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Tasty Bible Stories: A Menu of Tales & Matching Recipes (Bible)

Tami Lehman-Wilzig

Tasty Bible Stories: A Menu of Tales & Matching Recipes (Bible) Tami Lehman-Wilzig Amazon Price: $8.76
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

The Good Book and the Cook Book 5 out of 5 stars.
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.

Although not lengthy, this paperback is a terrific resource for families or religious school teachers. The recipes are easy enough for kids to make largely on their own and are very appealing taste-wise. Adding a food dimension to Bible studies makes the lessons more memorable and interactive. I use it regularly with my class and wish I'd had it when my kids were young!

Wonderful! 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

This is exactly what I was looking for! I am a chef and a Religious Education Director. I get to combine my love for God and my love for cooking and share it with the children!

Meeting God at the Table 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

I love this book. I purchased it with the intent of using it for inspiration - I'm writing a Vacation Bible School curriculum for my parish. The recipes are wonderful and they are connected to biblical paraphrases. Most of the recipes are easy to prepare and lend themselves to a group activity. The illustrations are delightful also. The book is from a Jewish perspective. Do not expect Christian scripture references. The stories are all from the Hebrew Scriptures. Of course, those are the stories most Christian kids hear in Sunday School! So, bake an apple pie and re-read the stories of Creation in Genesis. It's fun to meet God at the table.

Editorial Review:

Retells 14 familiar Old Testament in up-to-date language with related recipes.

The Scent of Orange Blossoms: Sephardic Cuisine from Morocco

Kitty Morse, Danielle Mamane

The Scent of Orange Blossoms: Sephardic Cuisine from Morocco Kitty Morse, Danielle Mamane Amazon Price: $16.47
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

a spice filled welcome addition to Jewish cookbooks 5 out of 5 stars.
34 of 34 people found this review helpful.

A celebration of Jewish cuisine that came from the interaction between Jews and Moslems in North Africa and Spain. When the author Kitty Morse led eating tours of Morocco, the highlight was a meal at the villa of retailer Danielle Mamane in Fez el Jdid. Both women have collaborated on this well designed and interesting book of recipes. I recommend it for its recipes, design, stories, and photographs. In addition to recipes, letters between mothers and their newly married daughters, and introductory stories, the authors list menu plans (with recipe page numbers) for the Jewish holidays, as well as the more Moroccan Jewish celebrations of La Mimouna (Pesach period), Hillula (visiting sages), and Kappara (pre-Yom Kippur). For Jewish weddings, there is the customary flan (t'faya). For Mimouna, the recommended recipes are Chicken with Orange Juice; Sephardic Mafleta pancakes; and couscous with raisin and onions confit. My favorite recipes include Walnuts with Pomegranate Seeds (which uses a heavy dose of orange blossom water); a cucumber with lemon salad; fish filets made in Fez style (with tomatoes, potatoes, and garlic); Fresh Fava Bean Soup with Cilantro for Passover; Chicken Couscous with Orange Blossom Water for Yom Kippur; Harira or Lentil and Chickpeas Soup (for Moslem Ramadan and Jewish Yom Kippur break-the-fasts); Meatballs in Onion Cinnamon Sauce, Chicken with Saffron and Ginger and Onions; and Honey Doughnuts for Hannukah. There are Fish Fillets a la Fassi (Fez style); Dafina Shabbat Stew (skhina); Chicken with Garbanzo Beans in Tetouan style; and Tangier style Potato Stew that uses preserved beef (kleehe). The Tagine of Beef uses carrot and turnips as well as cilantro, garlic, ginger, and tumeric. The Cornish Hens with Fresh Figs uses 12 figs and 12 threads of saffron; the Chicken with Onion and Tomatoes uses toasted almonds, ginger and eight threads of saffron. Preserved fruits, lemons, and kumquats play an important role in the cuisine. There is a recipe for Sephardic Shabbat Challa, and the Top of The Shelf spice that is often used; it includes a blending of cinnamon, nutmeg, pepper, allspice, mace, salt and ginger. La Maguina, a vegetable and meat frittata, is sliced like meatloaf. Some unique soups and salads are a white and chard soup a la Tangiers; a fennel salad; a tomato and bell pepper salad with garlic, paprika and sugar; fava bean salad with cumin; and tomato with preserved lemons.

