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Garlic Latkes with Roasted Pepper Apple Chutney

December 14, 2011 By newkosher

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05f8BMjM-HM&list=UUfbQnMMvRssrokknT-gHEXA&feature=plcp

I have very few traditions. But my new favorite tradition is winning the latke cooking contest at Atlanta Chevre Minyan’s Hanukkah contest. Last year, I scored big with my garlic salted latkes with cardamon fig apple sauce, winning best overall and best condiment. Just goes to show that preserving your own Moroccan lemons does pay off in the end!

This year, I plan on kicking some major you-kn0w-what with a new variation on garlic latkes, this time with a cumin salt blend. The side item? A fire roasted pepper and apple chutney, with nods to both apple sauce and Tex Mex salsa.

Latkes

1 bag shredded potatoes (with water squeezed out)
1 yellow onion chopped fine
around 3 tbsp chopped garlic (or more, to taste)
1/2 cp flour
1 egg
kosher salt
cumin
more oil than you can imagine

Combine egg, flour, potatoes, garlic and onion. Mix well.
Fry in small batches in hot oil. Use a non-stick pan and slotted spatula!
Place on paper towel and lovingly sprinkle with cumin and salt.

Apple Sauce

2 jalapenos
1 small red pepper
1/4 cp lemon juice
1/4 cp brown sugar
3 apples, mixed, and partially peeled
small bunch chopped cilantro
chopped ginger (to taste)

Roast peppers, then place in a paper bag. This will sweat off the skin. After ten minutes, remove from the paper bag and wash.
Chop peppers and onions. Saute in a little bit of oil until onions are soft. Add chopped apple and ginger. Cook until soft. At the last minute, add ginger, brown sugar and lemon juice. Combine until brown sugar is melted.
Place in a covered dish in the fridge. Allow this to sit for at least an hour (ideally, overnight). The longer it sits, the better, as the juices marinade together.
Happy Chanukah!

Filed Under: NewKosher (Recipes) Tagged With: apple chutney, apple sauce, chanukah, chutney, convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darshan yeshiva, hanukkah, latke, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, potato pancake, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, roasted peppers

Hanukkiah: Symbol of Kislev

December 2, 2011 By punktorah

In thinking about Kislev, I went right to the dreidel and the Hanukkiah.  I decided that if I had to pick one, it’s the Hanukkiah (but I may explore the other dreidels later in the month!)  The Hanukkiah is the nine-branched menorah that we light on Hanukkah.  Even though we generally just call it a menorah, not all menorahs are for Hanukkah!  The menorah, which is an ancient symbol of the Jewish people is actually seven branched.

If the menorah is considered  “the most central role of all the sacred vessels, for it is the symbol of light,” and a symbol of spiritual illumination — then it’s safe to assume that this is also the role the Hanukkiah plays.  Hanukkah is a strange holiday because it’s not only post-biblical, but also two holidays smooshed together.  I guess we have a lot of holidays that are two smooshed together, though.  Most commonly Hanukkah is the holiday that celebrates the victory of the Maccabbees over the Greeks, and the “miracle of the oil.”  It’s also a Winter Solstice (Tekufat Tevet) holiday, that acknowledges the darkness of the year and returning of the light.  That’s actually found in ancient midrash, it’s not just some modern “new agey” thing.  It’s even one of the stories I included in the Hanukkah Haggadah!

The lighting of the Hanukkah menorah offers wonderful opportunities for spiritual refreshment and renewal.  This year, toss away the annual debates over whether or not Hanukkah is important or just a reaction to Christmas.  Don’t worry about the ethics of celebrating the victory in a war (and that the Maccabees were total zealots, who probably would have killed many of us too…).  Embrace our own holiday of lights at its root level — light.

What do you want to light up?  What areas of your life, your heart, your soul need light?  Dedicate your entire Hanukkiah to bringing light into an area in your life.  Let each candle represent a step along the way, and watch the light grow over the eight days!  Take this time to rededicate yourself — to whatever you need to rededicate yourself.  Bring back the light in your own life, and rejoice in our very special holiday of lights!

