MileChai.com
Mile High City Denver Colorado

Home | About Us | Search Mile Chai | Help | Free Offer | Sale
Holidays| Jewish Art |Jewish Books | Jewish Jewelry | Judaica | Kosher Kitchen | Jewish Ritual

800 830-8660 Add us to your favorites
Jewish Books
ArtScroll Books
Children's Bible Books
Jewish General Interest
Nechama Leibowitz
Tehillim
Jewish Holidays
Shabbat
Rosh HaShanah
Yom Kippur
Sukkot
Chanukah
Purim
Passover
Shavuos
Judaica Menu
Judaica
Jewish Bookmarks
Kosher Kitchen
Jewish card
Jewish Jewelry
Jewish Ritual Items
Jewish Music
Most Popular Books
Books on Jewish Holidays
Complete Bensching CD
IJN - Jewish News
Jewish Authors and Rabbis
Jewish Books translated Spanish
Jewish Books Out of Print
Jewish Business
  Jewish Cookbooks
  Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
  Ten Commandments
  Torah Books Under $10

Jewish Books

New Releases
Sale Close Out Books!
Art
ArtScroll Books
ArtScroll Talmuds
  Steinsaltz Talmud
Soncino Talmuds
Basic Judaism
Autographed Editions
Bible/Torah
Books for Jewish Girls
Biographies & Memoirs
Breslov Books
Calendars
Chabad Books
Children's Books
Cooking/Kashruth
Counting the Omer
Current Events/Politics
Dr Seuss all Hebrew
Family & Parenting
Feldheim Books
Haggadah
Health & Medicine

Hebrew Books

Hebrew/Yiddish
History
Holocaust Anti-Semitism
Humor
Israel
Jewish Authors
Jewish Education
Jewish Law
Jewish-Self-Help
Jewish Thought
Kabbalah & Mysticism
Kitzur Shulchan Aruch
Life Cycle
Literature & Fiction
Little Midrash Says
Mikraos Gedolos
Mishnah Torah Rambam
Midrash Says
Moshiach
Political
Pirkei Avos
Prayer & Inspiration
Siddurs
Shabbos Books
Stone Chumash
Temple
Tikkuns
Torah Commentaries
Torah References
  Dictionaries
Concordances
Women's Topics
Weekly Parashah
MileChai ® --> Jewish Books --> Jewish Cookbooks --> The Gefilte Variations

Qty:

$19.99
Hard Cover - pages
The Gefilte Variations

Author: Jayne Cohen
Publisher:
Scribner
ISBN:
0684827190 ···  Hardcover ···  416 pages.
List Price:
$35

$19.99

 Overview:

The Gefilte Variations: 200 Inspired Re-creations of Classics From the Jewish Kitchen With Menus, Stories, and Traditions for the Holidays and Year-Round.

The Gefilte Variations is a hefty volume, sporting no obvious cookbook filler -- there aren't even any photographs. But the cover's Cubist menorah in blue hues, with its scholarly, tome-like appearance, is misleading, because Cohen's Jewish cookbook gives us atypical interpretations of a very rich tradition.

Jayne Cohen's collection of cultural recipes is a revamping of classic dishes for current tastes, with flourishes expected of cooking today, like Crispy Shallot Latkes With Sugar Dusting. Her innovations are successful; while Cohen won't cloak recipes in ancestral form, she doesn't toy with innovation frivolously. As she says, her improvisations "are firmly rooted in Jewish tradition, and while playful, they remain faithful to its spirit and soul."

But where does one find a tradition's spirit and soul? What, in other words, is the essence of a culinary tradition? There is no easy academic answer, only personal takes on the matter -- call them the Bubby Debates. Essentially, "Jewish" to one grandmother is unlike what the word means to the next. Again, take latkes. One Bubby's family makes hers with potato and onion, frying them in schmaltz, "as in the old days." Another substitutes zucchini or yams for the traditional potato but insists on frying them in oil, like the Chanukah story prescribes. Another cares little for ingredients or method. Instead, she preserves a dish's context, noting the latke's role in holiday ritual. Cohen seems most interested in this last aspect, freely altering the ingredients of traditional dishes, but using them in their established roles. Kugel, for instance, can be made with peaches and plums as long as it preserves the spirit of practicality and abundance required of the Jewish Sabbath and holiday meals.

I don't mind if Jewish cooks borrow ingredients or techniques from other culinary canons, trying to infuse some new flavors into Old Country Cuisine. However, I prefer that this integration is limited to geographic areas of historic influence. Chinese food, for example, is a huge part of contemporary American Jewish culture, particularly on the East Coast, but it is not a major influence on Jewish culture historically. Therefore, it would seem out of place in a book trying to maintain an earnest tie to the past. Cohen, happily, avoids these kinds of superficial associations. In general, she refrains from compiling a worldly potpourri of Jewish cuisine. Her recipes are unusually elegant, but they stay close to the familiar tastes of home and the flavors of the seasons. She writes, "I am not creating silly, culturally perverse combinations here, like ... jalapeño-sundried tomato gefilte fish. ... Rather, my recipes are all integrated interpretations of food I think of as Jewish, and all are kosher." Her pairing of mostly Mediterranean flavors is right on: Apricot Blintzes With Toasted Pistachios and Yogurt Cream, Sorrel Onion Noodle Kugel. She does dabble in adjectival excess, the editorial equivalent of a striptease. But at least tiringly verbose titles like "Salmon Gefilte Fish Poached in Fennel-Wine Broth With Ginger-Beet Horseradish" reveal quite deliciously what the recipe holds in store.

Cohen's book is a testament to how integration -- a risky idea to historically ostracized people -- can have preservative value. Cohen is a wonderful cook, and she has used the fertile ground of classic Jewish cooking to make good food. For that reason, this book is a worthy tribute and contribution to a continually evolving cuisine.


Gefilte Fish Serving Tray


Jerusalem Stone Book Ends

Wood Book Shtenders

Deluxe Book Shtender

Secure Shopping!

Shop Israel - Bring the Holy Land to you...

Powered by MileChai ™ Technology - Everything to make your home kosher - Torah - Judaism copyright
Spreading Torah at the Speed of Light ©  - site map
SPREAD THE WORD! Share us with a friend

Jewish Books - 2011