Five Towns Jewish Home - 3-31-22

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The Jewish Home | MARCH 31, 2022

jewish women of wisdom

Don’t Judge a Book By Its Genre by Sara N. brejt, esq., cPc

M

A cookbook can also focus us on life’s small, precious moments. A cookbook may remind you of a special food you ate years ago. With special people. On a special day. During a special conversation. When we were dating, my husband and I were eating at the then-trendy kosher vegetarian Greener Pastures. Do you

honest, I was going on and on – about how cute the broccoli florets would look on a bed of brown rice. He seemed to hesitate and then he asked me, “Do you know how to make chicken soup?” “Yes.” I smiled. “That’s good.” He also smiled. And looked relieved. He also promised me he

Cookbooks of each cuisine open our minds and open our hearts to Jews of all stripes.

would try anything I make once. Even the stranger foods. And he has! A soup cookbook will warm our hearts on a cold winter day. The very picture of steam from a tureen, with the ladle at-the-ready, evokes the hearth, the table, the aroma …the opportunity to gather with family and with friends… the ultimate comfort food. Do you enjoy

JWOW! is a community for midlife Jewish women which can be accessed at www.jewishwomanofwisdom.org for conversation, articles, Zoom events, and more.

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remember that restaurant? It was near Bloomingdale’s on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. I was waxing eloquent about the title recipe from The Enchanted Broccoli Forest, a cookbook from the proprietress of The Moosewood Restaurant, of counter-culture fame. This was very trendy at the time. Did I say that already? To be

your soup piping hot? And, in the summer, reading the recipes of iced desserts will cool our bodies, in an exceptionally non-caloric way. That refreshing feeling reminds us of summer vacations, with no care, and all the time in the world. A newer, more modern cookbook is fun-to-read, creative and inspirational. A cake-in-a-mug cookbook combines the seemingly contradictory values of today – speed and comfort. How very 2022! We may dream about producing the fantastic pictures in the new cookbooks, and we don’t even have to lift a finger. Dreams can be satisfying, even the ones that don’t materialize. We will internalize the creativity of the cuisine, the styling, the design. A cookbook can bring us to tears as it evokes the aromas of our youth. “I had no idea even how to make a good soup. I do not remember exactly what my mother looked like, but I remembered the smell of her chicken soup. I worked on it till I felt I had my Mom in my kitchen.” -From the “Holocaust Survivor’s Cookbook” Are “cookbooks” a genre of literature? I have been thinking about this since JWOW! hosted “The Joy of Books,” an interactive Zoom program in the fall. If cookbooks were just compilations of lists of ingredients with directions, then perhaps not. But cookbooks are so much more. Food is an essential part of our identity, our emotions and our moods. And, therefore, cookbooks enrich our lives. By helping us explore culture and history, they connect us to who we are, who we were, and who we aspire to be. I vote “yes!” Cookbooks are a genre of our literature. Happy reading!

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y husband and I were considering our mishloach manos theme options. I wanted to make Indian food. I figured we’d start with Hodu (India) and celebrate a different country each year until we arrived at Kush (Ethiopia). Based on the idea that Esther, as wife to King Achashveirosh, was the queen over 127 provinces, we’d be set for the next 126 years! My out-of-town chavrusa (learning partner) arranged for me to borrow a few of her fascinating cookbooks on Indian Jewish cooking. Who knew there was such a thing!? I learned about the Jews of India and garam masala, an authentic Indian spice, and how hard it was to obtain kosher versions of those traditional Indian spices, especially in Cleveland. So, we toned it down (a lot!) and sent a much simpler saffron rice and a small bottle of flavored vodka. Those Indian cookbooks certainly broadened my cultural horizons. As the well-known adage goes, “The way to a culture’s heart is through its stomach.” The ethnic variety of the traditional cooking in our Jewish world astounds the mind. From the range of the different Sephardic communities to the variety of European ones, cookbooks of each cuisine open our minds and open our hearts to Jews of all stripes. They can unify us as a people as we each become familiar with other sections of our community through the foods that we eat. If we are researching our own history, we will connect to our own past. If we research that of others, well then, we will connect to them as well. The Spice and Spirit cookbooks – or today’s equivalent, the Bais Yaakov cookbooks – are often our trusty kitchen companions. We find recipes that our families have enjoyed for generations. Sometimes, the book simply falls open to the pages of those tried-and-true recipes, the ones we go back to again and again. You know which pages – the ones with the oil stains and the little crumbs stuck on.


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Articles inside

Still Counting Down by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

2min
pages 142-144

Your Money

3min
pages 140-141

Against All Odds by Avi Heiligman

6min
pages 132-133

A General’s Retirement is a Chance to Reflect by David Ignatius

4min
page 131

Free Speech Gets Tossed by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
page 130

Madeleine Albright Shaped a Generation by David Ignatius

4min
page 129

Notable Quotes

10min
pages 126-128

The Aussie Gourmet: Salmon Pistachio

1min
pages 124-125

JWOW

4min
pages 122-123

TJH Speaks with David Lobl, Candidate for Assembly

14min
pages 104-107

Love Your Kids by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

6min
pages 116-117

The Up-and-Coming Chickpea by Cindy Weinberger, MS RD CDN

3min
pages 118-119

Parenting Pearls

7min
pages 120-121

Teen Talk

5min
pages 110-111

My Mission to Ukraine by Shoshana Rockoff

14min
pages 108-109

TJH Speaks with Ari Brown, Candidate for Assembly

13min
pages 100-103

Rescuing Anna by Rafi Sackville

5min
pages 96-99

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

4min
pages 94-95

Looking Forward by Rav Moshe Weinberger

11min
pages 86-89

The Jewish Approach to Leadership by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

11min
pages 90-93

Community Happenings

1hr
pages 40-81

National

15min
pages 30-35

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

3min
pages 84-85

Israel News

14min
pages 22-29

Global

12min
pages 12-21

Centerfold

2min
pages 82-83
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