Ketzirah is a Kohenet, Celebrant, and Artist. Her mission is to help others experience the best life possible by connecting with the Divine presence, physical resources, creative expression, and communal ritual experience.

Originally posted here: Hanukkiah: Symbol of Kislev | Peeling a Pomegranate http://www.peelapom.com/wheel-of-the-year/chanukah/hanukkiah-symbol-of-kislev/#ixzz1fPdj3kkP

Filed Under: Chanukah, Community Member Blogs, Judaism & Belief Tagged With: convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darshan yeshiva, hanukkah, ketzirah, kislev, kohenet, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, rosh chodesh

The Proper Response to Darkness

December 1, 2010 By punktorah

By Leon Adato (Edible Torah)

“As long as Hanukkah is studied and remembered, Jews will not surrender to the night. The proper response, as Hanukkah teaches, is not to curse the darkness but to light a candle.”

Irving Greenberg

Much has been written about Hanukkah’s core message and symbols, and I don’t intend in this little blog to try to compete with any of those writings or the great minds that produced them.

I do want to point out that – at least in my time zone – Hanukkah arrives this year just a week shy (and a minute off) of the earliest Shabbat of the year. The day after next, we at EdibleTorah HQ will kindle the Sabbath flames at 4:39pm. Next week Friday will be the shortest for the entire year – with Shabbat starting at 4:38pm.

There is something engaging for me about this – it might be my penchant for all things comic book and sci-fi –  that we will be brightening the darkest days of the year. In my mind, the epic battle will be waged: Hanukkah is able to fight back the forces of darkness  (for at least 18 minutes, as the halacha of Hanukkah requires) for 8 days.

But  on the darkest day of all, Hanukkah will fall, unable to continue the fight. In that moment, it will be the light of Shabbat, not Hanukkah, that will prevail.

“…and I shall shed my light over dark evil.
For the dark things cannot stand the light,”

– from the original Green Lantern oath

Filed Under: Community Member Blogs, Shabbat & Holidays Tagged With: convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darkness, darshan yeshiva, green lantern, hanukkah, Jewish, Jews, Judaism, light, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier

Latkes With Purple Potatoes: An Essay

November 29, 2010 By punktorah

Latkes With Purple Potatoes

by Michael Croland

I’ve been beyond fascinated with colorful vegetables this year. At the Union Square Greenmarket, I’ve purchased purple potatoes, stringbeans, artichokes, bell peppers, okra, asparagus, and cauliflower—in addition to orange and green cauliflower. This obsession extends past the enthusiasm I had as a child for three- or four-color pasta. There is actually a nutritional basis for it, and as Chanukah drew nearer, I was eager to “apply” it to that quintessential potato dish: latkes.

The core principle is that vegetables with colorful flesh and skin tend to be healthier than those with white flesh and skin. In Food Rules: An Eater’s Manifesto, Michael Pollan explained, “The colors of many vegetables reflect the different antioxidant phytochemicals they contain—anthocyanins, polyphenols, flavonoids, carotenoids. Many of these chemicals help protect against chronic diseases, but each in a slightly different way, so the best protection comes from a diet containing as many different phytochemicals as possible.”

I first learned about purple- and blue-flesh potatoes when I attended a presentation by Dr. Michael Greger in 2008. Although the vegan nutritionist touted the antioxidants and other health benefits of colorful produce, in the realm of potatoes, he pushed for orange-flesh sweet potatoes as packing the best punch all-around for one’s health. I’ve never been a big yam fan, so I focused more on the purple and blue potatoes he mentioned in passing. They still seemed better than typical white-flesh potatoes.

While I do not challenge Dr. Greger’s point that yams are best, there have been numerous studies highlighting the health benefits of certain varieties of purple and blue potatoes. A Kansas State University researcher has been in the news of late after finding, “[O]range-fleshed sweet potatoes are high in carotenoids — vitamin A precursors. But the [particular variety of purple potatoes studied] have higher levels of anthocyanins, dietary fiber and vitamins.”

