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Full Description
Got kugel? Got Kugel with Toffee Walnuts? Now you do. Here's the
real homemade Gefilte Fish – and also Salmon en Papillote. Grandma Sera
Fritkin’s Russian Brisket and Hazelnut-Crusted Rack of Lamb. Aunt
Irene's traditional matzoh balls and Judy's contemporary version with
shiitake mushrooms. Cooking Jewish gathers recipes from five
generations of a food-obsessed family into a celebratory saga of
cousins and kasha, Passover feasts – the holiday has its own chapter –
and crossover dishes. And for all cooks who love to get together for
coffee and a little something, dozens and dozens of desserts: pies,
cakes, cookies, bars, and a multitude of cheesecakes; Rugelach and
Hamantaschen, Mandelbrot and Sufganyot. Not
to mention Tanta Esther Gittel’s Husband’s Second Wife Lena’s Nut Cake.
Blending the recipes with over 160 stories from the Rabinowitz
family—by the end of the book you'll have gotten to know the whole
wacky clan—and illustrated throughout with more than 500 photographs
reaching back to the 19th century, Cooking Jewish invites the
reader not just into the kitchen, but into a vibrant world of family
and friends. Written and recipe-tested by Judy Bart Kancigor, a food
journalist with the Orange County Register, who self-published her
first family cookbook as a gift and then went on to sell 11,000 copies,
here are 532 recipes from her extended family of outstanding cooks,
including the best chicken soup ever – really! – from her mother,
Lillian. (Or as the author says, "When you write your cookbook, you can
say your mother's is the best.")
Every recipe, a joy in the belly.
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