
My great-grandmother, Sophie, fled Russia at 16. But for the rest of her life, she cooked dishes from the old country, and her grandchildrenâmy dad, his sisters and their cousinsâremember her preparing foods like borscht and schav. âThe great aunts and uncles who came from Russia regarded these as Old World delicacies,â explains my dadâs cousin Paul. âWe kids (who ate in the kitchen while the adults ate in the dining room) found them disgusting.â On Passover, she served homemade gefilte fish, which she would skin, fillet, grind in a meat grinder and then use the bones to make stock. She also served chopped liver, which my Aunt Barb remembers her preparing with a metal hand grinder resting on the countertop, and then mixing with hard-boiled eggs, chopped onions and schmaltz.Â
My relatives still love gefilte fish, but these days they almost always experience it as a dish that comes from a jar. And while my Aunt Barb remembers enjoying Sophieâs handmade chopped liver on matzah, she has never made it herself and concedes that it âmay die off with your generation.â In my family, she is right. âI have heard of chopped liver,â my brother says, âbut I couldnât tell you what it is.â
Younger generationsâ cluelessness is easy fodder for the outraged defenders of beloved Passover dishes. But itâs always been true that, as tastes change and new ingredients proliferate, popular holiday recipes fade into obscurity. When I asked Paula Shoyer, a Jewish cookbook author, about Passover foods that are going out of style, homemade gefilte fish was the first dish that came to mind. The reason: These days, making gefilte fish by handârather than purchasing it in a jar or doctoring up frozen loavesâis seen as a massive undertaking. âPeople think gefilte fish is a big fuss,â Shoyer says. âIt smells up your house, and âWhere am I going to buy the fish? It has to be really fresh.ââ
But while gefilte fish and chopped liver are still widely known, many other dishes have largely disappeared from Ashkenazi Jewish collective consciousness. (Itâs worth noting that these are Ashkenazi holiday staples; Sephardic Jews have different memories of their familyâs food traditions.) In particular, there is a whole class of Passover foods that have gone out of style because theyâre heavy or unhealthy. Take farfel, an egg noodle dish, though the Passover version is made with broken pieces of matzah. For years, farfel was served as a popular side dish, says Shoyer. But these days, modern chefs are more likely to choose a healthier alternative, like quinoa.
Another Passover favorite that has gone MIA is stuffed veal. For centuries, it was a favorite special-occasion dish, particularly in Europe, says Joan Nathan, cookbook author and expert on Jewish cooking. But these days, âveal is out of fashion,â she says. âItâs very, very fatty and people just donât like that.â But health concerns arenât the whole story, and veal is a fitting example of how a collection of cultural forces can take down a popular dish. Soon after the Civil War, because of changes in the meat industry, âbrisket took over,â Nathan says, and it supplanted veal in many American diets. Veal is also expensive, and securing kosher veal can be difficult in some areas. And then there are ethical issues: âItâs something thatâs not correct to eat anymore,â Nathan says. âNobody wants to eat a veal, a young calf. A lot of people will not eat it because they think itâs cruel.â
Another old Passover stalwart is russell, a fermented beet juice, which often serves as a base for borscht. âRussell was eaten in Eastern Europe when there was nothing else around for Passover,â says Nathan. It also required a lot of planning, as it takes four to six weeks to prepare. In the weeks before Passover, Eastern European Jews would place beets âinto large earthenware crocks to ferment,â writes the late Gil Marks in The World of Jewish Cooking. âBy Passover, the mixture had been transformed into russel [sic] (the Slavic word for âbrineâ),â which could be used âto flavor soups, drinks, preserves, horseradish, kugels, and other traditional dishes, while the liquid was used as a vinegar.â The timing makes sense: Beets were one of the few items capable of surviving Eastern European winters, according to Marksâs Encyclopedia of Jewish Food, and by winterâs end, enough remained to provide âa note of brightness and sweetness for the Passover holiday.â
Russell was widespread until the 19th century, when potatoes became a popular alternative. Many Jews from Eastern Europe, like my great-grandmother, brought beet-based recipes with them to America. But these days, Nathan says, âpeople are not so excited about beets anymore, except for maybe in salads.â Thatâs too bad, because fermented foods like russell or pickles are actually quite healthy, providing the probiotics that help us digest rich holiday meals, says Jeffrey Yoskowitz, cofounder of Gefilteria, a Brooklyn-based company aimed at revitalizing Old World Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine. Back in the day, these dishes spoke to this priority, as well as to âhow beautiful it is to think half the year about how to make this one week special.â
Looking through mid-century cookbooks, Nora Rubel, a Jewish studies professor at the University of Rochester, discovered recipes for several Passover desserts, such as chremslach, a fried matzah pancake (or âglorified latkes,â as one of the recipes describes them) and charlotte. A European dish, charlotte is a type of Passover cake, âoften lumped in the same category as a kugel,â although it looks more like a trifle, says Rubel. âThatâs one thing that shows up everywhere that I donât think anyone I know has ever madeâor had.â She has found recipes for matzah charlotte, farfel charlotte, apple charlotte and was particularly intrigued by fruit meringue charlotte, made of matzah farfel, prune or apple juice, lemon juice, grated lemon rind, melted shortening, eggs, salt, sugar, chopped nuts and sliced bananas or apples.
