
Charoset and Sex: A Recipe |
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by Arthur Waskow, April 7, 2009 |
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That's the most secret Question at the Seder - nobody even asks it. And it's
got the most secret answer: none.
The Haggadah explains about matzah, the bread that was baked so quick and came
out so dry it blocks your insides for a week. The Haggadah explains about the
horseradish, so bitter it blows the lid off your lungs and makes breathing so
painful you wish you could just stop. The Haggadah even explains about that
scrawny chicken neck or beet masquerading as a whole roast lamb.
But it never explains charoset.
Yes, there's an oral tradition. (Fitting for something that tastes so
delicious!) You've probably heard somebody at a Passover Seder claim that
charoset is the mortar the ancient Israelite slaves had to paste between the
bricks and stones of those giant warehouses they were building for Pharaoh.
But that's a cover story. Really dumb. You think that mortar was so sweet, so
spicy, so delicious that every ancient Israelite just had to slaver some mortar
on his tongue?
You think it wasn't leeks and onions they wailed for after their waters broke
and they were born or borne across the Sea of Blood, but the mortar they were
pasting on their masters' mansions? You think they were whining, "Give me
mortar or give me death?"
Forbid it, Almighty God!
OK, maybe it's a midrash? Those bitter-hearted rabbis, always fresh from some
pogrom or exile, claiming that to the Israelites, slavery was sweet? So sweet
that it reminds us that slavery may taste sweet, and this is itself a deeper
kind of slavery? No. The oral tradition transmitted by charoset is not by word
of mouth but taste of mouth. A kiss of mouth. A full-bodied, full-tongued,
"kisses sweeter than wine" taste of mouth.
Charoset is an embodiment of by far the sexiest, kissiest, bodyest book of the
Hebrew Bible ---- the Song of Songs. (Check out the translations by Marcia
Falk, by Chana and Ariel Bloch , and by Shefa Gold.) Charoset is literally a
full-bodied taste of the Song. The Song is the recipe for charoset.
X-rated Charoset
You think they were going to tell you that when you were six years old, just
learning how to stumble through "Mah nishtanah"? Or maybe when you
were fourteen, just beginning to eye that curvy cousin sitting right across the
table, so lubricious you couldn't even ask for the chicken breast without
moaning? Or maybe the year you first noticed the drawings in that Haggadah
where half-naked Pharoah's servants were whipping the half-naked, well-muscled
Israelite slaves? Or the ones where Miram and half-naked Pharaoh's daughter
were swimming in the Nile, ducking each other and giggling while they saved
little Moses and tried to convince old Pharaoh he wasn't their baby?
Or maybe when you were 34 and they were all nagging you to settle down already,
get married--that's when you thought they might finally tell the truth about
charoset? Or 52, when they were so embarrassed about your mid-life
"crisis" and its little fling--just the moment for nibbling on the
spicy raisins of the woman whose breasts were like twin fawns in beds of
flowers, the man whose ivory belly held bright gems of sweet delight?
Face it: They were never going to tell you. Maybe they might mention that the
olden rabbis thought the Song of Songs should be recited during the festival of
Passover, but quickly they'd explain it was about God's loving effort to free
the Israelites from Pharaoh. Indeed, they'd mutter, if you think you notice
"two breasts" mentioned, it's really about Moses and Aaron. After
all, who could God want more to love, to suckle, than those heroes of freedom?
Time to tell the passionate truth: The Song of Songs is the recipe for
charoset.
Verses from the Song:
"Feed me with apples and with raisin-cakes;
"Your kisses are sweeter than wine;
"The scent of your breath is like apricots;
"Your cheeks are a bed of spices;
"The fig tree has ripened;
"Then I went down to the walnut grove."
There are several kinds of freedom that we celebrate on Pesach:
--The freedom of people who rise up against Pharaoh, the tyrant.
--The freedom of earth, the flowers that rise up against winter.
--The freedom of birth, of the lambs who trip and stagger in their
skipping-over dance.
--The freedom of sex, that rises up against the prunish and prudish.
The text of the Song subtly, almost secretly, bears the recipe for charoset,
and we might well see the absence of any specific written explanation of
charoset as itself a subtle, secret pointer toward the "other"
liberation of Pesach -- the erotic loving freedom celebrated in the Song of
Songs, which we are taught to read on Passover.
The Song of Songs is sacred not only to Jews, but also to Christians and to
Muslims, and especially to the mystics in all three traditions. Its
earth-and-human-loving erotic energy has swept away poets and rabbis, lovers
and priests, dervishes and gardeners.
Yet this sacred power--"Love is strong as death," sings the Song--has
frightened many generations into limiting its power. Redefining its flow as a
highly structured allegory, or hiding it from the young, or forbidding it from
being sung in public places.
Even so, long tradition holds that on the Shabbat in the middle of Passover,
Jews chant the Song of Songs.
Why is this time of year set aside for this extraordinary love poem? At one
level, because it celebrates the springtime rebirth of life. And the parallel
goes far deeper. For the Song celebrates a new way of living in the world.
The way of love between the earth and her human earthlings, beyond the future
of conflict between them that accompanies the end of Eden.
The way of love between women and men, with women celebrated as leaders and
initiators, beyond the future of subjugation that accompanies the end of Eden.
The way of bodies and sexuality celebrated, beyond the future of shame and
guilt that accompanies the end of Eden.
