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Advice & Reviews

Decoded Dinner

Our suggested Rosh Hashanah menu, interactive and mouth-wateringly illustrated

Rosh Hashanah is the Jewish version of New Year’s Eve, but the festive meal served during the holiday is the Jewish culinary rival to an American Thanksgiving — it also includes slow-cooking a big hunk of meat (brisket) and preparing copious and scrumptuous side dishes. The new year is a time to start anew, and the foods we eat symbolize our wish for happiness, health, and an overall good year to come.

This year, Rosh Hashanah begins at sundown on Wednesday, September 12, so you have about a week and a half to plan your menu. To help, we’ve put together an interactive dinner table with a menu full of symbolic ingredients. The challenge in formulating a Rosh Hashanah menu is similar to that of Thanksgiving—coming up with something that fulfills the tradition but still surprises dinner guests. We’ve assembled a potpourri of old-fashioned and nouveau recipes. Sweet flavors are paramount in this menu to signify the hope for a sweet new year. Since Rosh Hashanaha is observed over two days, there are two special meals to serve, so cook a lot and plan ahead.

Click the dishes you see on the table to reveal their symbolic meaning. Then click the black box below to go to recipes, chef Q&As, leftover ideas, and resources for more information on the holiday.

Here’s to a sweet new year!

And stay tuned to Pickled as our Budget Baleboosteh prepares her first Rosh Hashanah dinner party with selected dishes from this table.


Advice & Reviews

Five Off-Registry Gifts

Get out of the doghouse with these creative wedding presents
Caroline Waxler

There's only one way to get out of the obligation to give your friends wedding presents: They have to divorce within a year of the wedding. Rather than waiting to see if the marriage lasts, try these five usual gift ideas. After all, if the gift is clever enough, they might forget it's a year late.

Dining Out: Everybody likes a free mealDining Out: Everybody likes a free meal1. The dinner date

You can’t go wrong with a dinner for two at a top restaurant in the couple’s town. If you don’t live in the same city (or don’t know what places would fit the bill) look on Citysearch. Call ahead to get a gift certificate for, say, $100 or $150, which should cover it even if you live somewhere expensive like New York. If the couple has children, you could really dig yourself out of the hole by offering to baby-sit.

Drink Up: Who wants one bottle when you could have twelve?Drink Up: Who wants one bottle when you could have twelve?2. The starter wine cellar

A case of wine (12 bottles) is a creative and infinitely useful gift. Even if the bride and groom don’t drink it, they’ll be covered for dinner parties for the next few months. This gift will most likely set you back over $100, but your local liquor store will usually give you a 10-20% discount. (Who has to know?) Since many states won’t let you ship wine, this works best if the couple lives in your city, or if you’re planning on driving to see them. If it’s awkward to suss out the couple’s favorite kind of wine, then just buy your favorite or ask the clerk for a recommendation. You could also try my favorite: Francis Ford Coppola’s Diamond Claret.

The Gift of Giving: Paying it forwardThe Gift of Giving: Paying it forward

3. The gift that keeps on giving.

Charity can ease everyone’s conscience—which benefits not only you but the couple, after that ludicrously expensive wedding. Network for Good and Just Give are clearinghouses for charitable gifts, both with easy-to-navigate websites, that make giving in the couple’s name easy and offer a wide range of causes. Donate whatever amount you were planning to spend on the gift.

Squeaky Clean: White towels match every bathroomSqueaky Clean: White towels match every bathroom4.) The updated trousseau

My save-the-day wedding gift to give comes from Basiques, a cute Manhattan shop which recently relocated to Houston, Texas. At $199, this present is simple but swank. It’s a set of insanely plush terry towels: two bath, two hand, and two washcloths presented in a toile hatbox that the couple may like as much as what’s inside. The towels are white and the washcloths are monogrammed in whatever color you want. Who doesn’t need monogrammed white towels?