Many other Passover desserts are becoming obsolete simply because tastier alternatives are replacing them. Shoyer is happy to say goodbye to the âcake meal-y cakes and cookies that have that pasty taste. You know what Iâm talking about?â she says. âThat Passover taste.â For many decades, âif you wanted to make a cake for Passover, you were using cake meal and potato starch.â But Shoyer is confident these kinds of Passover dessertsâa category that also includes sponge cakes, Passover brownies, macaroonsâare on their way out.
Today weâre much more aware of ingredients like almond flour, coconut flour and tapioca. This is partly due to the proliferation of tasty gluten-free recipes. While not all gluten-free foods are kosher for Passoverâand not all Passover foods are gluten-freeâthere is a great deal of overlap. âThe gluten-free world has opened up the eyes of the Passover bakers and the Passover cooks to a whole new range of possibilities,â says Shoyer.
Some foods, however, are unlikely to fade without a fight. Perhaps the most controversial Passover paradigm shift? Kugel, a casserole made with eggs, a fat and a starchâusually potatoes or noodles. âI donât think people are making them as much at Passover,â Nathan says. âItâs just too much.â Shoyer agrees, though she often runs into passionate kugel fans. âI get abused sometimes at events where I criticize kugel,â she says. âPeople get very upset.â
But preserving culinary traditions doesnât mean never changing them. âI donât necessarily want to go back to exactly how people were eating in Poland in the 1890s,â says Yoskowitz. At the same time, he hopes Passover cooks will return to preparing dishes from scratch. When we stick to âthe same Manischewitz gefilte fish and the same store-bought foods,â he says, âweâre losing those flavorsâboth metaphorical and actual flavorsâthat make us who we are.â
RECIPE
Matzah Charlotte
Michael Wex, author of Rhapsody in Schmaltz, shares his late friend Libby Sklambergâs recipe on his website.
Ingredients
3 large eggs, separated
4 matzahs
1/2 cup sugar or so (to taste)
1/2 cup raisins
1 tsp. kosher-for-Pesach vanilla
1 tbsp. lemon juice
1 tsp. grated zest
1/4 tsp. salt
1 can Cornstock apples or 3 large fresh applesâpeeled, cored and sliced thin
Topping:
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/4 cup finely chopped nuts
1 tbsp. butter
Mix all together and sprinkle on top of the apple mixture
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees fahrenheit.
2. Beat the egg whites until stiff and set them aside. Break the matzahs into pieces and soak them in hot water for a few minutes. Drain.
3. Add the sugar, egg yolks, raisins, vanilla, lemon and salt. Mix well.
4. Add the apples, folding them in so as not to break the slices. Fold in the beaten egg whites. Pour the mixture into a greased casserole dish.
5. Sprinkle with the topping. Bake for one hour. This dessert may be served warm with whipped cream (for a dairy meal).
Return to Momentâs Passover Resource Guide
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3 thoughts on “Talk of the Table | The Foods of Passovers Past”
Thanks for the passover recipe. Looking forward to making a proper dessert for my family.
Am off to share this
How inevitable, what a loss! I didnât see mention of egg-soup, possibly the most cholesterol-heavy food in creation. Nor of âchrainâ with a guttural âchâ, usually purple, which went with gefilte fish. And by the way, my Mom made the most fabulous gefilte fish ever – there was no filling, and they were the aeriest, largest and lightest I have ever seen. They resembled kneidlach, and on one occasion, the Inevitable error was made, fortunately not at the Seder, but as leftovers. Fortunately saved by chrain!
My mother also made her own Gefilte fish & it was the best ever!! It was a sad day in our house when she stopped doing this:(
My younger brother & I grew up reading the children’s book, “THE CARP IN THE BATHTUB” ( did anyone else read this book?) And very honestly thought it was about our family as what went on in the book mirrored what happened in our our house to a “T”…