Showing posts with label kosher cookbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kosher cookbook. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 06, 2018

Making Kitchen Progress, Who Wants These?

One of my tasks before redoing the kitchen, Gd willing, is to get rid of things that have been in it for decades, which I don't use.  And like many people, especially experienced and confident cooks, I don't open my old cookbooks.

Way back when I did love and utilize cookbooks, I'd frequently read them cover to cover and then internalize general principles. Except for cakes, I'd very rarely follow a recipe exactly. Besides eliminating or seriously reducing the amount of salt and other seasonings, it was usually impossible to find all of the ingredients in my pantry/kitchen. I became a "housewife" in late June,1970, and two months later we docked in Israel. Post-tzenna* Israel had plenty of food, but not all of the the ingredients in the American recipes.

My mother bought/sent me not only cookbooks, but lots of books about natural health, dieting, pregnancy and child-raising. I added many books and health/vegetarian magazines to the collection. But it has been a very long time, decades, since any of them have been opened and read. When I need a recipe, instead of taking down a few books, going through the index, putting small pieces of paper to mark the pages and then reading and comparing, I just check with Chef Google. Isn't that what almost everyone does?

So, as I've planned and envisioned my new kitchen, the bookshelves** will morph into my coffee corner. Gd willing in a few months, maybe by my next birthday, we'll be seeing my percolator, French Presses and coffee mugs on those shelves.

I've already given away more than half of the actual cookbooks. If anyone is interested in any of the remaining books, please come and get them.





*צנע tzenna or zenna, was the term for the austerity days of great financial difficulties and hardships in the early years of the State of Israel. The population grew dramatically, as Jews from all over the world hurried to our Historic Homeland. Basic food items were rationed, and families/citizens were given coupons to try to make it possible to share the limited supplies.

** That wall closet is to be re-doored with new formica to match the new cabinets on the other walls.

Sunday, November 29, 2015

Cooking From Cookbooks? Passé?

I've been married forty-four and a half (44 1/2) years, and I have quite a collection of cookbooks, diet books and healthfood books. My mother and other relatives used to get me all of the kosher cookbooks they could find mostly during the 1970's. I have a full collection of Adelle Davis books and the then popular Italian, French and Chinese Kosher series that had the crazy Yiddish type food names.

When I planned my kitchen over thirty years ago, I made sure I'd have book shelves for them:






Do you recognize any of the titles there?

I also used to have a small box for index cards on which I copied my favorite recipes or recipes I had gotten from now forgotten sources and people. That was a trick I learned from a friend to keep my cookbooks clean and also kosher for Passover.  But a number of years ago, I threw that out. It was disgustingly dirty and not used much, except for the Hamantasch cookie dough.

In the old pre-internet days, if I was looking for a recipe, I'd pull out a number of cookbooks that could possible contain the sort of recipe I needed. I'd open the index and search and then go page by page sticking little pieces of paper to hold the place, and then I'd read all the options, choosing which to follow or combine.

Now, since I'm a food blogger, I've blogged most of my recipes, so it's just easiest to check my own blog with the help of google. And if I'm looking for a new recipe, or something I haven't blogged, I just "google" with some key words, compare the recipes and cook. I've never been very OCD about following an exact recipe. If you look up things like chocolate cake, meatballs or challah, you'll find such a variety of recipes and instructions...


  • Nu, what do you do?
  • Do you cook from cookbooks?
  • Do you still have your own recipe files?
  • Ot do you just buy ready-made or what?

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Kosher Cookbook Memories, Bring on The Celebrities...

I get an email version of Jewniverse every once in a while. It's a cute little service that sometimes has some wonderful tidbits. Yesterday the email "subject" seemed rather familiar,  The 1975 Celebrity Kosher Cookbook That Only a Turkey Could Hate. As I read on, I realized that I had that very cookbook.

In the 1970's when I was a young wife and mother, the older generation of the combined clans, mine and my husband, liked to buy me all sorts of, mostly kosher, cookbooks and health food guides. My kitchen bookshelves are still stocked with them, although I don't cook according to recipes and haven't even glanced at most for decades.

