Showing posts with label Kosher for Passover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kosher for Passover. Show all posts
Saturday, April 7, 2012
Matzo Oven Pancake
Last night instead of attending a seder we went out for tortillas. Our seder this year is tonight. Tonight we will gather with friends and family to read through the Haggadah, eat matzo and ask the 4 questions. As we ate our tortillas I mentioned that it was the first night of Passover. "What!" Said Sebastian in horror as he looked at his dinner. "I don't want to eat bread during Passover this year."
"Don't worry honey." I replied, "It is still light out, Passover has not started." He looked at the bright sky, sighed happily and finished his quesadilla. I did not think much more about Sebastian's observance of the Passover holiday until this morning when I recognized we had a problem. I have not bought any matzo yet. Normally for Passover we as a family add matzo to the food we regularly eat, without subtracting anything. Clearly without matzo, matzo brei was not an option. Besides, for Lewis and I matzo brei has alway been our traditional breakfast the morning after our seder. All we had for Passover provisions was a canister of matzo meal. So what could we make for breakfast that Sebastian could eat?
Then I had an inspiration, matzo meal oven pancake. I have played enough over the years with modifying recipes to use matzo meal, so I had a good idea of what to do. However Lewis is usually in charge of making the oven pancakes. So I began preparing the dough as Lewis watched, often disapprovingly. However in the end it turns out I did know what I was doing as I pulled a golden brown and puffed pancake from the oven. With fresh lemon juice squeezed on top, our preferred way to serve oven pancake, it was a delicious breakfast. It would have been delicious even if it was not Passover.
Sebastian happily ate his share. However as he ate it he informed me that the regular oven pancake would have been fine. "I don't want to eat any bread with yeast in it this week. Flour is fine though."
Matzo Meal Oven Pancake: Kosher for Passover
3 eggs
1 cup milk
1/2 cup matzo meal
2 Tbsp unsalted butter, melted
1/4 tsp salt
1 Tbsp sugar
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
2-3 Tbsp unsalted butter
Preheat the oven to 450°
Combine the eggs and milk in a large bowl and beat well to combine. Add the matzo meal and mix well before stirring in the melted butter (don't worry about over mixing the dough, because matzo has already been baked the gluten is set and cannot make the mixture tough).
Add the salt, sugar, and vanilla extract and mix well. Allow the dough to rest for 15 minutes so the matzo meal can absorb some of the liquid and soften a little. Near the end of the dough resting place 2 to 3 Tbsp butter in a large cast iron skillet (10 to 12 inches wide) or a pyrex dish (9 x 13 or a little smaller). Place the skillet or pan in the oven until the pan is hot and the butter is fully melted. Pour the dough into the pan and place in the oven.
Cook for 20 to 25 minutes until golden brown and set. Do not check on the pancake until it has cooked for at least 15 minutes so it does not deflate. I often place an oven mitt over the handle when I remove a hot skillet from the oven. When I don't I always seem to forget and grab the burning hot handle.
Slide the pancake out of the pan and onto a cutting board. Slice into wedges and serve with fresh lemon juice squeezed on top and if you wish a sprinkling of powdered sugar (I never use the sugar). To get more juice from your lemons place them in the microwave on high for 40 seconds before slicing into them.
Labels:
baking,
breakfast,
Holiday baking,
Jewish Holidays,
Kosher for Passover,
Matzo,
Passover
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Macaroons: Gluten Free, Kosher for Passover and irresistible
The usual in like a lion and out like a lamb of March has been turned upside down this year. Outside there are crocuses and daffodils shivering in the sudden drop in temperature as March ends. Even with March ending with temperatures reminiscent of Winter or Fall the end of March/beginning of April to me signals Passovers approach. Every year I ignore the containers of macaroons in the "Passover shelves" in the grocery store. Store bought macaroons are squishy throughout with a flavor that is more sweet then true coconut.
