Totally kosher Tradition with a twist! 150+ recipes for the holidays and every day

Chanie Apfelbaum

Book - 2023

"120+ modern and exciting kosher breakfasts, dinners, desserts, and more... from the founder of the voicey and fun kosher blog Busy in Brooklyn After quitting her job to be a stay-at-home mom to her five beautiful children, Chanie Apfelbaum channeled her creative energy into her cooking--and hence, her popular blog Busy in Brooklyn was born. Her mission was to make kosher food trendy, accessible, and delicious for Jewish families around the world. What that means is miso in the matzo ball soup and tahini in the pumpkin pie-and her fans absolutely love recreating her recipes and feeling in the know on the latest food trends while keeping kosher kitchens. While all 120+ recipes are kosher, not all are traditional, meaning that you'l...l find creative recipes including Chocolate-Cherry Granola, Pull-Apart Garlic Knots, and Chicken and Waffle Drumsticks as well as Stuffed Boureka Sandwiches, Traditional Sabbath Cholent, and Yemenite-Spiced Sheet Pan Chicken. There are also helpful, basic guides to keeping and cooking kosher with trends like ten build-your-own boards (Taco Board! Falafel Board!) and kosher food hacks contribute to making this the cookbook kosher communities will be talking about and cooking from for years to come"--

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Subjects
Genres
Cookbooks
Recipes
Published
New York : Clarkson Potter/Publishers [2023]
Language
English
Main Author
Chanie Apfelbaum (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
319 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780593232613
  • Breakfast & brunch
  • Appetizers & finger food
  • Sammies & tacos
  • Salads
  • Soups
  • It's tradition!
  • Fins & scales
  • Just wing it
  • Split hooves
  • Meatless meals
  • Veg & sides
  • The bakery
  • Noshes & nibbled
  • You're so extra!
Review by Library Journal Review

Apfelbaum (Millennial Kosher) slogged through the chore of cooking as a new mom until she discovered family recipes and the artistic nature and creative outlet found in her kitchen preparing Shabbat dinner. In her new cookbook, Apfelbaum walks readers through kosher practices and explains the differences between Jewish and kosher foods. Recipes that are rooted in tradition come with plenty of twists like miso matzo-ball soup. Folks who don't follow a kosher diet will still enjoy the big flavors and may be pleasantly surprised at how many meat-free options are on offer. Bright food photography and Apfelbaum's easygoing style will attract new cooks and charm readers who are already comfortable at the stove. This title will be in high demand by those who keep kosher; however, also consider this for the collection because of its practical modern approach, a natural tendency to meat-free cooking, and flavorful recipes. VERDICT Fans of Apfelbaum's popular blog Busy in Brooklyn already know this is a must-have cookbook for kosher kitchens, but it's also a breath of fresh air for cooks looking for big flavors and a fun voice.--Sarah Tansley

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Introduction It was January 19, 2011, when I took up yet another hobby, a humble blog named Busy in Brooklyn , to add to my hodgepodge of avocations. I'd been dillydallying in the arts for years--from scrapbooking to knitting, photography to calligraphy, I had tried them all. With three young children at home, it was time to leave my job as a web designer, but I needed an outlet for my creative energy. I had started sharing some of my birthday cake creations, crochet projects, and simple kosher dinners on Facebook, and the feedback was coming in strong: start a blog! So I went in blind, with no expectations, thinking that my blog would go by the way of my other hobbies, another short-lived stint. And here I am, twelve years later, a professional food writer and self-taught photographer lucky enough to travel the world sharing what I am so passionate about: bringing families around the table to celebrate our traditions and Jewish pride through food. What was it about blogging that stuck for me? Well, it certainly wasn't my love of cooking--at least not in the early days. I was one of those newly-marrieds who had never stepped foot in the kitchen, but learning to cook is a rite of passage for a Jewish housewife, so I did what any young bride does--I ordered takeout! Then, on Fridays, when I had to get Shabbat dinner prepped, I'd call my mom and ask for recipes for her traditional gefilte fish, chicken soup, and kugel. Lots and lots of kugel. When I started hosting Shabbat dinners, I realized that cooking didn't have to be a chore. Instead it could be a means for me to express myself creatively. Friends would ooh and aah over my dishes, and it proved the maxim "People eat with their eyes first" to be true. Food started to not seem all that boring anymore--the kitchen became my studio, and my dishes were a blank canvas to explore my artistic side. So I dived in and began binge-watching the Food Network and poring over food blogs and food magazines, and I eventually took a crash course in photography that segued into a full-on kosher culinary school adventure. Before long, that young bride who couldn't cook an egg slowly and steadily learned to hone her skills in the kitchen and behind the camera. Soon after, I started to receive photos of my recipes out of other people's kitchens-- testimony from moms like me who gathered their children around the table for weeknight dinners, messages from novice cooks who baked my challah recipe for the first time for Shabbat, DMs from nonaffiliated Jews celebrating Rosh Hashanah over my brisket recipe--it fueled me and filled me with the greatest sense of purpose. The feelings run deep for me because, when I was thirteen years old, my oldest brother, Ari Halberstam, was killed in a terrorist attack on the Brooklyn Bridge simply for being Jewish. He was a six-foot-tall, blue-eyed, funny, and charming sixteen-year-old, a star on the basketball court, who took so much pride in his Jewishness. Ari was a prankster, and as his younger sister (and the middle child!), I bore the brunt of his many escapades, but he was also fiercely protective and my biggest champion. Finding a path to honor my brother Ari's memory is the greatest gift of my journey. Every Busy in Brooklyn recipe that other families share around a holiday table, every blessing made over one of my kosher creations, and every opportunity to share the love of food, family, and tradition among one another is a means to celebrate what my brother Ari lived and died for. From the depth of my heart, I thank you for giving me the privilege and honor of gracing your holiday tables and for making space for my cookbook on your shelf. Chanie Apfelbaum Excerpted from Totally Kosher: Tradition with a Twist! 150+ Recipes for the Holidays and Every Day: a Cookbook by Chanie Apfelbaum All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.