Editorial Review:

During Spains infamous inquisition, Jews were forced to flee the country for more welcoming shores. Many of the refugees landed in Northern Africa, specifically Morocco, and a unique cuisine was born of the marriage of Spanish, Moorish and traditional Jewish culinary influences. This volume celebrates this cuisine presenting the elegant and captivating flavours passed down through generations of Moroccan Jews. It provides sample menus for all major Jewish holidays, and includes recipes for fresh fava bean soup with cilantro for Passover, chicken couscous with orange blossom water for the Day of Atonement and honey doughnuts for Hannukah. It emphaizes the connection between food, family and tradition as recipes are interspersed with letters between mothers and newly married daughters.

The Jewish Vegetarian Year Cookbook

Roberta Kalechofsky, Rosa Rasiel

The Jewish Vegetarian Year Cookbook Roberta Kalechofsky, Rosa Rasiel Amazon Price: $18.95
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 5 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

disappointed by recipe selection 2 out of 5 stars.
34 of 37 people found this review helpful.

This book is great for learning about Jewish traditions. But I was disappointed by the selection of recipes. If you take away the Jewish recipe names, it is mostly just a standard collection of vegan recipes. I wanted to learn how to make vegetarian matzoh ball soup, tzimmes, noodle pudding and rugelach. Instead I found recipes for ratatouille, spicy peanut pasta, tamales and baklava. Which would have been fine for an international cookbook, but not what I was looking for in a Jewish cookbook. I ended up returning the book.

a totally divergent view, hey 4 out of 5 stars.
15 of 19 people found this review helpful.

you know, i am a book *seller*, not a buyer (nevermind a punkrock 22year vegetarian, thank you) & i was planning on selling this book, especially after reading the initial review of it, where the reader says there are no traditional recipes w/in etc & etc.
but i think that is kind of inaccurate. i really like this book & plan to keep it. a lot of these recipes are ethnic crossovers, it's true, but if traditional (esp eastern-euro-cum-to-america traditional) types are what you are looking for, theyre in here too. i - maybe i am alone in this but i doubt it - for 1, have never seen a vegetarian kishke recipe before. vegan/pareve no less. & youve got yr latkes, yr borscht (beet), 3 kinds of knishes, mock chopped liver, eggless challah..... right beside yr colcannon & tamale pie. here in california we call that making the whole family happy.
i guess there is a more israeli/sephardic bent/cant (whatever) to these recipes than might be initially expected - & i think that makes this book more unusual & more interesting rather than less. recipes like sharon fruit gratin (aka fuyus), galia melon halves w/ port, uppuma, or tofu in walnut pomegranate sauce are unlikely to be found elsewhere. & yes, while the authors do cull some recipes from other book sources, they are primarily from books that would be as easy to find in the states...
& hey, some of us 3d (or 4th or 5th.....) generation freethinkers have never even **seen** these blessings & that, particularly combined w/ the rad recipes, is pretty cool too.

Editorial Review:

Combines the Jewish holiday traditions with 170+ delicious vegan recipes. Each holiday has explanatory notes and prayers. The book even includes a Tu b'Shevat haggadah. It is an excellent gift for non-Jews as well as Jews, and for non-vegetarians as well as vegetarians--for anyone who wishes to learn about the Jewish holidays and how to cook vegetarian holiday meals for their Jewish friends.

How to Keep Kosher: A Comprehensive Guide to Understanding Jewish Dietary Laws

Lise Stern

How to Keep Kosher: A Comprehensive Guide to Understanding Jewish Dietary Laws Lise Stern Amazon Price: $19.96
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

"Traditional Judaism injects sanctification into the ordinary habits of everyday life.Keeping kosher helps us pause and think about what we eat, and how we eat it, and elevates the act of eating."

What does it mean to keep kosher? Many may be familiar with the basics: no bacon, no shrimp, no cheeseburgers. But the Jewish dietary laws go deeper than that, and How to Keep Kosher explores the ins and outs. Why are some foods deemed kosher while others are not? Why can't you mix meat and dairy dishes? How do you turn a nonkosher kitchen into a kosher one? Do you really need multiple sets of everything -- dishes, pots, pans, and utensils? How do you keep track of what's what?

