Jewish Recipes

165 recipes found

Vegan Latkes
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Dec 20, 2024

Vegan Latkes

You don’t need to use an egg substitute like flax seeds or aquafaba to make excellent vegan latkes. The key is to use flour to bind the potato strands together, then leave the latkes alone in the pan as they cook thoroughly on the first side before flipping them. (Too much flipping can cause them to fall apart.) Once the latkes form a golden-brown crust on the first side, carefully turn them over to finish cooking. For the crispiest result, you can add the potato starch lost in squeezing back into the batter (see the Tip for details). It does add an extra step and 15 minutes to the process, but it’s easy and worth it for latkes lovers who live for the crunch.

40m3 dozen latkes
Date and Honey Kugel
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Sep 30, 2024

Date and Honey Kugel

Sweetened with dates and honey, this caramel-scented noodle kugel will be the perfect addition to your Rosh Hashana menu. While many noodle kugels are typically made with sour cream and cottage cheese, this one uses cream cheese and milk in the custard for a creamy and rich result that can easily be made pareve, meaning it uses no meat or dairy products (see Tip).  Toss the chewy noodles with the spiced date and honey custard and jammy chopped dates. Bake until the custard is just set and the noodles develop crispy edges. Serve cold, with a hefty drizzle of honey on top.

1h 10m1 (8-inch-round) kugel (about 8 servings)
Matzo Pizza
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Apr 22, 2024

Matzo Pizza

A staple during Passover, this easy snack combines a crunchy, cracker-like crust and gooey, cheesy topping spiked with optional red-pepper flakes for a fiery bite. Feel free to add your favorite pizza toppings: Olives, anchovies, dried oregano and sliced garlic and onions can all be layered on top of the cheese before baking.

10m2 servings
Chocolate-Hazelnut Schaum Torte
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Apr 16, 2024

Chocolate-Hazelnut Schaum Torte

Ever since I can remember, my mother made a meringue topped with strawberries for Passover dessert, though it always seemed too sweet to me. When visiting my son’s in-laws in Copenhagen, I was so pleased to be served nearly the same meringue as my childhood, but this time studded with roasted hazelnuts and chunks of bittersweet chocolate, cutting its sweetness. Now my family's Passover tradition continues in this updated recipe adapted from my new cookbook, “My Life in Recipes” (Alfred A. Knopf, 2024). It works well throughout the year, especially for gluten-free guests (see Tip if you will be cooking it in a humid environment). You can even make this dish dairy-free by using coconut cream in place of the heavy cream. Excellent for any celebration, this dessert feels quite fancy but involves little effort.

2h 45m8 to 10 servings
Brisket
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Apr 15, 2024

Brisket

For Jewish holidays, especially Passover, when there is a big crowd for dinner, I always make brisket. This recipe was carried down in my mother’s family, but updated a bit by me in my new cookbook “My Life in Recipes” (Alfred A. Knopf, 2024). The secrets to a good brisket are simple: Slowly braise it in ample liquid, and add lots of onions for flavor. The brisket can be eaten straight from the oven, as soon as it’s cooked, but is best prepared in advance to let the flavors blend together. Refrigerating overnight makes it easy to skim and discard the fat that accumulates on the surface of the gravy. You can strain the sauce if you like, but do keep the onions and carrots. Serve this with matzo farfel, egg noodles, potato latkes or kasha varnishkes.

12h 15m8 to 10 servings
Whitefish Salad
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Apr 15, 2024

Whitefish Salad

Whitefish salads are most often drenched in mayonnaise, masking the distinctive smoky, salty flavor of the fish and covering up the crispy celery and onion. In this lighter, fresher salad, included in my new cookbook, “My Life in Recipes” (Alfred A. Knopf, 2024), the celery adds a tiny bit of texture while the herbs complement without overpowering. A minimal amount of mayonnaise adds silkiness as freshly squeezed lemon juice brightens, letting the fish dominate. The only tricky part is to make sure you remove all the bones. Serve this whitefish salad as a dip; a spread for matzo, bread or bagels; or as a topping on leafy greens, cucumber rounds or endive spears.

