous soup can be traced all the way back to the Old Testament. In Genesis 25:29-34 you can read how Jacob’s brother, Esau, sold his birthright as oldest son to his younger brother, merely for a bowl of Lentil Soup! So yes, this soup is truly delicious and comforting. Whether you should sell your birthright for it? Well, I will let you decide on that.

My mom and I love to make this soup with brown lentils, as they are stronger flavored and hold their shape after being cooked. You can blend the soup after it’s done, but for us it’s all about the texture. We use beef stock but feel free to use vegetarian or chicken stock instead. Extra yummy, if you serve the soup with homemade croutons and some fried curry onion rings as garnish.

Ingredients:

For the soup:

2 tbsp. of olive oil

1 onion, finely chopped

2 sticks of celery, finely chopped

1 large carrot, finely diced

1 leek, white part only, cleaned and finely chopped

350g (1½ cup) brown lentils, washed and drained

2L Beef/Chicken/Vegetable stock

1 lime

1 tsp. ground cumin

1 tsp. salt

¼ tsp. black pepper

For garnish:

1 tbsp. of olive oil

2 onions, sliced in rings

½ tsp. mild curry powder

6 slices of old bread

olive oil to drizzle over the croutons

garlic/garlic salt

Preparation:
For the soup heat the olive oil on medium heat. Add the finely chopped onions and gently fry without coloring for 10 minutes or until softened.

Then add the carrot, celery and leek, again gently fry without coloring. Add the lentils, mix all ingredients gently and pour in your stock. Bring to boil and once boiling reduce the heat, simmer covered for at least 2 hours, stirring occasionally.

When lentils are soft, stir in the cumin, lime, salt and pepper.

While the soup is simmering, preheat the oven to 175 degrees C. or 350 degrees F. Slice each bread slice into cubes and sprinkle with olive oil and if you like, garlic or garlic salt. Place on a baking sheet and bake for approximately 15 minutes or until cubes are dried. Keep an eye on them while bake to make sure they don’t burn.

When you are about to serve the soup, fry the onions in olive oil and season with curry powder. Pour the ready soup into the serving dish, add the fried onions, croutons and enjoy!

 

 

21st Century Cholent

March 6, 2014

Author: Fran Kolin

 

 

This is the original “stick to your ribs” meal, a traditional shabbos lunch that cooks before sundown on Friday until lunchtime on Saturday. Real old-world goodness!

Ingredients:

1 bag of baby potatoes

1lb flank steak or brisket, cubed

Fried onions

1 bag of baby carrots

Kishke

1tbsp chopped garlic

Red kidney beans

Black beans

Small white beans

Preparation:

Use the largest pan or pot that can go in your oven, Layer the ingredients in the order written. Add water to the top. Put uncovered into 350 degree oven. Cover after 2-3 hours. Lower oven to 250 degrees for another 8 hours. Add water as necessary to “mush up” texture. (Or put in the oven in the morning – for that night- at 325 degrees all day.)

 

Posted in Soups and Stews  

Tags: black beans, carrots, garlic, kidney beans, kishke, onions, potatoes, shabbos, steak,white beans

 

 

Veggie Cholent

March 6, 2014

Author: Batsheva Frankel

 

 

I developed this recipe as an alternative to meat cholent- because I stopped eating meat when I started keeping shabbat. It’s yummy and fast!

Ingredients:

Barley

1 can whole potatoes

1 can cut sweet potatoes

1 brown onion – sliced

1 can garbanzo beans

1 can veggie baked beans

4-6 whole cloves of garlic

1 cup of ketchup

1 cup of BBQ sauce

1 parve kishke (sliced)

Preparation:

Grease sides and bottom of crock pot with olive oil. Cover bottom of crock pot with thin layer of barley. Put all ingredients in crock pot in order listed on Friday before shabbat- it will be ready for shabbat lunch!

 


 

Gazpacho

March 6, 2014

Author: Francis Levine-Grater

I got this recipe in my first year of marriage, and I am celebrating 18 years of happiness! It is perfect for Shavuot or Shabbat lunch in the summer.

Ingredients:

1 jug of tomato juice

2 small cucumbers

Handful of parsley or cilantro

2 small tomatoes, chopped

6 tbs olive oil

6 tbs balsamic vinegar

3 tbs honey

Juice of 2 lemons

Preparation:

Mix wet ingredients together. Add veggies and herbs. Can be left chunky or blended. Enjoy!

 

 

Moroccan Fish from Israel

March 12, 2013

Author: JDCEntwine

 

 

Recipe courtesy of Rachel Tachvilian from Beit Shemesh, Israel. Read more about the JDC and Israel.

Ingredients:

• 4 slices tuna or Nile perch (if available)

• 2-3 ripe tomatoes

• Salt (for marinating fish and for sauce)

• Lemon juice

• 1⁄4 teaspoon turmeric

• 1⁄2 teaspoon chicken-flavored

(meatless/”pareve”) soup mix

• 2-3 cups boiling water, plus more

boiling water if using tuna

• Handful of fresh chopped cilantro

• 1 red pepper, chopped

• 1 long chili pepper, preferably dry, cut

into wide strips

• 1 clove fresh garlic, peeled and

chopped

• About 1⁄4 cup vegetable oil

• 1 tablespoon sweet red paprika

Preparation:

Sprinkle salt and lemon juice over fish and let marinate for 30 minutes. In the meantime, prepare sauce by peeling the tomatoes and placing them into a wide pot. Add salt, turmeric, and soup mix and bring to a boil. Mash cooked tomato mixture (can use a potato masher), then add 2-3 cups boiling water to the pot. Bring sauce to a simmer.

