Tue, May 13, 2008

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Last logged in: Oct 14, 2007
Comments: 5
Friends: 2
Blog Posts: 3
Age, Status: 26, Dating
School:
McGill University
Interests:
eating, cooking, traveling, photography, swimming, yoga
Currently reading:
The Kite Runner, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds, Hope Dies Last
Currently listening:
Land of Talk, Once soundtrack
Currently watching:
Weeds

About Eve Bergazyn

Eve lives in Astoria, where she eats bagels daily, cooks in her tiny kitchen, and gets lots of parking tickets. She has written articles about food, travel, yoga, health, and architecture, and her work has appeared in guidebooks, magazines and online. Eve is one of Jewcy's Pickled bloggers.

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Recent Comments

That looks amazing! I'll try it and let you know how it goes.
You can get it here.
It's date season in California...
Fresh bread is the best, but if you make it the day before it probably won't get too stale. Maybe mix together the day before, refrigerate overnight and bake the day of? I'm not sure if that would work, but it's worth a shot!
Why not bake your own challah? It does need to be fresh, although working time is pretty minimal, compared to, say, churning butter.

Recent Blog Postings

PICKLED
Rosh Hashanah: Gift Ideas for Dinner Guests

Honey serverHoney server1. Dessert Wine. It’s sweet, not cloying, if you get a good bottle, and is a perfect way to cap off a delicious meal. Banyuls, an unusual red dessert wine, goes great with chocolate desserts.

2. Homemade Baklava, the sticky sweet Middle Eastern pastry is a far cry from the usual honey cake. Ramp it up a notch with honey from small producers, and keep in mind: the darker the honey, the more flavorful. Epicurious.com has a great recipe Dale Raben will prepare for Pickled next week.

3. Make Your Own Meade Kit - Yes, you can make this honey wine at home. And so can your host with this kit. Become a brewmaster of this fermented honey beverage. Buy a kit to give your host with some delicious honey.

4.
Honey Serving Pots - Forget the honey, give its accoutrements. This honey server will reduce stickiness.

5. Homemade Spiced Almonds - Put in a celophane bag and tie with pretty ribbon. See recipe below.


PICKLED
Q&A: Challah Saleswoman Jane Moritz

The Challah Connection website offers “gourmet kosher gift baskets with Jewish traditions in mind.” What began in 1994 as a small company that delivered challah to homes and synagogues now enjoys booming success thanks to owner Jane Moritz. A photo of Moritz holding a glossy, golden brown challah loaf is stamped on every page of the Challah Connection’s site. Intrigued, we called her to chat about challah and how she made a Jewish food company so successful. She shares her challah recipe below.

Jane MoritzHow did you start the Challah Connection?
My husband and I sold our advertising business nine years ago, and I decided I wanted a different career--something to do with baking. There was this company call the Challah Connection here in Westport and I thought I could use my background in direct marketing and business to grow it. I thought if people wanted challah, they’d probably want other Jewish baked goods like babke and rugelach. I bought this business and plodded along for several months, and then I got this fabulous write-up in the New York Times, so we got all these calls.

How many of your customers are Jewish?
A lot of my customers aren’t Jewish. They call and they want to get the right thing--they’re sending a gift to a Jewish friend or relative, like for shiva or sympathy. There are so many people who want to understand Jews. Because I’m on the phone with them, this is my mitzvot: I’m helping people understand us.

So does challah make up the majority of your business?
No. Before I took it over the Challah Connection was only doing challah. The Challah part of it is a hook – we do have challah, but it’s less and less a part of our business.

Why is that?
It’s a novelty bread, which is too limiting. You use challah for Shabbat maybe. But we will always have challah. If I was starting the business today, I wouldn’t make it the 'Challah Connection.' It’s funny, last May we stopped home delivery to our customers in Westport. They asked me, “Where should we go?” I told them, you know what you really should do? Bake your own! On my website there’s a recipe you can make in a bread machine, which makes it easy.

Challah dates back to Biblical times. How would you modernize it?
I think it would be really fun to work with great bakers… who use all of these wonderful and fresh flavors. Wouldn’t it be fun to experiment with it and make it more of a gourmet thing? Who says it has to be in its regular shape? If you can find chefs who are doing that kind of thing, call me.


PICKLED
Gefilte Fish De-Gooed

Jennifer Felmley (center left) in cooking class.Jennifer Felmley is a nutritionist, chef, and cooking teacher with an infectious laugh who lives in San Diego. We talked to this culinary historian about Jewish cuisine and one of its most infamous components: Gefilte fish. She provides an upscale recipe for the stuff – gelatin included – below.

Why do you think Jewish food’s popularity is waning these days?
Well, traditional Jewish food is made with cheap ingredients, like brisket and whitefish, that are difficult to prepare and not as delicious as more expensive, and often fresher, food.

How do you modernize old recipes and make them more appealing?
I try to take traditional Eastern European food that we grew up with back to its roots by using the freshest ingredients. When immigrants came to the U.S., they had to make do with canned products and poorer qualities of meat. I try to keep things as fresh and clean as possible.

Why has gefilte fish gotten such a bad rap?
Many people, when they think of gefilte fish, think of a ball of fish suspended in goo. Not delicious. The dish came from Germany and was a small dumpling cooked in liquid. When the fish sits for a while in its stock, the collagen and protein from the fish gelatinize, which keeps it fresh, but also has a gross texture.

Tell me about your recipe.
The first time I made the salmon gefilte fish recipe, I thought “Oh, I’m so special!” But when I got to the fishmonger’s at the crack of dawn in L.A., there were these chichi ladies from Beverly Hills and private chefs buying salmon for their gefilte fish.

How do you serve it?
My grand-aunt made her herb sauce, which I tweaked a little bit. Adding fresh herbs is the way it was traditionally done. I also do a horseradish and sour cream sauce with lemon.

Do you prepare it often?
You know, I’d make it as part of my last meal [before fasting] if I could. When I do it for Passover, I make mountains of it, and I eat it for days afterwards.

How does being Jewish affect your cooking?
I’m the Martha Stewart of Judaism. I’m not going to sit at home and study Torah, but I will cook a huge meal for all my friends and family. I love Passover. I prepare for days. For the first few years I did it, I made the whole meal completely kosher, but it’s gotten so big, with over 50 people, it just got too expensive.