A good Macaroon is a personal favorite, at their very best the tender inside contrasts with the crackly outside and their sweetness is subtle against a pronounced coconut sweetness. I have baked up many versions of them, some with beaten egg whites and a long list of ingredients while others required a boxed mix and water. However I was still in search of the perfect recipe. Food52 posted a new macaroon recipe by Alice Medrich's that boasted tiny wings of toasty brown coconut with soft and discrete inside layers, As soon as I read the description I began searching out the large shards of coconut in the recipe.
After baking up a batch I found the inside layers to be almost tough, instead of the soft pillowy center I was craving. Lewis loved them, calling them flannel macaroons because they have real texture to them. However the boys both suggested I try again, but this time use the tiny shreds of coconut. I might have switched out the coconut and then just followed the recipe, but then I would have had 8 egg yolks in my fridge. So when the mixture appeared to be dry, I added 2 of the egg yolks back in. I mean who said macaroons have to be made with egg whites only? After all the richness and fat of the egg yolks would add the creamy texture I was after. That is just what they did, there is a still a crackly crisp outer layer where the coconut crisped in the ovens heat, but the inside texture is softer, more giving and tender with a pronounced coconut flavor. I tested the cookies again with all 4 egg yolks and found the extra yolk muted the coconut flavor. So these will not eliminate the yolks in the fridge, but it will reduce it by 2.
Macaroons
3 cups medium shred coconut (preferably unsweetened)
3/4 cups sugar
2 large eggs
2 large egg whites
2 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp kosher salt
Mix all of the ingredients well in a large bowl. Set the bowl in a saucepan of simmering water. You are not trying to create a mock double boiler here, the bowl should be in the water. Mix the batter well using a silicone or other heat proof spatula for about 2 to 5 minutes, just enough to dissolve the sugar and warm all the ingredients.
Set the bowl of cookie batter aside for 30 minutes so the coconut can absorb some of the liquid. While the batter is resting place the oven racks in the upper and lower third of the oven and preheat to 350°.
Line 2 cookie sheets with parchment paper and scoop out tablespoon sized balls of dough spaced 1 inch or so apart on the sheets. I used a 1 Tablespoon cookie scoop
Labels:
baking,
coconut,
GF,
Gluten Free,
Holiday baking,
Holiday Meals,
Jewish Holidays,
Kosher for Passover,
Passover
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Potato Latkes
I prepared these potato latkes the night before Hanukah began because I wanted to have the time to post the recipe before Hanukkah was over. When Sebastian asked what was for dinner he was overjoyed and curious. "Why are you making latkes, Hanukkah doesn't start until tomorrow night." When I told him I wanted to photograph the latkes for my blog he understood right away. "Oh, that way your readers can make them for the holiday." Maybe it is just me but I feel his logical thinking has recently improved. For example the other night I was tucking him into bed while Lewis and Julian were at the ER. Julian had swallowed a penny and then begun throwing up. Sebastian looked at me, in that straight man way only a child can, and started to list off the reasons each of them have visited the ER.
"Julian ate a pebble when he was a baby, burnt himself on a pan of Brussels Sprouts and now he swallowed a penny. Every time Julian has gone it has been for something he has done. I went when I was dehydrated because I had gastroenteritis," (he really did say gastroenteritis, which just shows how often he has heard the story), and then there was the time I stepped on a piece of glass" My favorite part is he was so matter of fact, and really it does tell you a lot about both of my children.
Like when they each decided they were walkers not crawlers. They were both late walkers at right around 17 months. However when Sebastian became a walker he had been practicing while holding our hands for so long that he could practically run. I had read that new walkers can not turn corners or carry things while walking. Sebastian could turn a corner while carrying anything he wanted. Julian however just decided one day that he was done with crawling, even though he was completely unsteady and fell down as much as he walked. But he had chosen and steadfastly walked (and fell) from then on without reverting to crawling.
