Lawrence Szenes-Strauss

Archive for the ‘Pesach’ Category

‘Tis the Season: A Kemach Torah Passover Digest

In Dairy, Holidays, Jewish food, Jewish legalese, Official blog business, Pareve, Passover, Pesach, Recipes, Seasonality, Soup, Vegan, Vegetarian on 1 April 2012 at 2:59 AM

First things first: The 2012 Passover Guide is proving to be enormously popular, at least by the standards of a niche blog like this one. The hit count on March 30th, the day it was published, was more than three times the previous record hit count for a single day. Thanks to everyone who shared it through Facebook, Google+ and word of mouth, and please keep spreading the word!* Please treat the comments section of this post as the new suggestion box for additions to the 2013 Guide.

Now that we’re in the final week of preparations, I thought it would be a good time to present some relevant posts you might have missed last year.

  1. Who Knows Three? An explanation, a bit on the technical side, of why we have three matzot on the modern seder plate.
  2. A Question of Seasonality. Addressing the oddity of charoset, which is usually made with apples even though they’re a fall crop and Passover is a spring holiday. Read the comments section.
  3. The Curious Case of Matzah Ashirah. How egg matzah is highly problematic for reasons that make no sense.
  4. Carrot “consommé” (vegan). Not necessarily a Passover recipe, but if you read the Guide (just follow the first link in this article) you’ll see that that’s exactly the point.
So much for old business. Now, how about that Passover-hekhshered ice cream? No? And you don’t have a dedicated ice cream maker for Passover? No problem.

Shavua tov!

* I don’t make money off of this blog or anything. I just want to make Passover better.

The Kemach Torah 2012 Passover Guide

In Holidays, Passover, Pesach on 30 March 2012 at 2:57 AM

Most Passover guides—every kashrut agency produces one—are big clusters of information about which food products are kosher for Passover, with an emphasis on processed products. (Raw ingredients are usually, but not always, no-brainers.) They list page after page of cream cheeses, canned preserves, alcoholic beverages and anything else you might think of, indicating its appropriateness or lack thereof and sometimes giving information about whether it needs a special Passover mark to be considered acceptable. Passover guides also include information about how properly to make one’s home and kitchen tools (where possible) kosher for Passover, a process that can involve anything from a good scrubbing to a generous once-over with a blowtorch depending on the utensil and how it is used.

This is not that kind of guide. A little less than a year ago I announced a plan to create a new kind of Passover guide, one meant not to help people observe the holiday scrupulously, but to help them enjoy it thoroughly. Observant Jews are not very good at this, you see. You start hearing complaints about Passover food around lunchtime on the first day, and they get louder and more frequent until all anyone seems to talk or think about is which chametz foods they’ll eat the moment they’re allowed. This runs against the precept of simchat chag, “joy of the holiday,” and anyway it’s annoying. Why devote all that energy to complaining about a thing or two missing from your diet? Why gum up the conversation with surprisingly frank announcements about indigestion and constipation? For that matter, why eat things that make such topics germaine when you don’t have to? I have one answer to all of these questions: There is no reason, so don’t do it. Let’s look at another way.

Health

We might as well start with the biggest offender. I really enjoy Passover (which I’m going to start calling Pesach here because it takes less time to type, and the baby will only sleep so long). The problem is that enjoying Pesach while all your friends are complaining about their gastrointestinal tracts is a bit like trying to watch Citizen Kane in a crowded theater where all the other audience members are constantly making armpit noises. Since I don’t think I’m going to convince anyone that they enjoy their condition, here are some tips on how to avoid it entirely:

Three handmade matzotEat less matzah. Much, much less! Matzah is the reason we have this problem in the first place, and while Pesach is undoubtedly a matzah-themed holiday, you don’t have to eat it all the time. There are only a handful of occasions when you must eat matzah (barring a doctor’s note or something):

  1. At the seder. We eat matzah at the beginning of the meal proper, then we eat some more with bitter herb on it, then we eat some more at the very end of the meal. That can still come to a lot of matzah depending on which authority you trust to define a kezayit, the olive-sized bulk that is the minimum amount of matzah needed to fulfill the commandment. Still, you don’t have to eat any during the rest of the meal.
  2. During the daytime holiday meal, which begins with wine or grape juice and then necessarily moves on to matzah. Once you’ve eaten matzah at the beginning, it is likewise ignorable.
  3. If you live outside of Israel, follow steps 1 and 2 again on the second day.
  4. Matzah is also necessary for Shabbat meals, since we have to eat bread and this is the bread available to us. This year Pesach contains two Shabbatot, both of which coincide with full holiday days on which you would have had to eat matzah anyway, so we get off easy.