Choose Your Own Adventure: It's like giving them back their registry virginityChoose Your Own Adventure: It's like giving them back their registry virginity5.) The one-size-fits-all

Sending them a gift certificate for wherever they registered is just plain efficient. Stores tend to close registries not long after the wedding, but a certificate allows the couple to fill in whatever they wanted and didn’t receive. Plus it won’t involve the couple having to return anything. Think about this: You were already late with the gift and now you’ve made it worse by giving them some vase (you love it; they think it’s hideous) that they now have to schlep back to the store? Not exactly the best way to make amends.


Advice & Reviews

Don't Be a Deadbeat Wedding Guest

What to do when your gift is a year late
Caroline Waxler

I dread wedding season, and not for the reason you’re thinking. I love seeing my friends get married, and if the ten invitatations I got last summer are any indication, I’m a good guest. The problem for me—and for the couple waiting for their silver gravy boat—is that I’m incapable of giving wedding presents on time.

Every spring, I feel the unique shame of the late-gifter—and by late, I mean in some cases overdue by nearly a decade. At my ten-year college reunion, I ran into two couples who had married soon after we graduated. I still owed them both gifts. And I know I’m not alone. In talking to friends and co-workers, I've found that there are a lot of us, though many are too ashamed to admit it.

For me, the slacking started due to lack of funds. I’d just graduated and was living in New York City, working at a low-paying, entry-level media job. It didn’t help that I was often a bridesmaid, forking out cash for showers and bachelorette parties, not to mention the dress. Add that to the cost of travel and lodging—since these weddings were often out of town—and I was tapped out. I always figured that I could spring for a gift later, once my bank account bounced back. But then the next wedding would pop up.

Now that I’m a little older, and a little more stable financially, my problem isn’t money but time. I always have grand plans about how I’m going to get the couple a thoughtful, personal gift. If it’s a destination wedding, as many of them are, I figure I’ll get them something local. But I’m always so busy, and since wedding etiquette dictates that you have a year from the date of the party to give the couple their gift, it's easy to stall.

I think I’ve finally beaten the habit, though. This summer, I went to a friend’s wedding in Italy. Not wanting to ship something internationally—that’s something I’d really drag my heels on—I decided to bring my gift with me. I’ve never felt more responsible than I did showing up with their present.

But I still had to make restitution to those I’d wronged. If you’re in my boat—and it seems most people are—here’s my five-step plan for how to deal with all those late presents. It’s a lot like AA, only shorter and more expensive.

Don't Look A Gift Box In the Mouth: Nobody minds getting presents, even if they're late.Don't Look A Gift Box In the Mouth: Nobody minds getting presents, even if they're late.
Step One: It’s never too late to pay your tab.

 

It’s probably not as bad as you think. For all you know, the couple believes they lost your gift. In any case, if you’re still friends, and no one has mentioned anything, it’s likely that they’re not dwelling on it. But the sin of omission has been hanging over your head. The good news? As Linda Lee, Macy’s General Vice President of Bridal Registry, points out, it’s never too late to do something nice. No matter when you give them the gift, the couple should appreciate getting it.

Oh Lord, Won't You Buy Me a Mercedes-Benz: Wait till they have kids, then get them toys.Oh Lord, Won't You Buy Me a Mercedes-Benz: Wait till they have kids, then get them toys.Step Two: Go Shopping. Immediately.

As soon as you read this and decide that you want to make amends, go out and take care of it. It doesn’t matter how long it’s been. Ali Weiss, 35, a Miami publicist, likes to make up for the late present when the couple has their first child. She gave one newborn a three-foot long toy black sports car. Of course, the baby was too young to enjoy it, but she figured it would look great in his room. It’s now her shtick, she says, to bring an extra-huge present to the bris.

You don’t need to wait until the knives are out—you don’t even need a new baby as an excuse. Buy it today.

Mightier Than the Sword: If you're using pen, do a rough draft first.Mightier Than the Sword: If you're using pen, do a rough draft first.Step Three: Include a really good apology note. Handwrite it, if you can remember how.