Truth be told, my latkes came out subpar. I do not blame the purple potatoes. With all the work I put into peeling and hand-grating the spuds, I should have looked harder for a vegan latke recipe with better binding qualities in the absence of eggs. But nobody can take away from the purple potatoes’ prettiness!

Then again, if you’re health-conscious, maybe frying potatoes in oil isn’t the best idea anyway.

Filed Under: Rants Tagged With: chanukkah, convert to judaism, convert to judaism online, darshan yeshiva, hanukkah, heebnvegan, michael croland, online conversion, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, vegan hanukkah, vegan latkes

Tevet: The Lesson of Dan

November 21, 2010 By punktorah

Tevet 5771 begins at sundown on December 7th, 2010 and ends at sundown on January 5th, 2011

(cross-posted on PeelAPom)

~This is an excerpt from the Tevet Wheel of the Year Guide for Rosh Chodesh.  
Subscribe for free to receive the entire guide
~

How do we know the difference between good and bad judgment?  How do we know the choices we make are the right ones?  What do we allow to influence us?  What we do allow to blur our vision?  What do we use to clear our eyes, our hearts, and our minds to turn back to the right path? Where do we cross the line between right and wrong, and do the ends justify the means?  These are the questions that the Tribe of Dan, the tribe associated with the month of Tevet (טֵבֵת), asks us.

Dan (דָּן) is the son of Jacob and Rachel, through her handmaiden Bilhah.  He is the full brother of Naphtali.  Some midrash say that Dan is the one who suggested dipping Joseph’s coat in the blood of a goat (the astrological symbol of Tevet – גדי) because he hated him for giving “evil” reports to Jacob about the sons of Bilhah and Zilpah. (Jewish Encyclopedia) Dan is represented, historically, by  two different emblems.  He, and the tribe, are represented by scales because the name “dan” means judgement.  He, and the tribe, are also represented by a snake or serpent because of the blessing from Jacob in Genesis 49:17, which actually contains both the snake (49:17) and judgment (49:16) themes.

Dan shall judge his people, as one of the tribes of Israel. Dan shall be a serpent in the way, a horned snake in the path, that biteth the horse’s heels, so that his rider falleth backward.

דָּן, יָדִין עַמּוֹ–כְּאַחַד, שִׁבְטֵי יִשְׂרָאֵל.יְהִי-דָן נָחָשׁ עֲלֵי-דֶרֶךְ, שְׁפִיפֹן עֲלֵי-אֹרַח–הַנֹּשֵׁךְ, עִקְּבֵי-סוּס, וַיִּפֹּל רֹכְבוֹ, אָחוֹר

When we explore the Tribe of Dan through history and legend we see a mixed story. We see Dan associated with the serpent. We see Oholiab, one of the two master craftsman of the wilderness tabernacle (Ex 31:6-11).  We see Huram-Abi, the master craftsman of Solomon’s Temple (2 Chron 2:12-13 & 4:11-22).  We see Sampson, who is a hugely flawed hero. We see the Northern Tribes that innovated, but then according to the prophets lapsed into idolatry.

But our challenge is to see with clear eyes (עֵינַיִם), not to be turned by the evil eye (עַיִן רָעָה) towards anger (זַעַף).  Is the snake (נָחָשׁ) evil and inherently bad?  Or is the snake set in our path to offer us information and see what choices we make with it?  Is the snake’s role to see what kind of judgement we exercise?  Yes, there was a snake in Eden, but Moses is also instructed by G!d(dess) to create a brass/bronze snake (נְחַשׁ נְחֹשֶׁת) to heal the people in the wilderness from the fiery serpent angels (הַנְּחָשִׁים הַשְּׂרָפִים) set upon them by G!d(dess). (Numbers 21:6-9) Any Israelite who looked upon the brass serpent Moses created were healed.