That’s it. No more required. This year a typical outside-of-Israel Jew will be obligated to eat a prescribed amount of matzah on the first two and last two days of the eight-day holiday, and will otherwise be free to avoid the stuff altogether. Want more starch? There are a thousand ways to cook potatoes that don’t involve grain. Tired of potatoes? Try sweet potatoes, turnips, rutabagas, yams, carrots, parsnips or celeriac. Want something crispy to dip into things? Tostones might be a good way to go.

This is not to say that you ought to abstain from matzah. Maybe you like the stuff (though in my experience most people who are enthusiastic about it aren’t Jewish). Maybe you’re like me and can’t bear to go an entire Pesach without making matzo brei at least once. There’s nothing wrong with that. Just keep in mind that your digestive system is not well built for the task of processing and passing large amounts of barely hydrated starch. Plan accordingly and see what a difference it makes.

Bunch of asparagusEat more fruits and vegetables. I guess you could call this a corollary to the previous point, but it’s worth mentioning on its own. In fact, it’s good year-round advice that most of us ignore year-round. In his eminently readable In Defense of Food, Michael Pollan notes that virtually every nutritionist, regardless of ideology or preferred theory of health, says that Americans (and Westerners in general) eat too little produce, and that this is part of the reason our diets so often make us sick. It just happens that during Pesach our bad habit gets worse, maybe because we’ve filled up on matzah and can’t stand the thought of anything else in our overburdened stomachs.

When I started asking friends and readers to suggest content for this guide, several pointed out that ratatouille works, unmodified, for Pesach. Add any protein source and it’s a meal, as are many other vegetable stews and casseroles. (Mediterranean and Balkan cooking provide lots of ideas here.) Try making a big batch to keep around, and dipping in whenever the urge strikes. Instead of snacking on matzah and cream cheese or matzah and jam, have fresh fruit on hand. When playing ball sports, replace the ball with a kohlrabi or a pomelo!

Actually, ignore that last one.

Drink more water. Always good advice, for this and a host of other reasons.

Suspend your low-fat regimen. I’ll probably get in trouble for this one, but it matters. Lipids (the family of molecules to which fats belong) have been used as laxatives for centuries, and at least some people report that they lose regularity when they switch to a very low-fat diet. Given the scientific community’s increasing skepticism about the role of dietary fat in chronic illness, it may make sense to phase some of the fun stuff back into your diet, especially at this time of year. (Has anyone else ever wondered how the FDA can tell us with a straight face that olive oil prevents heart disease, fish oil prevents heart disease, and fat—a category including olive and fish oils—should be avoided because it gives people heart attacks? Can someone explain the logic to me?)

This is not to say that you should spend Pesach washing down sticks of butter with glasses of olive oil. Just remember that the addage “all things in moderation” seems repeatedly to show up as the best nutritional advice. Speaking of fats …

Read the ingredient label. Over the past few decades, the gradually shrinking list of acceptable vegetable fats to use on Pesach has led to some strange choices. Before my time (but during my lifetime) everybody used peanut oil, but now it seems to be impossible to find kosher-for-Passover peanut oil; allergy concerns will probably ensure that there is never a resurgence even if people lighten up about eating peanut derivatives on Pesach. Corn, canola and soybean oil, the three most common vegetable oils in the United States, are all off the list because they are derived from kitniyot, beans and grains that are not technically forbidden on Pesach but which the Ashkenazi majority traditionally avoid during the holiday. The same goes for sunflower seed oil and sesame oil. That leaves some perfectly good oils for the taking, including almond, grapeseed and avocado oil, but they’re on the pricey side and can interfere with profits (if the manufacturer chooses not to jack up the price) or marketability (if they do raise the price, which is usually what happens even without expensive oils). Now the go-to oil is cottonseed oil.*

Normally I’m a big fan of using every part of a plant or animal to minimize waste, but cottonseed oil carries a special problem. If you’ve ever read Joseph Heller’s Catch-22—and even if you haven’t—you’re probably aware that cotton is not food. We can’t digest it, and so we don’t eat it. That means there aren’t a whole lot of government regulations in place to limit the use of pesticides by farmers who grow cotton. When you see cottonseed oil on the label, consider that it was probably grown in an environment saturated with chemicals meant to assure that nothing could live there other than cotton.