Here are the shelves:




So, when I saw the keywords, celebrity, kosher and 1975, I was pretty sure that I had the book. It fit the timeline of my collection perfectly. Yes, it's the one with the faded pink cover in the top photo.


I don't think that I ever found a recipe I could use in it, but I absolutely loved reading the stories accompanying them. Since I read cookbooks, rather than cook from them, that shouldn't be a surprise.





To be totally honest, I've always had a dream of writing a cookbook, a cookbook that would be more than just a recipe collection. I think it's time to reread "Celebrity Kosher Cookbook."

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Kosher Cooking Carnival, Sivan 5773




 
Welcome to the Rosh Chodesh Sivan, 5773,  edition of the Kosher Cooking Carnival aka KCC.

The Kosher Cooking Carnival is a monthly blog carnival that can include any sort of blog post about kosher food, kosher cooking, traditions, halachot-laws and reviews of kosher cookbooks and restaurants.  It's really easy to host, especially if you work from blog carnival's instacarnival.  That's what I ended up doing.  That's why I'm included in the "third person." Instacarnival just needs editing, such as making sure there aren't an spam links.  You can add pictures from the posts that were submitted.  And I suggest adding some sort of introduction which will tell your reader to contact me or our facebook page for hosting.

I started KCC after a recipe of mine had been rejected by a recipe carnival, because their edition's theme was pork.  In response I began the Kosher Cooking Carnival. If you'd like to host an edition, then please contact me at shilohmuse at gmail dot com or sign up via our facebook page.  You can submit links via blog carnival.


Photo from Mia3Mom Rachel
Yosefa Huber presents Basic Sauerkraut - How it all began posted at Cooking Outside the Box, saying, "This is a simple tutorial to get you started making homemade fermented food. It is one of the cheapest and easiest ways to get kosher PAREVE probiotics."

Yosefa Huber presents Special Helpers in the Kitchen posted at Cooking Outside the Box, saying, "Expert tips for cooking with kids, from guest author and Israeli mother of four, including two special needs kids."

desserts


Chaviva Karon presents Lemon Mousse posted at Challah Maidel.

Yosefa Huber presents Too Easy Chocolate Chip Peach Cake posted at Cooking Outside the Box.

any time dishes


Batya presents me-ander: Fantastically Easy, One Pot Meal Baked posted at me-ander.

Batya presents me-ander: A New Salad, A Variation From "The Modern Menu" posted at me-ander.

Batya presents me-ander: And Another Coffee Post: Don't Use Turkish Coffee in Your French Press! posted at me-ander.

anything kosher!


Leora Wenger presents Recipe: How to Make Almond Milk - Sketching Out posted at Here in HP, saying, "I initially made this because I wanted a pareve creamer for Pesach. It turned out it was quite delicious!"

Every day meals


Batya presents me-ander: Homemade Sort of "TV Dinners" posted at me-ander.
Hannah presents Thai-Style Dressings at Hannah's Nook.

food "to go


Ben-Yehudah presents Mourning Mexican Food: Where's My Burrito?! posted at Esser Agaroth, saying, "Personal story"

Jewish Shabbat and Holiday food


Batya presents me-ander: Challah Baking Tips, Our Favorite Challah Shapes and Readiness Check posted at me-ander.

Liron Yankonsky presents Art in the Middle East: Israeli and Jewish Holidays Food! posted at Art in the Middle East, saying, "Israeli Jewish Holidays Food (Including illustrations by me)!"

Leora Wenger presents Crunchy Vegan Rice Salad Recipe - Sketching Out posted at Here in HP, saying, "A tasty, filling salad dish to make on a Friday and serve for Shabbat lunch"

Hadassah Sabo Milner presents Recipe: Kishke Stuffed Turkey Breast : HaDassah Sabo Milner posted at In The Pink.

Restaurant or Cookbook Reviews


Batya presents me-ander: Modern Kosher, The Modern Menu posted at me-ander.

Batya presents me-ander: A Different "Alice's Restaurant" posted at me-ander.

traditional food


Olga Rezo presents Live to Eat or Eat to Live? | Kabbalah Guest Articles posted at Metaphysical light rays meditation.