15mAbout 2 1/4 cups
Cheese Sambousek
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Dec 4, 2023

Cheese Sambousek

These crescent-shaped pocket pastries from Rachel Harary Gindi, a home cook living in Los Angeles are popular in one form or another throughout the Middle East and India. Cooks will find, of course, many variations from all over. This Syrian Jewish version from Aleppo creates the dough using flour and smeed, a fine semolina often also used in Middle Eastern cookies, which is not essential but adds a pleasing texture to the tongue. Some Syrian Jews add several kinds of cheese including feta to the cheese mix. Make this dish your own, as this recipe does with the use of nigella seeds. Topping the sambousek with sesame seeds or (nontraditional) nigella seeds adds a slight complexity to the taste of this mild, homey snack. Though you could certainly brush the tops of the sambousek with water and sprinkle with the seeds, for efficiency you can do as Poopa Dweck, author of “Aromas of Aleppo: The Legendary Cuisine of Syrian Jews” (Ecco, 2007), instructed: “Dip the dough ball or formed sambousek into sesame seeds before baking. The seeds will stick onto the dough.”

1h 30mAbout 48 pastries
Braised Chicken Thighs With Sweet Potatoes and Dates
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Nov 29, 2023

Braised Chicken Thighs With Sweet Potatoes and Dates

This colorful meal is based on tsimmes, the classic Ashkenazi dish of sweet potatoes, carrots and dried fruit (and sometimes meat) typically served on Rosh Hashanah and other Jewish holidays. This version includes boneless, skinless chicken thighs and spices, and lets everything simmer together in a Dutch oven until fragrant and silky. It’s a festive one-pot meal that’s sweet, savory and a little tangy from some orange juice used for braising.

1h 30m6 to 8 servings
Egg and Onion
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Mar 29, 2023

Egg and Onion

Served to start the Sabbath dinner or as a simple breakfast on weekends, this Ashkenazic dish of mashed hard-boiled eggs and ultracaramelized onions feels indulgent in its rich flavor. Lisa Goldberg, a founder of the Monday Morning Cooking Club in Sydney, Australia, shares her grandmother’s Polish Jewish recipe for this beloved, time-honored dish, also called “eier mit tsibeles” in Yiddish. The key to deep, complex flavor is in the onions, which should be cooked slowly until caramelized, with a slightly burned texture. Save the leftover onion-infused oil to add flavor to vegetables or chicken. Serve this as an appetizer, with good bread or matzo, or as breakfast, with bagels or matzo.

30m6 servings
Challah Bread
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Sep 14, 2022

Challah Bread

This challah recipe is ideal for first-time bread bakers, as it contains several checks and tests to indicate exactly when you’re ready to move on to the next step, minimizing the potential for failure. The biggest risk factor is underproofing, especially in a cool environment (the dough is temperature-sensitive), so for a light, silky loaf, make sure you give it sufficient time. If your oven has a proof setting, you can use it to speed up the process considerably. (Watch Claire make and braid this dough on YouTube.)

7h 20m1 large loaf
Childhood Memory Pasta
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Sep 8, 2022

Childhood Memory Pasta

This is recipe reminiscent of my mom, Emily leftover pasta dish. It was always based on the leftovers on hand. It was a great way to use up stale crackers , and assorted cheeses. You can make it your own by incorporating your leftovers.

1h 30mServes 6-8
Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Drizzle
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Mar 30, 2018

Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Drizzle

Super easy, gluten-free, kosher for passover recipe for Coconut Macaroons with Chocolate Drizzle

Makes 18
5-Ingredient Jewish Asian Cabbage Soup
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Apr 20, 2016

5-Ingredient Jewish Asian Cabbage Soup

Tongue in cheek. I had a very small green cabbage in my refrigerator that was begging for some attention. A few weeks ago I made some delicious chicken stock in which I had added a 2-inch nugget of fresh ginger. For months I have been making foxesloveslemons' Korean meatballs and therefore had an ample supply of Gochujang sauce. Armed with these three main ingredients, I made a delicious cabbage soup in a matter of 30 minutes. The cabbage and chicken stock make up the Jewish part of this recipe - the Gochujang sauce and soy sauce the Asian. This is quick, with a spicy and hot undertone balanced by the sweetness of the raisins. This soup makes a great lunch or a good first course.

45mMakes 2 large portions of soup, or 4 adequate portions for a first course
Raspberry Rose Rugelach
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Dec 2, 2015

Raspberry Rose Rugelach

With its garnet-hued raspberry jam filling and fragrant rose sugar topping, this rugelach is a vivid departure from more traditional incarnations. It also uses two different kinds of salt, which provide forthright seasoning and a bare hint of crunch. You can make them up to 5 days ahead, if stored in an airtight container.