Got it? Good. Now consider that you are not cotton. See where I’m going with this?

There are plenty of good options. If you like the flavor, you can use extra virgin olive oil. If you want something without a distinct taste and live near a supermarket with a large kashrut-observant clientele, you may be able to get bottles of refined nut oils. If you’re near a natural foods store or a supermarket with a well-stocked natural and organic section, virgin coconut oil is definitely worth a try. Just remember what Milo Minderbinder learned the hard way: Cotton is not food.

Wealth

This section is short, because I only have a small piece of advice. It applies the rest of the year, too. Here it goes: Try to do most or all of your cooking for Pesach from scratch. Is it more work? Yes, but not insanely so, and the amount of money you save by reducing your mixes and other value added products—remember that “value” here is a euphemism for “price”—will be substantial. Pesach often places a financial burden on individuals and families, and these days that burden is less welcome than ever. Consider paying with extra work rather than with your wallet.

Happiness

Smiley faceDon’t cook anything that you wouldn’t happily eat the rest of the year. If you can help it, don’t eat anything you wouldn’t happily eat the rest of the year. (Sometimes it can’t be helped. If you’re expected to visit your cousin and eat his cake while exclaiming through suddenly parched lips and tongue that “it doesn’t even taste like Passover,” that might just be one you take for the team.) Try to set a standard that says any food not good enough for Rosh Hashanah isn’t good enough for Pesach either.

Occasionally I hear someone talk about how creative Jewish cooks have to get on Pesach, but more often than not what we actually do is fail to be creative and then make up for our lack of creativity by replacing a forbidden ingredient with a permitted but less suitable one. You can buy or make Pesach rolls made with matzah meal instead of flour, and with eggs for non-fermented leavening, but it’s not the sort of mistake anyone should make twice. Decide that you would prefer to go without something rather than eat its inferior Pesach equivalent. Focus on the things you can use freely: all fruits and vegetables, eggs, meat and dairy products. There’s a lot of potential there if you’re willing to step outside your routine.

Want a quiche with a crust? Bake a layer of mashed potato in the oiled pan before adding the custard. Unimpressed with the limited and overpriced Pesach-certified spices you’ve found? Spend a week using fresh herbs instead. (Some cuisines, such as Persian, Turkish and Georgian, use herbs more freely than they do spices, and have a lot to teach us.) Don’t like macaroons? Of course you don’t; I’m the only person who likes macaroons, and even I am picky about which brand I buy. Make it fruit-based desserts all around!

And now we come to the most difficult principle to apply in this entire guide, but a very important one:

Just be happy. Bekhol dor vador chayav adam lir’ot et atzmo ke’ilu hu yatza mimitzrayim—”In every generation a person must see himself as if he departed from Egypt.” Quite a thing to think about, isn’t it? This is the holiday whose message of liberation is so powerful that its central ritual, the seder, has been appropriated in some form or other by half the religions and all the political causes I know of. This is the holiday when we read Shir Hashirim, the Song of Songs that describes in allegory the romance of God and the Israelite nation. This is the holiday when every Jew is expected to dine in the manner of the free and secure regardless of personal means. There’s a lot to be happy about.

Maimonides offered a variant on the imperative in the haggadah: Bekhol dor vador chayav adam lehar’ot et atzmo ke’ilu hu be’atzmo yatza ata mishibud mitzrayim—”In every generation a person must present himself as if he himself had just departed from subjugation in Egypt.”** Be a newly liberated person who remembers what lies behind and is hopeful for what lies ahead. Even if you don’t feel it, see how acting it out affects your view of this time of year. This one time, can it hurt to try?