Meryl Gold, Director of Public Relations for Michael C. Fina—wedding gift central— says you don’t need to overspend just because you’re late. Spending might ease the guilt, but it’s not necessary.

What is key, though, is admitting your tardiness. As Katherine Murray of the Knot points out, if the couple knows the present is late, there’s no point in pretending it’s not. You won’t fool anyone.

The card should start off with a sincere apology. Macy’s General Vice President of Bridal Registry, Linda Lee, suggests this fix: “We've been well-intentioned for a long time. Even after all this time, we still remember how especially beautiful your wedding was!" That may not be your kind of language, but you get the idea: regrets well-seasoned with flattery.

You Get What You Give: A big empty boxYou Get What You Give: A big empty boxDon’t expect a wedding gift on your own big day.

There are consequences to being a gift slacker. Alex Mamlet, 34, a New York television producer, was planning his wedding last year when his bad habits came back to haunt him.

One B-list friend of the couple’s—invited after a certain number of the A-listers sent in their regrets—got word of a save-the-date card that he didn’t receive. Realizing he was in the second tier group, he sent out an e-mail to all of their mutual friends that read: “What, no save the date for me? I guess that means I'm not invited. That’s OK because I was going to give Alex exactly what he got me for my wedding: Nothing. Do yourselves a favor everybody and drink up at the open bar, because that's the last drink he'll ever buy you.”

Ouch.

But Mr. B-List does have a point. What goes around comes around. Mamlet’s still waiting on gifts from about half the couples he’s stiffed. Then again, there’s a month left on his year “deadline,” so maybe some presents will slide in under the wire.

Don't Overthink It: You can always go with the classic teapot.Don't Overthink It: You can always go with the classic teapot.
Break the habit.

Ideally, you want to send a gift as soon as you get the invitation, says Elizabeth Howell of the Emily Post Institute. An invitation, she points out, obligates you to give a present, whether you go to the wedding or not. As for the idea that you can give your gift up to a year after the ceremony? That's a myth, says Howell. Some procrastinator made it up.


Advice & Reviews

Hipster Judaism Mad Libs

Fill in the blanks to create your own trend piece!
Eli Valley
Tired of people emailing you articles about “hipster Judaism”? Ever get the feeling they’re all the same article repeated ad infinitum? Now’s your chance to write your own. Just fill in the blanks below, sign your name and mail the finished product to the AP, Reuters or your local newspaper.

HED: Beyond [Yiddish word] and [Kosher Deli Food]
DEK: The new Jew [insert “phenomenon,” “movement,” or “revolution”]


Outside a [adjective] club in [insert “the East Village,” “the Lower East Side,” or “Williamsburg”], a dozen [adjective] twentysomethings with [insert “tattoos” or “piercings”] on their [body part, plural] are smoking [an herb] and talking about the latest Jewish [musical genre] sensation, [insert “Matisyahu”].Insert "Hipster Jewish Hangout": Williamsburg, BrooklynInsert "Hipster Jewish Hangout": Williamsburg, Brooklyn

“For the first time in my life, Jews are [adjective],” said [precious gem, capitalized] [Jewish surname], wearing a t-shirt that read “[Biblical figure] [active verb].” “I used to feel [adjective] about being Jewish. Today I [verb] my Jewishness in ways I never did before."

[Color] [Jewish surname], founder of a company that makes [Jewish ritual object]-shaped pasta, agreed, adding, “This is not our [family relative]’s Judaism.”

Faced with a multiplicity of [plural noun], they’re forging their own Jewish [plural noun].

They’re the new Hipster Jews, and they’re here to [verb].

