Holy Carrots For the New Year


While I grew up eating honey cooked carrots every Rosh Hashana, I never realized this was holy food until I read Rabbi Dovid Meisel’s account of the every day life of  Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum, the previous Satmar Rebbe. In case you’re unfamiliar with his story, the old Satmar Rebbe walked out of Bergen Belsen alive.  … Continue reading »

Rubia: Black Eyed Peas for the New Year


Until I learned about the simanim, the symbolic foods of the Rosh Hashana meal  I had no idea that Jews ate black eyed peas.  Like chitterlins and collard greens, I thought they belonged to the genre of African American cuisine known as soul food. Little did I know that this lovely legume feeds our neshomos too. … Continue reading »

Talking Rosh Hashana: Teiglach


 Now I understand why nobody makes Teiglach anymore. You know, Teiglach, that ancient Lithuanian Jewish Rosh Hashana delicacy assembled from hundreds of tiny balls of  honey soaked dough. My eyes light up when a recipe is labeled  ”easy” and “quick.”  Teiglach is clearly not this. Teiglach harkens back  to a time when women rolled their … Continue reading »

Talking Rosh Hashana:Wine Poached Fertility Pears


It feels like the summer has hardly begun but this Shabbat we usher in the month of Elul, the opening act to the High Holiday Season.  Elul is a heavy time for Jews. Since Rosh Hashana is the Yom HaDin, the  Judgment Day, Elul is the time to prepare  for that judgment. The way to do this is … Continue reading »

National Kasha Eating Day–Shabbat Shira


One of the nice things about doing this blog is that I get to learn so many new and wonderful things. Take this week, Shabbat Shira. I’m a day school grad–12 years, plus sem courses , plus hours and hours of listening to Torah lectures on CD and MP3. Never until this week did I … Continue reading »

Fabulous Farfel


This job takes under five minutes to complete This will eventually morph  into farfel!  Forget the Siberian Tiger and the Mountain Gorilla! There’s  something far important that may be vanishing from the planet—farfel.. The once ubiquitous gravel shaped noodle known as the Ba’al Shem Tov’s tzimmes  is  almost nearly  extinct, replaced on our Shabbos and Yuntif … Continue reading »