* Since the initial publication of this post it’s been pointed out that I neglected to mention safflower seed oil. Safflower oil is available for Pesach and less expensive than some of the others (though still more expensive than cotton oil). Some day I would like someone to explain to me why safflower seeds are not considered kitniyot when every other seed in the world seems to be.

** Yes, the Israelites spent a lot of time complaining about the food right after they left Egypt (Numbers 11:5). Don’t get any ideas.

Play it again, Streit’s

In Holidays, Pesach on 18 May 2011 at 11:50 AM

וַיְדַבֵּ֥ר יְ•הוָֹ֖ה אֶל־מֹשֶׁ֥ה לֵּאמֹֽר: דַּבֵּ֛ר אֶל־בְּנֵ֥י יִשְׂרָאֵ֖ל לֵאמֹ֑ר אִ֣ישׁ אִ֣ישׁ כִּי־יִֽהְיֶ֥ה טָמֵ֣א ׀ לָנֶ֡פֶשׁ אוֹ֩ בְדֶ֨רֶךְ רְחֹקָ֜ה לָכֶ֗ם א֚וֹ לְדֹרֹ֣תֵיכֶ֔ם וְעָ֥שָׂה פֶ֖סַח לַֽי•הוָֹֽה: יא בַּחֹ֨דֶשׁ הַשֵּׁנִ֜י בְּאַרְבָּעָ֨ה עָשָׂ֥ר י֛וֹם בֵּ֥ין הָֽעַרְבַּ֖יִם יַֽעֲשׂ֣וּ אֹת֑וֹ עַל־מַצּ֥וֹת וּמְרֹרִ֖ים יֹֽאכְלֻֽהוּ:־

Adonai spoke to Moses, saying: Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them, Every man who is contaminated through contact with a dead body, or who is journeying and far from you—in the present day or among your descendents—shall offer Adonai’s Passover sacrifice. They shall offer it on the fourteenth day of the second month, and shall eat it with matzot and bitter herbs. (Numbers 9:9-10)

Sacrifices of food and incense were a typical mode of worship in the ancient Middle East. In the case of the Jews, virtually all licit sacrifices were carried out in the Temple by the Kohanim, the priests who formed a caste within the tribe of Levi. The one exception to this rule was the Passover offering: Long before the advent of the seder, the central observance of Passover was the sacrifice of a lamb or goat, which could be offered directly by a layman in the Temple. In fact, unlike most of the yearly order of sacrifices that involved only the priests, every household was expected to provide an animal for sacrifice in Jerusalem, to be eaten in the courtyard of the Temple. This presented a potential conflict of values: A person who was tamei due to exposure to a dead body could not enter the Temple, and therefore could not participate despite the mandate that everyone do so. Read the rest of this entry »

The curious case of matzah ashirah

In Health, Holidays, Jewish legalese, Pesach on 29 April 2011 at 3:06 PM

Boxes of matzah have all sorts of interesting things written on them. Streit’s puts a message on its package telling consumers to “restore crispness” by placing the product in a warm oven, something I’ve never heard of anybody doing. (They also helpfully inform the consumer that the product must be removed from the box prior to the aforementioned recrisping maneuver, which is terrifying insofar as it implies that somebody once tried to heat up a cardboard box of Streit’s matzot in an oven.) Yehuda, which refers to its unleavened bread product “matzos” despite being an Israeli company, brags about the number of taste test awards it has received from the San Francisco Chronicle. (Incidentally, if you’re in a public space then you might not want to click on the Yehuda link without first turning off your speakers. What made San Francisco’s favorite matzah firm decide that their site should more closely resemble someone’s MySpace page?)

Read the rest of this entry »

A new guide

In Holidays, Official blog business, Pesach on 22 April 2011 at 1:53 PM

The prevailing wisdom among almost all the strictly observant Jews I know is that you’re not supposed to like the food during Pesach. You’re supposed to complain about it vocally and constantly, wishing that you could have a decent diet for this week. (The especially devout can be identified by their willingness to discuss, under any social conditions, the effects of large quantities of matzah on their digestive and eliminative processes.) The thing that never quite makes sense to me is how many people seem to go out of their ways to find, purchase and eat foods that they dislike.