That concludes this edition. Submit your blog article to the next edition of kosher cooking carnival-kcc using our carnival submission form. Past posts and future hosts can be found on our blog carnival index page.

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Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Review of the Harry Potter Cookbook, Kosher and Hebrew Version בעברית

The following is a review my daughter wrote about The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook (Hebrew,) Gefen Publishing House. She titled her review "Savta Batya Brought us a Surprise."  The reason why the review is in Hebrew is because the book is.  I'll just summarize what she wrote in case a non-Hebrew reader wants to get one to give as a gift.  My daughter first made it clear that she and her eldest are great Harry Potter fans and have read the series.  That's why I accepted it for reviewing.  I knew that they would love the idea of having such a book.  They'd be interested in anything about Harry Potter. My daughter mentioned that the book isn't produced as a cookbook; it was hard to use, keep open.  They cooked the Brown Bread Ice Cream.  The bread needed isn't whole wheat; it's sweet challah.  And only in the middle of making the ice cream did they discover that the book required an ice cream maker.  They made it without.  It's actually very sweet and tasty.  I tasted some when I was over the other day.  It's hard to believe that there's really some bread inside.

As Harry Potter fans, they are happy with the book, and she thinks it was a great idea to publish it.

סבתא בתיה הביאה לנו הפתעה

"ספר הבישול הבלתי רישמי של הארי פוטר" – דינה בוכהולץ

המהדורה העברית יצאה על ידי גפן בית הוצאה לאור

סבתא בתיה הביאה לנו הפתעה: "ספר הבישול הבלתי רישמי של הארי פוטר". אני ובכורתי, שקראה את הסדרה מספר בלתי נתפס של פעמים, קפצנו על המציאה. נתחיל מהשבחים: אין ספק שמדובר ברעיון קסום ונחמד. ספר שמשלב שתי אהבות גדולות: נפלאות עלילות "הארי פוטר" וקסמי הבישול. הספר מחייה את חוויות הארי פוטר ומגשים אותם למשהו שאפשר להריח ולטעום, תוך קישור לסצנות הרלוונטיות מסדרת הספרים. הספר אף מלא במידע מרתק על ההסטוריה של אוכל אנגלי. ויתרון קריטי מבחינתנו הינו שהמתכונים כשרים, למרות שהתפריט המקורית בסדרה איננו כזה נעשו כל השינויים הנדרשים לאפשר לנו ליהנות ממתכונים שמתאימים גם למטבח שלנו.

ובכל זאת לספר כמה חסרונות... נראה שהוא אינו מצליח להחליט האם הוא ספר קריאה או ספר בישול. הספר הודפס בגודל של ספר קריאה, בכריכה רכה, הדפים רכים ואינם בנויים להתמודדות עם חווית המטבח. ההסברים מורכבים סיפוריים ולא סדורים, הכתב קטנטן – מה מקשה על תהליך העבודה ומחייב גם מי שטרם מאובחן כזקוק למשקפי קריאה להרים אותו כדי לעקוב אחר ההוראות, מה שלא ממש נוח תוך כדי העבודה עם ידיים לא תמיד יבשות ונקיות – בפרט שהספר כל כך לא בנוי לחיים במטבח כאמור. הספר גם פוסח בין הסעיפים – ספר לילדים או למבוגרים – אין ספק שהמתכונים מורכבים מכדי להיות נגישים לגילאי רוב ציבור חובבי הסדרה.

בכל מקרה אחרי שבילינו זמן מה בקריאתו, נתתי לבכורתי לבחור מתכון.  המתכון הנבחר נקרא "גלידת לחם חום" (גלידה שמכינים עם פירורי חלה מתוקה).

כיוון שלא התעמקתי באותיות הקטנות מראש, רק בחצי הדרך גיליתי שבעצם המתכון מיועד לבעלי מכונת גלידה... מה שאין ברשותנו. המשכנו בכל זאת... חלק מהכמויות וההוראות העלו תמיהות אצלנו – אך השתדלנו לא לזיף מדי... בסך הכל יצא מקפא מתוק ומעניין. נהנינו מהחוויה ומהתוצאה אך בעיקר מהקריאה בספר... אחלה יוזמה ... רק חבל שלנו המוגלגים אין את הכישורים של מולי או של גמדוני הבית להכין את המאכלים בדרך הנכונה באמת  - בקסם...