Rinse fish: if using tuna, rinse it first with boiling water and then with tap water; if using Nile perch, rinse it

with tap water. Place slices of fish on top of sauce in the wide pot. Lay chopped cilantro, pepper strips, and chopped garlic on top of fish. Bring mixture to a boil. In the meantime, thoroughly combine the oil and sweet paprika in a separate dish and add to the fish mixture. After the fish has boiled for 10 minutes, reduce heat to a simmer. Simmer fish for about 30 minutes more. Serve fish with sauce, hot or at room temperature.

Serves 4 people

 

 

Thanksgivukkah Snack Mix

This fall we need a new snack mix to eat while watching football and playing dreidel! By combining equal parts of any of the snack foods below, you can create your own mix to capture the flavors of Chanukah and Thanksgiving, or Thanksgivukkah!

Ingredients:

CHANUKAH THANKSGIVING

Potato sticks Sweet potato chips

Dried apples Dried cranberries

Chocolate gelt Dried green beans

Pecans Dried strawberries

Yogurt chips Corn Nuts/Corn Chex

Cinnamon sugar Pumpkin pie spice

Preparation:

Pick equal amounts of a few ingredients from each column. Mix it up in a bowl and serve. Eat while rooting for your favorite football team, or trying to get a “Gimmel,” and enjoy!

This post was submitted by OOGIAH.

 

Kreplach

February 10, 2014

Author: Vicky Pearl

My grandmother, who lives in Brooklyn not far from my own home, is well-known for her cooking and baking prowess. Her jelly cookies are the arbiter by which all other cookies made or consumed by my family are measured. But if you ask me, it is her kreplach that stand out. They are truly the gold standard. I can’t tell you how lucky my family and I feel when she serves them up to us on special occasions such as Purim, Erev Yom Kippur, and Hashano Rabba.

So I was a little hesitant when I set out to make these wonderful gems in my gluten-free kitchen. Would I be able to capture the soft in the mouth, not too heavy in texture pillows without all-purpose flour? I can tell you I was a little more than surprised when, after my first try (which, in all honesty have to admit is not always the case), actually achieved the consistency I wanted to reproduce. At first glance I thought I had failed. The kreplach seemed a bit thicker than I would have hoped. However, once they had a leisurely soak in the soup as it rewarmed, they were the perfect texture and I felt I had a winner. I can’t tell you how happy I was – not only because I had reproduced my grandmother’s recipe and could enjoy it without any wheat, but also because I had truly done justice to the original. It wasn’t just my word either. I offered some to my family and friends who eat wheat. As I stood in anticipation, they heartily enjoyed the soup and announced, to my pleasure, that it was the best kreplach they had ever had. I felt I had just won first prize in some national contest!!

So it is with great pleasure that I share with you this recipe for kreplach, made with brown rice flour, tapioca flour and potato starch.

Ingredients:

1 cup brown rice flour

1 cup tapioca flour

½ cup potato starch

1 tsp xanthan gum

2 large eggs

½ cup water

½ cup oil

pinch of kosher salt

Filling:

5 chicken patties, mashed

Preparation:

1. In a mixer fitted with the dough hook, mix together dough ingredients until well combined.

2. Roll dough between two well-floured pieces of parchment paper to 1/8-inch thickness. Cut

into 3×3-inch squares.

3. Place 1 heaping tsp of filling onto each square. Fold dough over filling, forming a triangle.

Press edges with the tines of a fork to seal.

4. Fill an 8-quart pot to a little bit more than ¾ full with water; bring to a boil over high heat.

Add 1/8 tsp salt.

5. One at a time, add kreplach to boiling water. Return to a rolling boil. Reduce heat to medium-

low. Cook, covered, for 20 minutes.

6. Without letting kreplach fall out, pour out hot water from pot. Refill with cold water, making

sure that the water completely covers all the kreplach. Allow kreplach to cool in water. Remove

using a slotted spoon.

7. Add to soup, heat thoroughly, and enjoy.

These freeze very well for up to 6 months. Chill before freezing and thaw in refrigerator.

Yield: 18 to 20 kreplach.

Note: Brown rice flour works best for this recipe. It gives it a fine consistency, and will not taste

grainy as it is being cooked.

Sidebar: Doughs made with gluten-free flours tend to be a touch more sensitive than regular wheat-flour doughs. It’s important to get to know the brands of flour that you work with. Sometimes you will need to add a bit more liquid, sometimes less. If your dough is a bit sticky, flour your parchment paper with a dusting of sweet rice flour. For kreplach, it doesn’t matter if the dough has a little bit of extra flour on top or inside of it. The dough should be pliable without being dry.

This recipe comes from Gluten Free Goes Gourmet.

 

 

 

 

Spinach Artichoke Dip

April 4, 2014

Author: Jaclyn Friedland

Ingredients:

1 block frozen spinach

2 cans artichoke hearts-cut up

2 cans water chestnuts

2 cans chopped chilies (not hot)

2 cups mayonnaise

2 cups grated parmesan cheese

Preparation:

MIX all ingredients together.

BAKE at 350 degrees for about 45 minutes. Serve with tortilla strips or carrots. Enjoy!

 

 

Sauteed Chicken Livers

April 19, 2014

Author: A Klonsky

Ingredients:

Chicken Livers

Onion

Garlic

Shallots

Red Sweet Peppers

Mushrooms

Fresh Ginger

Soy Sauce

Dry Mustard

Pinch of Oregano or Thyme

Preparation:

Saute onion, garlic & shallots until golden

Add peppers & mushrooms

Add chicken livers that have been cut in half

Add fresh ginger, dry herbs & dry herbs

Season to taste

Simmer until ready

Serve over rice or noodles