We’ll be hosting dinner for about ten people this coming Sunday night, and I went grocery shopping yesterday after we figured out the menu. My bag contained five pounds of carrots, three leeks, three bell peppers, two dozen eggs, fresh thyme, fresh bay leaves, a hunk of ginger and two cans of macaroons. (What? I like macaroons. Deal with it.) Scratch the last item and it wouldn’t look much like a Passover shopping run at all, which was sort of the point: the best way to be happy with your meals during this holiday is to eat things that are worth eating all year round.

Next year, right after Purim, I plan to post the Kemach Torah 2012 Pesach Guide. Normally a “Pesach/Passover Guide” is a set of instructions concerning which products are available for use during the holiday, which ones can’t be used, and which ones don’t need special Pesach supervision. This one will be different. It won’t be a guide to observing the holiday, for which there are many sources better than my own limited erudition, but to enjoying it. The suggestion box is open now (hint: it’s the comments section of this post), and the best ideas will be incorporated into the post in one year’s time.

Ready. Set. Zissen Peysakh!*

* Yiddish, “sweet Passover.” Compare with the often-used Hebrew expression chag kasher vesameach (“kosher and happy holiday”).

A question of seasonality

In Holidays, Pesach, Seasonality on 22 April 2011 at 12:15 AM

Seasonality is a big deal in the modern foodie world.* We’re told that all crops taste better when eaten in their season rather than grown year-round in greenhouses, and my experience supports this idea. We’re also told that until the advent of industrial agriculture and rapid international shipping, everyone ate seasonal food exclusively, all the time, but there’s one dish served this time of year that gives me pause. Turn to the entry on “charoset” in Gil Marks’s Encyclopedia of Jewish Food and you’ll find ten recipes for sweet, symbolic fruit mortar from ten different Jewish ethnic subgroups, all of which originate within the Northern Hemisphere and half of which call for fresh apples. (The one from Surinam uses dried apples.)

Say it with me: Apples are a fall crop.

I don’t have any insights to offer this time, only confusion. How have so many Jewish cultures come to use this fruit on the wrong side of the calendar? Are all of these recipes recent innovations inspired by the availability of Chilean produce? Did Jews from Georgia, Ashkenaz, Italy and Afghanistan—for Bob’s sake, apples are native to Afghanistan—collectively decide that a mealy, well-past-the-expiration-date apple was just the thing to remind them of their ancestral bricklaying duties?

This calls for some investigation. After Pesach is over.

* Call this a quibble, but I really dislike the word “foodie.” In my mind it means something along the lines of “a person who read an article in Saveur about wine pairing and now feels empowered to snicker at whatever you’re serving with dinner.” But it’s the word of the times, and until “gourmand” comes back into style I guess I’m stuck with it.

Who Knows Three?

In Holidays, Jewish food, Jewish legalese, Passover, Pesach on 17 April 2011 at 3:52 AM

I hope to update the glossary soon to account for the jargon in this entry. Please be patient. I can answer questions if you e-mail me! Don’t forget to remove the 3.

The centerpiece of the Passover seder is a tray with a stack of three whole matzot: unleavened, usually cracker-like breads made with only flour and water. Early in the seder the the middle matzah is broken in two by hand, and the larger of the two pieces—it’s virtually impossible to make them equal, and I’ve tried—is wrapped in a cloth and set aside, usually off the table. This piece, called the afikoman, is shared by all participants at the end of the seder as a last course. (It’s often referred to as a “dessert.” Nobody else seems to find this as funny as I do.)

Some people never think to ask why there are three matzot. (If they do ask, the standard response is that they represent the three levels of the ancient religious caste system: the Kohanim [the priests], Levites [the acolyte caste of which Kohanim are a subset] and Israelites [all the other Jews]. I dislike this explanation, mostly because I’m a Levite and I don’t fancy being snapped in two.) Most of us don’t realize that until recently, at least according to a Jewish standard of “recent,” there were only two matzot. But first things first: why do we break one of them?