For all their differences in how they approach the world they are also remarkably similar. They may take a slightly different path to get there but they both think of inventive ways to possibly injure themselves. Like the time I discovered them tying a rope around their waist so they could repel off the porch. They also used to agree that latkes are yucky, until I started precooking the potatoes before shredding them. Now they agree they are one of the best dinners. Soft inside with a crispy outer crust. As an added benefit for the cook there is no chance of the potatoes discoloring, so the batter can be made up in advance. You also do not need to drain the shredded potatoes.
Potato Latkes
Before starting to cook these go and close any doors in your house. Latkes are delicious but the lingering scent of latkes is best avoided. After all the latkes are made you can help cleanse the air by boiling a large pot of water with fresh ginger or citrus slices in it.
Before starting to cook these go and close any doors in your house. Latkes are delicious but the lingering scent of latkes is best avoided. After all the latkes are made you can help cleanse the air by boiling a large pot of water with fresh ginger or citrus slices in it.
2 1/4 lb. potatoes (I used Yukon Golds, you can substitute your favorite potato)
1 onion (mine was 6 oz.) grated on the second largest holes on a box grater
5 eggs
1 1/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
2 Tbsp matzo meal or flour
Oil for frying, I used olive oil as the frying temperature should never be above olive oils smoke point
Scrub the potatoes and remove any eyes or blemishes. Cut the potatoes to the size of the smallest potatoes and steam until not all the way tender but a knife can be inserted. I steamed mine for about 13 minutes, the pieces were about 2 inches wide. Remove from the heat, drain out the hot water and cover the potatoes with cold water.
Grate the potatoes on the second largest holes on a box grater. Grate as much of the skin as you can by continually turning the potato to grate new skin. Reserve any skin that does not grate and chop it all finely at the end. Add the grated potatoes to the remaining ingredients except oil.
Preheat oven to 250° and place a rack on a sheet pan. Heat 1/4 inch of oil in a large saute or frying pan to about 350°. Scoop the batter out by tablespoons into the hot oil and flatten down some. Fry until crisp and brown before flipping over and cooking the second side. Once both sides are cooked transfer the cooked latkes to the prepared rack and place in the oven. The oven will keep them warm and also crisps up the outside.
Serve with applesauce and sour cream or full fat greek yogurt
Grate the potatoes on the second largest holes on a box grater. Grate as much of the skin as you can by continually turning the potato to grate new skin. Reserve any skin that does not grate and chop it all finely at the end. Add the grated potatoes to the remaining ingredients except oil.
Preheat oven to 250° and place a rack on a sheet pan. Heat 1/4 inch of oil in a large saute or frying pan to about 350°. Scoop the batter out by tablespoons into the hot oil and flatten down some. Fry until crisp and brown before flipping over and cooking the second side. Once both sides are cooked transfer the cooked latkes to the prepared rack and place in the oven. The oven will keep them warm and also crisps up the outside.
Serve with applesauce and sour cream or full fat greek yogurt
Labels:
Jewish Holidays,
Kosher for Passover,
Latkes,
Potatoes
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Kosher for Passover Brownies
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I grew up in Manhattan in a predominately Jewish neighborhood and attended a school were most of the students were Jewish. I am not sure when I first realized that this was not the case for the rest of the country, or even the state. I do remember in 10th grade one of my history teachers, Mr. Gatch, told of a time he subbed for a 7th grade history class. Midway through the lesson he realized that the class believed the majority of U.S. citizens were Jewish. So after taking a poll of the class where students said they believed the U.S. was 90 to 95 percent Jewish he told them about the town in Ohio where he grew up.
He told them about the one Jewish family in the whole town. "Imagine what it would be like to be the only Jewish family in your town. Imagine how you would feel if you and your brother were the only Jewish children in your school". Mr Gatch just stood there for a minute to allow the students to try to picture what he said, try to place themselves in the shoes of Mr Gatch's classmate. Then one boy in the back raised his hand and asked, "Mr Gatch, what was it like for you being the only Jewish family in your town?" My whole class laughed at the inability for this student to even comprehend that their teachers were mostly not Jewish. Our laughter was stronger because of our faint chagrin that we only recently (some while Mr Gatch told his story) learned otherwise ourselves.