4h4 dozen rugelach
Tangy Brisket With Ginger
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Oct 10, 2014

Tangy Brisket With Ginger

Brisket in sweet-and-sour sauce is the Zelig of the kitchen. It takes on the character of whoever cooks it. In the early part of the 20th century, when ''The Settlement Cook Book'' reigned supreme in American Jewish households, recipes for savory briskets of beef with sauerkraut, cabbage or lima beans were the norm. As tastes became more exotic, cranberry or barbecue sauce, root beer, lemonade and even sake worked their way into recipes. Here, Coca-Cola is the secret ingredient, along with ginger.  The result is sublime and the dish only improves if it's cooked a day in advance of serving it. However, you can prepare and serve it the same day, if you'd like, though you may want to use a fat separator to strain the fat from the finished sauce. Several readers commented that the original cooking time and temperature on the recipe (3 hours, including 1 hour uncovered, at 350 degrees) was inaccurate. We've retested and adjusted the recipe, so the brisket now cooks for 5 to 6 hours, covered, at 325 degrees. Please also note that this recipe is not kosher for Passover.

6h 30m12 servings
Carciofi alla Giudia – Roman Jewish-Style Artichokes
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Apr 26, 2014

Carciofi alla Giudia – Roman Jewish-Style Artichokes

In this Carciofi alla Giudia recipe, the trick to getting the combination of crisp leaves – nutty and golden – and a tender interior comes from frying twice.

Serves 4
Hazelnut Citrus Torte
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Apr 9, 2014

Hazelnut Citrus Torte

A touch of quinoa flour gives this hazelnut torte an underlying smokiness that makes it more complex than most. It also makes it both gluten-free and kosher for Passover (make sure to select a quinoa flour that's listed as kosher for Passover). But if you can’t find quinoa flour, millet flour will work well, too, as would wheat flour (though of course it would no longer be gluten-free). With a supple, moist crumb, this torte will keep for several days, well-wrapped at room temperature, so feel free to make it ahead. Then serve it with a citrus sorbet or sweet citrus salad and a mound of whipped crème fraîche or mascarpone.

1h8 servings
Chocolate-Covered Matzo
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Apr 5, 2014

Chocolate-Covered Matzo

This is a no-frills, 5-ingredient recipe for classic chocolate-covered matzo. Unlike the store-bought variety, this version does not skimp on the chocolate.

12h 10mServes 10 to 12
Smoked Salmon Chowder
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Feb 17, 2013

Smoked Salmon Chowder

There is a recipe for lox chowder in Mark Russ Federman’s charming memoir of his family's appetizing business on the Lower East Side of Manhattan: “Russ & Daughters: Reflections and Recipes From the House That Herring Built.” I put a version of it into The Times in 2013. The soup tastes best made with the store's smoked salmon trimmings, which offer a lot of fatty, flavorful bits from up around the fish’s collar (and cheap, too!), but a number of test runs using supermarket smoked salmon offered evidence that the soup is still terrific when made outside the five boroughs of New York City, with a fantastic smokiness tempered by the sweet flavors of potato and leek.

1h 10m4 to 6 servings
Classic Potato Latkes
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Nov 30, 2012

Classic Potato Latkes

This recipe is for a classic, unadorned latke; no kohlrabi or cumin here. Serve them hot and make more than you think you need. They go fast.

45mAbout 3 dozen
Joan Nathan’s Matzo Ball Soup
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Mar 28, 2012

Joan Nathan’s Matzo Ball Soup

For children (and arguably most adults), the most welcome Passover dish is chicken soup with matzo balls. My matzo balls, neither heavy as lead nor light as a feather, are al dente, infused with fresh ginger and nutmeg. I like to freeze them, and the soup, in advance.

4h 15mAbout 15 matzo balls
Alice Medrich's New Classic Coconut Macaroons
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Mar 23, 2012

Alice Medrich's New Classic Coconut Macaroons

This Classic Coconut Macaroon recipe calls for those wide, sloping unsweetened coconut shavings, also called coconut chips, sold at health food stores nowadays.

1h 20mMakes about 22 cookies
Fairly Classic Gefilte Fish
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Mar 27, 1996

Fairly Classic Gefilte Fish

3h 45m24 pieces, about 12 servings
Baked Gefilte Fish
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Mar 31, 1993

Baked Gefilte Fish

1h 30m12 servings