“The month of Tevet, the month of the tribe of Dan, relates to the growing-up process, from a state of immaturity to a state of maturity. Immaturity is characterized by the “evil eye,” while maturity is characterized by the “good eye.” The tribe of Dan represents the initial state of immaturity in the soul that “grows-up” during the month of Tevet. Dan means “to judge.” Initially, he judges reality and others critically, with severe judgment (the “evil eye”). This is the nature of one who is spiritually immature. Dan is likened to a snake, who bites with the venom of anger. The “evil eye” is the eye of the snake. The rectification of Dan is his engaging in the battle of holy anger against evil anger. Our sages teach us that only one from the soul-root of Dan can spontaneously jump up and kill the evil snake–”one like him, killed him.” Nachash (“snake”) = 358 = Mashiach. The holy power of Dan reflects a spark of Mashiach. In the Zohar we are taught that the commander-in-chief of the army of Mashiach will come from the tribe of Dan. …  Positive anger expresses the deepest care and concern of the soul that reality become good.” (Inner.org)

Now the lesson of Dan begins to become clear.  Moses is instructed by G!d(dess) to create an idol, to make a graven image (פֶסֶל) that represents something of heaven or earth. He does it and is not punished.   On the other hand, King Jeroboam ignores the council of his people and of his own volition decides to create two golden calves for the people to worship, invents new holidays, and installs his own priests — and he is punished (1 Kings 12:1-33).

Oholiab and Huram-abi create ritual objects for religious service, some that seem to cross over into representations of things from heaven or earth – but they are given not just knowledge – but Binah – understanding.  They are blessed.

Understanding comes with maturity. Good judgment comes with maturity. The snake is not evil; its temptation. As children, like Adam and Chava were in Eden, it is easy to be tempted.  But consider this too.  Maybe Chava grew up. Maybe she made a considered decision that it was time to grow up.  Maybe Adam didn’t, “she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.” (Gen 3:12) It is often said that girls mature more rapidly than boys, but even then they may be lacking the understanding (בִּינָה) of experience.  Maybe Chava was mature enough to make a decision for herself, but not mature enough to know that Adam would just eat or understand the implications her decision might have beyond herself.

In Tevet, Dan challenges us to look at the decisions we make for ourselves that impact only us and then the decisions we make that impact others.  Are we mature enough to know the difference?  Do we have just knowledge or do we have understanding?  Are our actions good ones?  If we are angry is it because we are immature and don’t really understand, or is it because we see clearly an injustice in the world that needs to be rectified? Use this month to explore the choices you make in your life.  Tevet and the tribe of Dan take us into the Winter Solstice ( Tefukat Tevet), the darkest of days — which this year will be darker than most because there is also a  total lunar eclipse.

Light born from darkness,
dawn born from night,
hope born from quiet
waiting for the light.

Spring born from winter,
spark struck from sun,
strength born from calling
for the spring to come.

Tonight the dark is waiting,
longing to be gone.
Tonight the earth is turning,
facing toward the dawn. (RK’Jill Hammer)

( Listen to a melody created for this chant by Ketizrah)

Will you find understanding in the darkness or will you find fear and anger?  May you find blessing, strength, wisdom and understanding in the darkening of the days and the knowledge that the light will return.

Want more insights into Tevet?

  • Tevet: Who Frees the Bound
  • Tevet: Seeking and Seeing
  • Hanukkah Seder: A Seder for the 8th Night or Winter Solstice

~This is an excerpt from the Tevet Wheel of the Year Guide for Rosh Chodesh.  
Subscribe for free to receive the entire guide
~

Filed Under: Community Member Blogs, Judaism & Belief, Random (Feelin' Lucky?) Tagged With: chanukkah, convert to judaism, Counterculture, darshan yeshiva, hanukkah, holiday, Jewish, Jews, Judaism, ketzirah, New month, patrick "aleph" beaulier, patrick aleph, punktorah, rabbi beaulier, rabbi patrick aleph beaulier, rosh chodesh, tevet

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