Now 24 years later I am living in Burlington, Vermont. My children do not go to a school that is predominately Jewish. This time of year it feels like every adult who talks to them asks what the Easter bunny is going to bring them. They never get asked what gift they received for the Afikomen or how their seder was. Everyone here seems to assume children are part of the predominant culture, waiting expectantly for the Easter Bunny.
This is the first year since Sebastian was born that I have not hosted a seder this week. We are going to wait to have a belated seder with family in New York the last week of April. Vermont seems to have an independent streak when it comes to school holidays, so our April break does not coincide with Passover and Easter as it does in most states. Last year we took Sebastian out of school for the week of Passover so we could celebrate with my family. However it felt like we came home just in time for April vacation. This year we will wait to have our seder, we could have celebrated with local friends, but my boys like this opportunity to celebrate with my family. I think they like feeling like one of many Jews at the Passover table, or maybe I am just projecting.
It feels really weird not to be marking this week, not to have gathered with either family or friends to read through the Haggadah I have written. It feels strange that I have not slaved in the kitchen for 2 weeks to prepare for our seder. I will still make my family crazy with the smells of brisket braised for hours only to be sliced and placed in the freezer for the future, just not yet.
In the midst of this weirdness I read an article about the White House Seder. I love the story of the start of the new tradition, a box of matzo and a bottle of Manishevitz after a long day. The Jews at the seder unable to answer all the questions asked by those new to the holiday celebration. I have to admit I also love the idea of gefilte fish being served on white house china. My non Jewish husband has embraced all other Jewish foods but draws the line at gefilte fish. I wonder what the Obama's think of it. This gathering really sounds like the best Passover seders have to offer.
So perhaps in recognition of what most other Jews (and the Obamas) are doing this week, I made Kosher for Passover brownies. My boys are all ecstatic to have brownies. These brownies don't taste of struggle or matzo, instead they are rich and chocolatey. The first year I made them one of the children at my seder, who is not Jewish and did not comprehend the matzo slight of hand that makes it possible to be so creative at Passover, asked me to teach her mother how to make brownies. Somehow I have lost my original recipe and had to play around and create my own. I was not happy with my first attempt, so I adjusted the recipe and made another half batch. Everyone agrees that the second batch is much better. However I am not worried that the first batch will go uneaten, it just needs to wait its turn.
Passover Brownies
These brownies can be made pareve (can be eaten with a dairy or meat meal) by using Kosher for Passover margarine, and of course you can use Kosher for Passover chocolate as well. My family celebrates Passover more as a way to connect with our ancestors and the rituals and celebrations they engaged in, so I use Callebaut chocolate and butter.
6 ozs bittersweet chocolate (Kosher for Passover if you want, I use Callebaut)
3/4 (1 1/2 sticks) cup butter (if you wish to make this pareve use Kosher for Passover margarine)
1 1/2 cups sugar
4 eggs
1/2 tsp Kosher salt
2 tsp vanilla
2 tsp chocolate extract
3/4 cups matzo cake meal
1 cup chopped nuts (optional)
Preheat oven to 325°. Grease a 9" by 13" pyrex pan with butter or margarine and set aside.
Melt butter (or margarine) and chocolate in a heavy pot over very low heat (if you want you can use a double boiler but the butter or margarine will protect the chocolate from the heat). Once the chocolate is all melted and smooth turn off the heat and add the sugar. Stir until well blended. Add the eggs, salt, vanilla optional chocolate extract. Stir in matzo cake meal and nuts if using. Allow to rest for 5 minutes to let the matzo meal soak up some of the batter before spreading in the prepared pan.
Bake for 30-35 minutes until a toothpick or cake tester comes out with little or no batter on it.
Labels:
baking,
Brownies,
chocolate,
dessert,
Holiday baking,
Jewish Holidays,
Kosher for Passover,
Matzo,
Passover
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