Whether you are thinking about adopting a kosher lifestyle or already have a kosher home and just want tounderstand what it is all about, Lisë Stern's How to Keep Kosher is essential reading. You will learn about the biblicaland historical origins of keeping kosher, the development of the kosher certification system, specific food preparation requirements for Shabbat, Passover, and otherholidays, and how to actually set up a kosher kitchen.

In straightforward language, drawing upon explanations from the Torah and Talmud, along with interviews with rabbis, academics, and laypeople who keep kosher, Lisë explores all aspects of Judaism's ancient dietary traditions as they are carried out in today's kitchen, with its range of modern appliances -- dishwashers, food processors, and microwave ovens. For the first time, one book explains both Conservative and Orthodox perspectives on kashrut, as well as opinions from other Jewish affiliations.

When Lisë was nine, her parents decided to make the change -- transform their home to a kosher one -- as a core part of their evolving commitment to Judaism. Because Lisë experienced the transition as a child and keeps a kosher home today, she is uniquely qualified to explain all aspects of this traditional practice.

Setting up a kosher kitchen lays the foundation for implementing the tradition; the proof is in the potato pudding. As Lisë notes, the Talmud says, "Room can always be found in one's stomach for sweet things," and the wealth of information is sweetened with more than forty recipes for Shabbat dinners and lunches as well as holiday and festival celebrations. Traditional recipes include Chicken Soup with My Mother's Ethereal Matzo Balls, Sliced Potato–Onion Kugel, and Hamantashen; new classics are Chilled Cucumber–Yogurt Soup, Rosemary Sweet Potato Kugel, Enchilada Lasagna, and Chocolate-Flecked Meringues.

Stern's How to Keep Kosher is an inclusive, user-friendly handbook filled with answers to the fundamental who, what, where, when, why, and how questions surrounding the Jewish dietary laws -- making these laws both accessible and appealing.

A Fistful of Lentils: Syrian-Jewish Recipes from Grandma Fritzie's Kitchen

Jennifer Felicia Abadi

A Fistful of Lentils: Syrian-Jewish Recipes from Grandma Fritzie's Kitchen Jennifer Felicia Abadi Amazon Price: $13.22
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Fun to read, but the recipes are flawed 4 out of 5 stars.
17 of 18 people found this review helpful.

I enjoyed reading Ms. Abadi's book. Since I am Syrian-Jewish, I compared many of her stories to my own family. in addition, she quotes some people that I know. Unfortunately, however, the recipes are not reliable. Since the author's grandmother spent many years in Oklahoma, where Middle Eastern ingredients were not available, she relied on substitutes such as Worcestershire sauce which we do not use.
Every family cooks their own way. However some of the recipes will fail completely. For example, the Kibbe Nabilseeyah. The dough calls for 5 Tbs. water which is way too little. I would advise anyone who is a serious cook to wait for the second edition. This will give Miss Abadi a chance to correct the errors.

Editorial Review:

When Jennifer Felicia Abadi was a child, her mother often pulled down a well-worn homemade black recipe binder from her kitchen shelf and created memorable Syrian-Jewish meals. As an adult, Abadi embarked on a labor of love with her grandmother to record all of her family s rich, mouthwatering Syrian dishes. In A Fistful of Lentils, Abadi shares with you more than 125 Syrian-Jewish recipes, as well as an intimate look at Syrian-Jewish culture through warm family anecdotes and little-known stories. Recipes include Meh'shi Sfeehah b'Dja'jeh (Stuffed Baby Eggplants with Roasted Chicken), Rishtah b'Tahineh (Egg Noodles with Lentils and Sesame Butter, Kibbeh m'Kamuneh b'Bandoorah (Meatballs in Tomato-Cumin Sauce, Lah meh Zetoon b'Limoneh (Lamb with Lemon and Olives), Ijeh b'Batatah (Potato Omelets), Leban m'Naa'na (Yogurt-Mint Dressing), Masapan (Almond Candies), and Knaffeh (Shredded Phyllo-Ricotta Pie). It all adds up to the best-kept secret in Middle Eastern cuisine, now yours to enjoy!

