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Martha
Stewart Explains Jewish Food
Latkes:
A pancake-like
structure not to be confused with anything the House of
Pancakes would put out. In
a latka, the oil is in the pancake. It is made with
potatoes, onions, eggs and
matzo meal. Latkas can be eaten with apple sauce but NEVER
with maple syrup.
There is a rumor that in the time of the Maccabees they lit a
latka by mistake and it
burned for eight days. What is certain is you will have
heart burn for the same
amount of time.
It's a GOOD
thing.
Matzoh:The Egyptians'
revenge for leaving slavery. It consists of a simple mix of
flour and water - no
eggs or flavor at all. When made well, it could actually
taste like cardboard.
Its redeeming value is that it does fill you up and stays
with you for a long
time. However, it is recommended that you eat a few prunes soon
after.
Kasha
Varnishkes: One of the
little-known delicacies which is even more difficult to
pronounce than to cook. It
has nothing to do with Varnish, but is basically a mixture
of buckwheat and
bow-tie macaroni (noodles).Why a bow-tie? Many sages
discussed this and agreed
that some Jewish mother decided that you can't come to
the table without a tie or, G-d
forbid 'An elbow on my table?'
Blintzes:
Not to be
confused with the German war machine. Can you imagine the N.J.
Post 1939 headlines:
'Germans drop tons of cheese and blueberry blintzes over
Poland -
shortage of sour
cream expected.' Basically this is the Jewish answer to
crepe Suzette. 
Kishka:
You know from
Haggis? Well, this ain't it. In the old days they would take
an intestine and
stuff it. Today we use parchment paper or plastic. And what do
you stuff it with? Carrots, celery, onions, flour, and spices. But the
trick is not to cook it alone
but to add it to the cholent (see below) and let it cook for
24 hours until there
is no chance whatsoever that there is any nutritional
value left.
Kreplach:
It sounds worse
than it tastes. There is a Rabbinical debate on its
origins. One Rabbi claims
it began when a fortune cookie fell into his chicken soup.
The other claims it
started in an Italian restaurant. Either way it can be
soft, hard, or soggy
and the amount of meat inside depends on whether it is
your mother or your
mother-in-law who cooked
it.
Cholent:
This combination
of noxious gases had been the secret weapon of Jews
for centuries. The
unique combination of beans, barley, potatoes, and bones or
meat is meant to stick
to your ribs and anything else it comes into contact with.
At a fancy Mexican
restaurant (kosher of course) I once heard this comment from
a youngster who had just had his first taste of Mexican fried beans:
'What! Do they serve
leftover cholent here
too?!' I tried something unusual for guests;
made cholent burgers
for Sunday night supper. The guests never came
back.

Gefilte
Fish: A few years ago,
I had problems with my filter in my fish pond and a few of
them got rather stuck
and mangled. My son (5 years old) looked at them and
commented 'Is that why we
call it 'Ge Filtered Fish'?' Originally, it was a carp
stuffed with a minced
fish and vegetable mixture. Today it usually comprises of
small fish balls eaten
with horse radish ('chrain') which is judged on its relative strength
in bringing tears to your eyes at 100
paces.

Bagels:
How can we finish
without the quintessential Jewish Food, the bagel? Like
most foods, there are
legends surrounding the bagel although I don't know any.
There have been
persistent rumors that the inventors of the bagel were the
Norwegians who couldn't get
anyone to buy smoked lox. Think about it: Can you picture yourself
eating lox on white bread? Rye? A cracker? Naaa!. They looked for
something hard and almost
indigestible which could take the spread of cream cheese and
which doesn't take up too much room on
the plate. And why the hole? The truth is
that many
philosophers believe the hole is the essence and the dough is only
there for emphasis.
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Martha
Stewart Explains Jewish Food
Latkes:
A pancake-like
structure not to be confused with anything the House of
Pancakes would put out. In
a latka, the oil is in the pancake. It is made with
potatoes, onions, eggs and
matzo meal. Latkas can be eaten with apple sauce but NEVER
with maple syrup.
There is a rumor that in the time of the Maccabees they lit a
latka by mistake and it
burned for eight days. What is certain is you will have
heart burn for the same
amount of time.
It's a GOOD
thing.
Matzoh:The Egyptians'
revenge for leaving slavery. It consists of a simple mix of
flour and water - no
eggs or flavor at all. When made well, it could actually
taste like cardboard.
Its redeeming value is that it does fill you up and stays
with you for a long
time. However, it is recommended that you eat a few prunes soon
after.
Kasha
Varnishkes: One of the
little-known delicacies which is even more difficult to
pronounce than to cook. It
has nothing to do with Varnish, but is basically a mixture
of buckwheat and
bow-tie macaroni (noodles).Why a bow-tie? Many sages
discussed this and agreed
that some Jewish mother decided that you can't come to
the table without a tie or, G-d
forbid 'An elbow on my table?'
Blintzes:
Not to be
confused with the German war machine. Can you imagine the N.J.
Post 1939 headlines:
'Germans drop tons of cheese and blueberry blintzes over
Poland -
shortage of sour
cream expected.' Basically this is the Jewish answer to
crepe Suzette. 
Kishka:
You know from
Haggis? Well, this ain't it. In the old days they would take
an intestine and
stuff it. Today we use parchment paper or plastic. And what do
you stuff it with? Carrots, celery, onions, flour, and spices. But the
trick is not to cook it alone
but to add it to the cholent (see below) and let it cook for
24 hours until there
is no chance whatsoever that there is any nutritional
value left.
Kreplach:
It sounds worse
than it tastes. There is a Rabbinical debate on its
origins. One Rabbi claims
it began when a fortune cookie fell into his chicken soup.
The other claims it
started in an Italian restaurant. Either way it can be
soft, hard, or soggy
and the amount of meat inside depends on whether it is
your mother or your
mother-in-law who cooked
it.
Cholent:
This combination
of noxious gases had been the secret weapon of Jews
for centuries. The
unique combination of beans, barley, potatoes, and bones or
meat is meant to stick
to your ribs and anything else it comes into contact with.
At a fancy Mexican
restaurant (kosher of course) I once heard this comment from
a youngster who had just had his first taste of Mexican fried beans:
'What! Do they serve
leftover cholent here
too?!' I tried something unusual for guests;
made cholent burgers
for Sunday night supper. The guests never came
back.

Gefilte
Fish: A few years ago,
I had problems with my filter in my fish pond and a few of
them got rather stuck
and mangled. My son (5 years old) looked at them and
commented 'Is that why we
call it 'Ge Filtered Fish'?' Originally, it was a carp
stuffed with a minced
fish and vegetable mixture. Today it usually comprises of
small fish balls eaten
with horse radish ('chrain') which is judged on its relative strength
in bringing tears to your eyes at 100
paces.

Bagels:
How can we finish
without the quintessential Jewish Food, the bagel? Like
most foods, there are
legends surrounding the bagel although I don't know any.
There have been
persistent rumors that the inventors of the bagel were the
Norwegians who couldn't get
anyone to buy smoked lox. Think about it: Can you picture yourself
eating lox on white bread? Rye? A cracker? Naaa!. They looked for
something hard and almost
indigestible which could take the spread of cream cheese and
which doesn't take up too much room on
the plate. And why the hole? The truth is
that many
philosophers believe the hole is the essence and the dough is only
there for emphasis.
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