Hipster Judaism has its roots in [insert “Adam Sandler’s Hanukkah Song,” “The Beastie Boys,” or “Dee Snyder of Twisted Sister”]. Raised on [1980s TV series] and too young to have an intense memory of [insert “the Holocaust,” “the creation of Israel,” or “Yahweh”], this generation has chosen a [adjective] approach to Jewish identity. And young Jews aren’t the only ones who [verb] Judaism. It seems that everywhere, from [cable TV station] to [clothing store], popular culture has become saturated by a [adjective] form of Jewish [noun]. When [female celebrity] was photographed wearing a Kabbalah [noun], the trend was officially [adjective].The Best Thing To Happen to Judaism Since "Paul's Boutique": MatisyahuThe Best Thing To Happen to Judaism Since "Paul's Boutique": Matisyahu

This isn’t the Judaism of [character from Fiddler On the Roof, The Chosen or Yentl].

“Today’s young Jews aren’t interested in [name of Jewish institution],” said [bird species, capitalized] [Jewish surname], founder of the [nonsense word beginning with S, capitalized] Semites Salon Series. “Like, I’m dating a [religion] [nationality] [unsavory profession] with [disease]. If that’s how I [verb] my Judaism, that’s my [adjective] decision. Who are my parents to tell me what’s [adjective] and what’s not? I mean, [ghetto slang expression]!”

A just-released Jewish community report, “Judaism in the Age of [cultural phenomenon from the early 1990s],” backs up this claim. According to the report, “In contemporary [country], with its [exotic Starbucks blend] and [popular video game] culture, Judaism is only one facet of a [adverb] [adjective] identity. Indeed, today’s [insert “Gen Y,” “Millennial,” “New Boomer,” “MySpace,” “Flickr,” “YouTube” or ”Skype”] Jews are models of a [adjective], do-it-yourself Jewish [noun]. Much like [recent technological product, plural], they plug in to [plural noun] and then they [verb].”

All this has led to a decidedly more [adjective] approach to Jewish identity.

“Jews don’t want to give up on Judaism, but they also don’t want to give up on the American ideal of [noun],” said Dr. [Hebrew name] [Jewish surname], Professor of Jewish [plural noun] at [insert “Brandeis”] University. “For all groups, contemporary ethnic identification is as fluid as [liquid].”

Inevitably, there are those who disagree. “[A Jewish food] and [a Jewish entertainer] are insufficient [plural noun] for identity,” argued Rabbi [Old Testament Prophet] [Jewish surname] of [sparsely populated state]. “You can only go so far on [insert “t-shirts,” “concerts,” “blogs,” “Jewfros” or “drugs”] before you realize there’s no nourishment there.”

But Will They Marry?: "Hipster" culture might not lead to Jewish babies, one professor points out.But Will They Marry?: "Hipster" culture might not lead to Jewish babies, one professor points out.“It can’t be all [mood],” agreed Professor [four-syllable name] [three-syllable name] [Jewish surname], recipient of the American Jewish [noun] Foundation Award for Excellence in [adjective] Jewish Thought in 1956, 1957, and 1959. “Besides, we have zero evidence that the so-called ‘hipster’ culture leads Jews to [active verb, sexual] and marry other Jews. So what’s the point?"

“They just don’t get it,” responded [Season, capitalized] [Jewish surname], founder of the blog Jew[exclamation].com. “The critics just aren’t as [insert “cool,” “edgy,” “trendsetting,” “downtown,” or “hip”] as we are, so of course they’re coming at us from a [adjective] perspective. Did I mention that we’re extremely [insert “cool,” “edgy,” “trendsetting,” “downtown” or “hip”]?”

In the end, no amount of pigeonholing will succeed in [verb]ing the new [noun] of American Jews.

“We mustn’t make generalizations,” said [first name of 19th-century U.S. president] [Jewish surname], [senior job title] of The [1940s Hollywood producer] Family Foundation Crisis Campaign for American Jewish [noun]. “But I think it’s safe to say that all young American Jews are [adjective], [adjective], [adjective], [adjective], [adjective] and [adjective]. And they won’t be defined by anybody else.”