 

Tuesday, April 09, 2013

Modern Kosher, The Modern Menu

Kim Kushner's The Modern Menu, Gefen Publishing House, is very much the modern kosher cookbook for the Modern Orthodox or to be perfectly honest a very good cookbook for anybody looking for a cookbook for special meals.  The fact that the very tempting and attractive recipes are kosher is almost irrelevant. 

Kushner's book isn't a "Jewish cookbook."  Don't buy it for the young bride who wants to bake challah and make the traditional Ashkenazi foods.  You won't find challah, geffilte fish, kneidelach or latkes.  And the Moroccan foods she includes, such as her bourekas, aren't at all like you'll find in one of the popular bourekas joints in Israel.  It's all very modernized. And it all looks delicious.

I've reviewed quite a few kosher cookbooks, and my practice is to read them, review them and then give them to my sister-in-law.  She cooks by recipe; I don't.  I have no doubt that she will absolutely love this cookbook.  Even I'm tempted to try a recipe*, which is pretty much unheard of in my kitchen.

Unless I missed it, there's no explanation of what kosher means or how to plan a kosher meal by not serving meat/poultry and a side dish or dessert made with butter.  Actually, I only noticed one of the butter using recipes that indicated that margarine could be substituted. Could it be that Kushner originally wrote it for the general market (meaning publisher) and not the Jewish or Israeli one? Also in only one of the mentions of the crab, which isn't at all kosher, is it explained that she really is referring to surimi, which is mock crabmeat made from kosher fish.

Kushner has some important recipes "hidden away" as part of a larger recipe, like the pesto in Baby Lamb Chops with Pesto Croute. (exactly how it appears in the book)
This recipe calls for frenched lamb chops, which are chops with the meat cut away from the end of the rib so that part of the bone is exposed. Frenching the chop makes it cleaner and let’s call it fancier, almost like a lamb lollipop, if you will! Your butcher can do this with the quick swipe of a knife; asking him or her to do this makes fast work of this simple-to-prepare dish. Croute simply means “crust” in French. Fancy.
Serves 6
Ingredients
1 handful fresh basil, washed and dried well
½ handful cilantro, washed and dried well
3 garlic cloves, peeled 
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling
½ cup pine nuts, toasted
¼ cup unseasoned dried bread crumbs, plus more for sprinkling
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
12 baby lamb chops, frenched
Directions
Preheat the oven to 400°F.
In a food processor, combine the basil, cilantro, and garlic. Pulse until coarsely chopped. Add the olive oil and pine nuts and process until the mixture forms a paste, about 30 seconds. Transfer the mixture to a bowl, stir in the bread crumbs, and season with salt and pepper.
Season both sides of the lamb chops with salt and pepper. Prepare a grill or set a grill pan over high heat. Sear the lamb chops on both sides, about 1 minute per side. Transfer to a baking sheet.
Place a spoonful of pesto in the center of each chop, then spread it evenly over the surface. Sprinkle with additional bread crumbs and drizzle with olive oil. Bake until the crust is golden and crisp and the lamb is pink inside, about 10 minutes. Serve warm.
A recipe I really must try is her *Lemon Celery Root Salad with Walnuts.
This salad takes me right back to my childhood home in Montreal: It was on the table, without fail, every Friday night. The funny thing is, I hadn’t a clue that the primary ingredient was celery root; I just knew that I loved the mild celery-like flavor and creamy texture. I love preparing dishes with somewhat unusual ingredients such as celery root; it’s what keeps me interested in cooking.
Ingredients
1 celery root, rough outer skin discarded, root halved
Juice of 1 lemon
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
¼ cup chopped walnuts, toasted
¼ teaspoon kosher salt
¼ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

On the large holes of a box grater or in a food processor fitted with the grater disk, grate the celery root. Transfer to a medium serving bowl. Pour the lemon juice and olive oil over the celery root, add the walnuts, and season with the salt and pepper. Toss to thoroughly coat and serve.
Serves 4 to 6
There really are many interesting recipes to choose from, and I like the fact that Kushner doesn't obsess over her cooking.  She likes to experiment, which is what we should all do.

