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Certain dishes
expected for holiday
But caterer is
relying on a sweeter spin for her festive meal.
By H.M. Cauley
For the AJC
Some dishes
are so strongly tied to holiday traditional that they have to be present to make the celebration
complete. Would it be Thanksgiving without stuffing and cranberries, or Christmas without
cookies?
Those who are
marking Rosh Hashanna, the Jewish New Year, which begins at sundown Friday, will find a range of traditional
dishes gracing the table.
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Along with being favorites, they also
incorporate symbolic meaning, so a feast
without them would be unthinkable. That's the case with
honey.
"Honey is especially significant because
it symbolizes a prayer for a sweet year," caterer Annette Marcus said. "There's a specific
prayer you say over the honey as everyone dips a piece of apple into it and eats.
There's also a blessing over the bread and another over the wine."
For her celebration, Marcus usually
prepares a brisket, kugel with noodles, rolled cabbage, kasha, chicken soup with matzo balls
and a round
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braided challah. But this year,
she's mixing some zing into the tried-and-true
favorites.
Instead of an apple or honey cake, she's
blended apples, nuts and brown sugar into a strudel. Instead of a brisket with traditional
gravy or ketchup and onions, she's added apricots, plums and apples to the juices. And in place
of the traditional chicken soup that everyone's expecting, Marcus has substituted a sweet
cabbage borscht flavored with brown sugar and gingersnaps.
"You do want to eat sweet things, so I
came up with recipes that represent the sweetness of the new year," she
said.
In addition, Marcus' recipes are easily
made kosher. "Just buy kosher meats or substitute margarine in the strudel if you don't want
to eat dairy after a meat course," she said.
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