וַיְהִ֣י ׀ בַּיּ֣וֹם הַשִּׁשִּׁ֗י לָֽקְט֥וּ לֶ֨חֶם֙ מִשְׁנֶ֔ה שְׁנֵ֥י הָעֹ֖מֶר לָֽאֶחָ֑ד וַיָּבֹ֨אוּ֙ כָּל־נְשִׂיאֵ֣י הָֽעֵדָ֔ה וַיַּגִּ֖ידוּ לְמֹשֶֽׁה: וַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֲלֵהֶ֗ם ה֚וּא אֲשֶׁ֣ר דִּבֶּ֣ר ה֔’ שַׁבָּת֧וֹן שַׁבַּת־קֹ֛דֶשׁ לַֽה֖’ מָחָ֑ר אֵ֣ת אֲשֶׁר־תֹּאפ֞וּ אֵפ֗וּ וְאֵ֤ת אֲשֶֽׁר־תְּבַשְּׁלוּ֙ בַּשֵּׁ֔לוּ וְאֵת֙ כָּל־הָ֣עֹדֵ֔ף הַנִּ֧יחוּ לָכֶ֛ם לְמִשְׁמֶ֖רֶת עַד־הַבֹּֽקֶר:־

It came to pass that on the sixth day they gathered double bread, two omer-measures [of manna] for one person, and the leaders of the community came and told Moshe. He said to them, “This is what Adonai has commanded: Tomorrow is a day of Sabbath rest for Adonai. Bake what you will bake and cook what you will cook, and leave whatever remains until morning.” (Exodus 16:22-23)

Read the rest of this entry »

Carrot “consommé”

In Holidays, Pareve, Pesach, Pesachdik, Recipes, Soup, Vegan on 14 April 2011 at 1:25 AM

I don’t know whether it’s auspicious or inauspicious to start a Jewish food blog right before Pesach. This is a food-driven time of year for Jews, when virtually all foodstuffs used during the year have to be destroyed, or at least stored away and (perhaps nominally) sold to someone who isn’t Jewish. The food we do eat can get . . . interesting. American kosher consumers have an unfortunate habit of trying to eat all the things they would normally eat, modified to be appropriate for Pesach.

Just so we’re clear, “appropriate for Pesach” means:

  • Other than matzah, you can forget about anything made from wheat, barley, oats, rye or spelt, or from any of their byproducts. This may sound daunting, but trust me, it’s dauntinger than that. Did it occur to you that conventional white vinegar isn’t allowed, since it’s usually fermented from grain alcohol? Don’t you wonder what else didn’t occur to you?
  • Ashkenazim are also expected not to eat kitniyot, a category of grains and vaguely grain-like foods that cannot become chametz by themselves, but for various historical reasons have been avoided during the holiday. Corn and soybeans, which show up in more foods than most people would ever imagine, are among the foods considered to be kitniyot.

Believe it or not, unleavened breakfast rolls made from ground up matzah instead of flour are pretty horrible. (Oh, you believed it immediately? Never mind.) Our philosophy of Pesach food is to eat only things we would willingly eat at other times of year. Enter the carrot consommé, which is not really a consommé at all, and which I learned how to make from an e-mail my mother sent me in 2005; she got it from the New York Times Passover Cookbook, and apparently it’s Charlie Trotter’s recipe. We served this with matzo balls to ten people at our seder last year. Only one of the guests was a vegetarian, but nobody missed the presence of chicken broth. It couldn’t be simpler to make.

Ingredients

  • 4 lbs carrots, washed but not peeled
  • 1 large white onion, unpeeled, with the root end trimmed
  • 2 whole cloves
  • 2 inches fresh ginger, rinsed and split in half lengthwise
  • 2 ribs celery
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 5 black peppercorns
  • 2 sprigs thyme
  • 3 quarts water

Instructions

  1. Place all the ingredients in a large stock pot and bring to a boil. Cover, reduce heat, and simmer for three hours. Turn off the heat and let cool for one hour.
  2. Strain all vegetables and spices from the soup and discard. (I left in the cloud of floating thyme leaves. They were pretty.)
  3. Add salt a bit at a time until the broth tastes the way you want it to. (My mother thinks it tastes great even without the salt, but I think it tastes like weak vegetable tea. Such is taste.) You can also add ground black pepper; I added hot Hungarian paprika to my own bowl.
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