The Modern Menu is for the sophisticated kosher cook or any cook who wants good food without too many complicated steps.

.

Tuesday, November 02, 2010

Yes, It's Time, To Choose a Rhyme!

So many rhymes came in
Who is going to win?
So help me choose
Though most will lose


My Kosher by Design Teens & 20-Somethings: cooking for the next generation by Susie Fishbein "win a free book" contest is coming to an end.  I've collected all of the entries, and I'd like your input in choosing the winner.


I enjoyed reading and reviewing it.  Choosing the contest winner is the hardest part of this deal!  Following are the rhymes that you sent in, and some of you sent in more than one!  I'm just coding them, not adding the names of the contestants.  I'll announce the winner sometime next week after Risa's Kosher Cooking Carnival.


1-The Hungry Teenager


I'm in the mood
for some tasty food.
Mom, what can I eat?
"Make something yourself, I'm beat!"


This new Kosher by Design
Has some recipes that are fine.
But where to start?
I'll go to the Kosher Mart.


Ingredients are what I need,
My friends and I need a feed!
Bowls and spoons, pans and pots,
Fruit and veggies we have lots.


Susie's recipe is so easy to make,
And only a half hour to bake!
Out of the oven it smells yum,
Can't wait till it's in my tum.


My dish tastes great,
And makes all my friends stay late.
It's so much fun to cook,
You should all get the new book!


2-Cookbooks are not just a way to cook food
The pictures and stories put you in the mood
So if Susie's past books demonstrate just a bit
This 20 and teen book's a guaranteed hit!


3-By Design cookbooks are for Kosher eats,
Dairy, veggies, fish and meats
But my favorite are the sweets,
Especially Shabbos dessert treats.


4-For a book to cook from,
that’s easy and neat
Containing amazing recipes,
pareve, dairy and meat.


5-Without time or space,
This book is suited for the student's place.
Whether old or young,
All the recipes will tickle your tongue.
So break out the food and get a start!
You'll make wonderful food -
perhaps even memories for your heart.


6-You don't have to be a teen
To enjoy this hip cuisine.


Susie's recipes always rule
Tasty, funky, hip and cool.


Moms no longer need complain
Your teen will help you entertain.


Busy cooks can now create
Inspired food to fill the plate.


7-teens and older
cooking bolder


8-From yummy scones
to pretzel tarts;
Cook your way to
kitchen smarts!


9-Gourmet French toast
or chicken wrap;
Fixing fast meals
is a snap!


10-I'm not a twenty or a teen
It's quite a while since I have been
One of those yet I can't wait
To see the amazing stuff I can create!


11-A teen's appetite is unpredictable at best
Starving then not hungry, it can put you to the test...
Well here's a book that's sure to not stay dusty on your shelves -
You all now can enjoy while they make dinner for themselves!

12-One generation: 40 years wandering in the desert eating mohn.
New generation: Time to move on and see what Suzy Fishbein has done!

Friday, October 29, 2010

Kosher by Design Teens & 20-Somethings: cooking for the next generation - Book Review



That’s right! Personally, besides things that are undoubtedly geared to specific age groups, like infant teething rings, I don’t like such specific pigeon-holing as the title. I think that Susie Fishbein and her publishers sell the book short by pegging it specifically for youth and young adults. This isn’t a criticism of the book, not at all. That’s how things are marketed. They want to make sure that singles will feel that the book is written for them, because Susie’s core readership cooks for family and guests.


I’m the type of person who has friends of all ages, ranging from my parents’ age to my kids’. I don’t think we should limit our social life to those of our exact age and generation. I’m saddened that some of my neighbors refuse to try out our long-running Shiur Nashim (Women’s Torah Class) on Shabbat, because they only want to go to one for “young women.” Personally, I love the mix of ages, ideas and experience.


