Thursday, June 30, 2005

Chasing Borscht

I arrived in Woodstock with a backpack, a guitar, and two hundreds bucks which I had earned as a cocktail waitress in a hillbilly bar at my last stop. Lisa, my older sister, was finishing up her final year at Binghamton College. It was the first time I had visited her outside of our parent’s home. The apartment was dark and smelled like old wood and fish. She shared the crowded third floor walk-up with Rose, a polish exchange student, who insisted I try her version of beet borscht the first night I arrived. The table was set with an array of chipped dishes and mismatched flatware. I adore naked borscht with nothing more than a boiled potato and sour cream as garnish and was delighted to sample her old-world recipe. But in its place, Rose’s offering was a hot brown soup spiced with curry and made with raisins and sunflower seeds. I fished around the bowl for the beets, so overcooked that their natural blood red beauty had been bleached out hours before, like a miner panning for gold. To add insult to injury, there was no sour cream in their dairy-free kitchen. I applied for food stamps the minute I was settled and with my first allotment Lisa and I bought a chicken to roast and a box of crumb-topped Entenmanns donuts. It brought back bittersweet memories of our junk food inebriated childhood and we laughed, like little girls keeping a secret, at the irony of the purchase, thinking that all things come full circle.
“I never eat like this anymore,” she said dunking her donut into a glass of soy milk. “I’m a vegetarian now.” Her voice was filled with conviction.
“Yeah, me too,” I replied grabbing seconds.

Wednesday, June 22, 2005

Recipe Riddles - June


In honor of National Camping Week (the 4th week of the month)! I'm going to take a real stretch here and say that only ardent campers would recognize this recipe. Hint: One of the words IS the cooking vessel. Good luck!

Friday, June 17, 2005

Strudel Makes The Woman

My mom and dad began married life in a small ground floor apartment in a two-family house in Brooklyn. One day Grandma Lil decided it was her daughters turn to learn the family recipe for strudel; beautiful Russian strudel filled with nuts and plum butter. My mother watched as the dough was worked until paper thin. The filling wasn’t difficult, but the dough required a certain expertise. The crucial part was in the initial preparation; the dough needed to be pounded and stretched. They slapped it and banged it like two prize fighters; which is comical enough, both my mother and granmother barely reach the five foot mark. (I’ve often said: “You know you’re in a Jewish family when at ten years old your taller than most relatives!”) The beating continued, with the two of them drenched in sweat, until they were almost done. They were obsessively working the dough, hoping it would soom gain its elasticity and before they passed out from heat exhaustion, when all of a sudden there was a loud knock at the door. My mom wiped the sweat from her face and opened the door to find the landlady, who lived upstairs, looking impatient and frustrated. With her hands on her hips, she expressed wonder at how her tenants could possibly be cold –still. She had turned the heat up several times. My mom was puzzled. What she didn’t know was the standard rule of two-family living: If you need more heat, rap hard on the pipes. My mother and grandmother still laugh about that till this day.

Friday, June 03, 2005

Out to Launch

The "Recipe Deck" Series, published by giftware giant Boston Warehouse, launched at back in January 2005 at The Atlanta Gift Mart. Like proud parents going to their child's first recital, John and I flew down for a "Meet the Authors" reception. Each "deck" is a collection of 100 recipes, menus, and entertaining ideas - in a card deck format with a funky box for packaging. By the time this photo was taken at The NY International Gift Fair , one month later - 30,000 copies had been sold from our eight titles! You can find them at Le Gourmet Chef, Steinmart, Home Goods, and Marshall's not to mention hundreds of smaller giftware stores nationwide. Kudos to BWTC for making our dreams come true with such a beautifully executed product! In the works for 2006 are three new titles.