The way of God so fully present in the whole of life that God needs no specific
naming (for in the Song, God's name is never mentioned).
The way of adulthood, where there is no Parent and there are no children. No
one is giving orders, and no one obeys them. Rather there are grownups,
lovers--unlike the domination and submission that accompany the end of Eden.
In short, Eden for grown-ups. For a grown-up human race.
Whereas the original Garden was childhood, bliss that was unconscious, unaware,
the Garden of the Song is maturity. Death is known, conflict is recognized (as
when the heroine's brothers beat her up), yet joy sustains all.
So the "recipe" points us toward apples, quinces, raisins, apricots,
figs, nuts, wine. Within the framework of the free fruitfulness of the earth,
the "recipe" is free-form: no measures, no teaspoons, no amounts. Not
even a requirement for apples rather than apricots, cinnamon rather than
cloves, figs rather than dates. So there is an enormous breadth for the tastes
that appeal to Jews from Spain, Poland, Iraq, India, America.
Nevertheless, I will offer a recipe.
RECIPE
1 pound raw, shelled almonds
2 pounds organic raises
1 bottle red wine
½ pound organic apricots
2 red apples (chopped)
5-6 figs
5-6 dates, pitted
1 tsp cinnamon or to taste
¼ tsp nutmeg or to taste
¼ tsp cloves or to taste
(if you don't have cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves, use 1 ½ tsp of "pumpkin pie
spice)
Either in an electric blender, or your great-grandmom's cast-iron hand-wound
gefulte-fish chopper brought from the Old Country, feed in almonds and raisins
in about equal amounts (the point is to make sure the whole thing doesn't get
stuck). Whenever you feel like it, pour in some wine to lubricate the action.
Stop the action every once in a while to poke around and stir up the
ingredients.
Freely choose when to add apricots, apples, figs, and/or dates. Taste every ten
minutes or so. If you start feeling giddy, good!--that's the idea.
When the mixture is the right texture, add in the spices. Clove is powerful,
sweet and subtly sharp at the same time; a lot will get you just on the edge of
dope.
Keep stirring, keep chopping, keep dribbling wine -- not till the charoset
turns to paste but till there are still nubs of nuts, grains of raisin,
suddenly a dollop of apricot spurting on your tongue.
You say this doesn't seem like a recipe, too free? Ahh -- as the Song itself
says again and again, "Do not stir up love until it pleases. Do not rouse
the lovers till they're willing."
Serve at the Pesach Seder, and also on the night when you first make love to a
delicious partner. And on your wedding night. And on every wedding anniversary.
And every once in a while, but not too often, on a night when you simply want
to celebrate and embody your love.
Copyright © 2009 by Arthur Waskow.
Seder Plate by Ken Goldman
18 kilos of rough stone from the nearby fields - requires the entire family- to lift !
How To: Make Charoset |
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| Looks gross, tastes divine | |
by Tamar Fox, April 9, 2008 |
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Yes, you can have you seder catered, but that’s no fun at all. If you don’t feel up to making a brisket and matzah ball soup for 30, at least try making your own charoset—it’s fun, easy, really yummy, and there are tons of different kinds of recipes to try. And remember, charoset is supposed to look like mortar, so the results can be plenty ugly as long as they taste sweet.
charoset: looks nasty, but you know you love itTraditional Ashkenazi Charoset
• 5 pound bag of apples (I like red delicious, but if you want your charoset tart, use granny smith), peeled and cored.
• About half a bottle of sweet red wine (Manischewitz works great)
• 1/3 to ½ cup of cinnamon
• one big bag of walnuts (about a pound)
Grind the apples and walnuts until they’ve formed a weird beige kind of runny paste. Add cinnamon and wine and keep trying until you get the consistency and taste you’re looking for. Ideally, you’d do the grinding with a meat grinder, but a food processor will work as well. Makes enough for two seders of twenty people each.
Looking for a gourmet take? Try Wolfgang Puck’s recipe.
Traditional Sephardi Charoset
Sephardi charoset usually contains dates, and is a little chunkier than its Ashkenazi cousin.
• 4 oz dates
• 4 oz figs
• 4 oz apricots
• 4 oz raisins
• 1 apple (Macintosh, preferably), peeled and cored
• 1 cup walnuts or almonds, ground
• 1 tablespoon honey
• Manischewitz
• cinnamon
In a food processor, grind the dried fruits until they’re chunky and add the apple, which should moisten everything a little. Mix in the ground nuts and the honey, and add some manischevitz until you have the consistency you want (sticky and chunky is the norm, but go with your gut) Then you can either add cinnamon to taste, or roll the charoset into balls about the size of a walnut and refrigerate. A few hours before serving, roll the balls in the cinnamon so they’re completely coated. Serve at room temperature. Makes enough for about 30.
For a gourmet take, try the recipe at Epicurious.
There’s a couple of great collections of Charoset recipes online if you’re looking to be more adventurous. The Canadian Jewish News covers the classics alongside recipes for Coconut and Lemon Charoset, Maple Charoset, Seven Fruit Charoset, and Turkish Charoset. Jewishfamily.com has charoset recipes from Morocco, Afghanistan, and India. Finally, Kosher4passover.com covers every exotic Charoset you could possibly imagine, including Provencal and Georgian.