Now, let’s get back to Kosher by Design Teens & 20-Somethings: cooking for the next generation by Susie Fishbein, the latest in her amazingly popular kosher cookbook series. It really is an excellent cookbook well-organized, easy to follow instructions, lovely pictures etc. It’s definitely an American cookbook, and that’s not just because I recognize foods from my sister-in-law’s Westchester, NY, table. It’s because all of the ingredients, measurements, brands etc. are American. There is no information page with equivalents so people like myself in Israel would know how much butter there is in a “stick,” or what Fishbein means by a box of soup stock etc. Since some ingredients are only available in the states, there should be an appendix with substitute lists. There has been a very well-orchestrated publicity campaigns all over the international Jewish blog world, so the book should have had been edited better for international use.


Also, to make it easier for those shaky in their kashrut, I’d color-code meat and dairy options when they’re for the same recipe, or every recipe. For instance, the Corn Potato Chowder can be either meat, dairy or parve. I’d have the meat ingredients in red and the dairy in blue, so people will have an easier time sorting things out. I’m a great fan of color-coding. When I ran the ready-made sandwich wagon department for a Bagel Restaurant, I color-coded the sandwich labels. It made it much easier to identify the cream cheese from the tuna. It was perfect until a very handsome guy who happened to be color-blind began working in the department. For Jeff, I added shapes. I’m sorry to begin this review with criticisms. Please don’t get me wrong; I do like the book. In the guidelines for reviewers we were told that we may and should add our constructive criticism.


I love reading cookbooks, but when I cook, I don’t follow them. That’s right; I don’t follow recipes. I use cookbooks for inspiration. And this cookbook is very inspiring. Admittedly, the recipes aren’t my usual style, but I’m getting lots of ideas from them. Years ago I bought myself one of those stick- blenders, which I’ve hardly ever touched. I can use it with some of the book’s recipes. There are some really delicious-looking vegetable recipes, like the Creamy Parsnips-Spinach and Za’atar Cauliflower. I’d probably substitute celery root for the parsnips, because I’m always looking for ways to cook those roots instead of throwing them out.


Considering that the book is marketed for students, the young and probably not yet married, it’s important that the recipes will be easy to divide to fewer servings. There are quite a few recipes which can easily be made for just one or two people; for instance, the Herbed Flounder Package. One of Jerusalem’s most handsome bachelors  once made something similar for us. He added more vegetables making it a “one pocket meal.”

The fun of cooking is being creative, and Susie Fishbein does seem to enjoy cooking. Back to cooking for fewer people, it would have helped to get information about freezing the food and cooking in advance. Busy people can’t cook every day. Even though I’m no longer working and traveling daily, I cook as I did then. I do all of my weekly cooking for Shabbat. The soup, meat and some of the side-dishes last the entire week. It’s so much more efficient.


I must admit that I was unpleasantly surprised at all the “hidden sugar” in recipes like Garlic Rosemary Filet Split. It would never have occurred to me to use ingredients like sugar and jam in meat, vegetables etc. Those diabetic and on strict diets should be aware of this. I’m going to have to check with my sister-in-law who cooks many similar dishes to those I discovered in Kosher by Design Teens & 20-Somethings: cooking for the next generation. I’m very curious about how many “non-sweet” recipes have sugar.


I do recommend the book. There’s lots of basic cooking and kitchen information, like the reminders to wash hands. I thought she was quoting me! And yes, the recipes are clear and easy to follow.


My cooking style is very different, much simpler. I use fewer tools, bowls etc. and fewer ingredients. While reading Kosher by Design Teens & 20-Somethings: cooking for the next generation  I developed more of an appetite for writing my own cookbook.


And for those of you, who are anxiously awaiting news, whether or not you’ve won the free copy of the book, I’ll be going over all of the rhyming slogans this week and G-d willing around Rosh Chodesh Kislev, November 7, I’ll post the winning slogan. So, if you’ve entered the contest and haven’t yet sent me your contact information please send it ASAP along with another copy of your rhyme. Most of the comments/entries don’t have easily identifiable names, addresses etc.