Jeff Nathan's Family Suppers: More Than 125 Simple Kosher Recipes

Jeff Nathan

Jeff Nathan's Family Suppers: More Than 125 Simple Kosher Recipes Jeff Nathan List Price: $32.50
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

In Jeff Nathan’s Family Suppers, the world-renowned chef and television host of New Jewish Cuisine delivers exactly what kosher home cooks everywhere have been asking for: creative recipes easy enough for the weeknight table. In the follow-up to his critically acclaimed debut cookbook, Adventures in Jewish Cooking, Jeff hangs up the professional chef’s coat to create a more casual kitchen go-to guide, simplifying steps in light of today’s busy family schedule but never sacrificing flavor or variety.

As a dad, Jeff knows all too well that family suppers require a kid-tested stamp of approval, and the recipes in this book won’t disappoint. Here are more than 125 irresistible yet eminently doable creations—Jeff’s signature modern American kosher fare with a global twist—that the whole family will enjoy, including favorites such as Four-Cheese Baked Ziti with Herbed Crumbs, Grilled Skirt Steak with Mint Chimichurri, Matzo-Crusted Chicken Strips with Honey-Mustard Dip, Spicy Oven Fries, and Tilapia Teriyaki with Stir-Fried Asian Vegetables.

The chapters are organized into unfussy, everyday menu categories: Soups, Salads, Chicken and Turkey, Meats, Fish, Vegetable Main Courses, Pasta, Side Dishes, and Desserts. Extras include a section on stocking the pantry, refrigerator, and freezer (from essentials to “could-haves”); time-saving tools; tips for keeping an organized kitchen; and, perhaps most important, ways to involve the whole family in cooking.

Jewish Cooking For All Seasons: Fresh, Flavorful Kosher Recipes for Holidays and Every Day

Laura Frankel

Jewish Cooking For All Seasons: Fresh, Flavorful Kosher Recipes for Holidays and Every Day Laura Frankel Amazon Price: $27.26
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Editorial Review:

"The recipes in this book are mouthwateringlydelicious--I know because I've prepared most of them.This exciting book thoroughly demonstrates thatkosher food can be as refined as the most exquisitegourmet cuisine. This is a real winner."
--Charlie Trotter



Laura Frankel, full-time chef and full-time mother, celebrates and enlivens Jewish cooking for the holidays and meals throughout the year with this book of seasonal specialties from Shallots restaurant, adapted for home cooks. In autumn, wow the family at Rosh Hashanah with Quince-Stuffed Veal Breast with Roasted Fennel and Apples and a knockout Chocolate Opera Torte with Chocolate Ganache, and in spring, serve an unforgettable Passover meal of Leek-Spinach Soup and Standing Rib Roast with Porcini Mushroom Crust and Mushroom-Onion Ragout. Jewish Cooking for All Seasons features 150 tempting recipes for soups, salads, starters, main dishes, and desserts--grouped by season so you can use fresh produce to its best advantage and serve unique dishes for the holidays.

Frankel's passion for the best, freshest ingredients is inspiring. Even when she writes about heirloom tomatoes at the peak of flavor or rhapsodizes about the fragrance packed into a tiny vanilla bean, she helps you genuinely appreciate the difference top-quality ingredients make in everything you prepare.

Cooking with Myrna Rosen (Revised and Updated by Myrna Rosen & Lesley Loon)

Lesley Loon, Myrna Rosen

Cooking with Myrna Rosen (Revised and Updated by Myrna Rosen & Lesley Loon) Lesley Loon, Myrna Rosen List Price: $30.00
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Editorial Review:

This book was first published in South Africa in 1978 and has earned a glowing reputation as "The Cooking Bible! The book will please not only the experienced cook but also the novice. The book has now been updated and revised with new recipes by Myrna Rosen and Lesley Loon

Sephardic Israeli Cuisine: A Mediterranean Mosaic

Sheilah Kaufman

Sephardic Israeli Cuisine: A Mediterranean Mosaic Sheilah Kaufman Amazon Price: $16.47
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

Introducing Israeli/Sephardi foods into your kitchen 4 out of 5 stars.
16 of 17 people found this review helpful.

If you've been cooking Mama's Eastern-European recipes long enough, and you want your meals to turn over a new, more Sephardic leaf, in step with Israeli-style cooking, Sheilah Kaufman's cookbook Sephardic Israeli Cuisine: A Mediterranean Mosaic is for you.

Start changing your cooking by changing your ingredients. Put aside the potatoes and the cabbage in favor of eggplant and artichokes. Forget the wheat and barley and go for rice and couscous. Leave the apples and pears on the shelf and choose the melons and apricots. Now that you have a lot of ingredients that you have no idea what to do with, reach for Sephardic Israeli Cuisine: A Mediterranean Mosaic .

To follow these authentic recipes you will have to stock up on some new-to-the-Polish-palate, spices. The section on Condiments and Spices will guide you right through the Middle Eastern spice market. I doubt that any of us will actually bother to make the spices when they are so readily availalbe in any Israeli market. But in this section you will learn what Zatar and Zhoug (and many other spices) are really made of.

In my eternal search for easy-to-make appetizers that taste good even when prepared several days before serving, this cookbook offers Leah Spiegel's recipe for Walnut Dip. Combine all the easy to find ingredients into a food processor, zumm, and store it in the frig. Alas! My kind of recipe.

Here are the recipes for the well known but Gd-know-what's-in -`em dishes like Mafrum. This exotic sounding Lybian dish turns out to be beef stew. What's special about Morroccan Cholent? In addition to all the unique spicing that Bubi never dreamed of, Moroccans make their Cholent with honey. Yes, honey.

We all know about the eggs that brown in the Cholent over night. Huevos Haminados is another Shabbat dish that Sephardi Yerushalmim and Turkish Jews make, that gives you the brown eggs but without the Cholent.

Your Polish taste buds may be adjusting to Sephardic and Middle Eastern foods slowly, but everybody loves those great Sephardic and Middle Eastern desserts. No matter where you are from, you will delight in those bite-size syrupy sweet and often crunchy specialties like Baklava. Kaufman offers a recipe for preparing Baklava by the sheet that you later cut into individual pieces. I was more intrigued by the recipe from Lybia for sweet roses called Debla, which is popular on Purim. These beautiful individual edible rose-shaped sweets are made of dough that is wound around into a rose-like shape and covered in sugar syrup. They look just like flowers covered in morning dew, and must be gorgeous in mishloach manot.

This cookbook has an excellent section on Sephardic Passover recipes. This Pesach, in addition to your traditional haroset you can prepare the Haroset from Turkey - also made with apples, nuts and wine, but with the addition of dates and raisins. Or you can make the Abravanel family haroset recipe originating in Portugal. In addition to the nuts and the wine, this recipe has - you won't believe it - orange juice and cherry jam. I liked the Passover recipe for sponge cake, which has a lot of eggs but no oil, so much for kitniyot issues.

The cookbook ends with a small section on Ashkenazi foods. I am not sure why this was necessary. From my point of view the book held its own with just the Sephardic recipes.

In addition to all the great recipes the cookbook has a section on the history of Sephardic Jews and an essay on the foods traditionally eaten on the Jewish holidays.

The books opens with a translation of the Bendigamos, the Grace After Meals according to the tradition of the Spanish Portuguese Jews. It would have been nice had the Ladino text appeared alongside the English translation.

Sephardic Israeli Cuisine: A Mediterranean Mosaic is a fine addition to your cookbook collection. You'll enjoy preparing these unique recipes and incorporating them into your standard repertoire.

Editorial Review:

These 120 kosher recipes celebrate the flavours of Israeli cuisine -- a colourful and delicious mosaic composed of a variety of culinary traditions. Typical Sephardic ingredients include cinnamon, cloves, fenugreek, saffron, almond essence, rose and orange flower water, tahini paste, artichokes, fava beans, olives, fennel, couscous, semolina, and bulgur. Noted cookbook author Sheilah Kaufman guides you through the Israeli kitchen with special sections on the origins and development of Israeli cuisine, kosher dining, Jewish holidays, and food terms.

Jewish Food for Festivals and Special Occasions: 75 delicious dishes for every holiday and celebration

Marlena Spieler

Jewish Food for Festivals and Special Occasions: 75 delicious dishes for every holiday and celebration Marlena Spieler Amazon Price: $12.74
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Editorial Review:

The glorious mix of over 75 classic and contemporary dishes draws on the culinary traditions of the global Jewish community. Packed with facts about Jewish people, their history, faith and food, this hugely informative book is an enthralling read and offers a wonderful collection of authentic Jewish holiday and festival recipes.

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