Category Archives: Holidays

Gathering food for the Jewish holiday season in the East Bay

Whole smoked whitefish from the acme smoked fish corporation

Each year I try to purchase a few things that Steve, my husband, would have been eating during certain holidays as a kid.  Since I’m from the same place and have been eating most of that stuff my whole life, I’m happy to do it.

Note that the idea here is to have some traditional Jewish foods available.  I’m not doing anything “official” or Kosher.

Like a broken record, let me again mention Costco.

I know Purim and Passover are around the corner when those #10 cans of Rokeach* gefilte fish show up there.  The canned version may not the best, but it’s OK, and $7.99 for 14 pieces is nothing to kick out of bed.  While “gefilte fish” literally means “filled fish,” nowadays they are large, poached fish balls made from whitefish or pike, matzoh meal and onions.  Years ago, the fish mixture was stuffed into a fish skin before poaching whole.  This allowed people of limited means to enjoy a whole fish on the Sabbath, even if it was stretched with filler.  Gefilte fish is good chilled with a little horseradish, and I always buy an extra can to have on hand to serve during the summer.

Costco had Rokeach hamentashen, too, but they contained high fructose corn syrup, so I passed.  Hamentashen are pastries made with short dough that’s partially folded over fruit filling, and they can be great if made at home or by a neighborhood bakery.

The Richmond, CA, Costco is good for smoked salmon, both farmed and mild, and, wonder of wonders!, whole smoked whitefish from the Acme Smoked Fish Corporation in Brooklyn, NY.  These fish are sold tail, head and all, in shrink wrap, for $6.99 a pound.  This is an incredible bargain, and I’d buy a Costco membership just to keep us flush with reasonably-priced smoked whitefish.  They used to carry Acme’s whitefish salad at $7.99 for a two-pound tub, but, alas, I have not seen it for over a year.  Maybe the nice Costco blog spies will pass along my request to bring the whitefish salad back to Richmond.

Smoked whitefish is salty and rich, and you can mix the flesh with a little good mayo and serve it on bagels.  Alternatively,  cut the whole fish into sections and eat it just like that with rye bread.  Serve the smoked salmon (lox) with some sliced cucumbers, red onion and sour cream on the side if you want to go the non-bagel route.

I like to buy chocolate covered jelly rings and candied fruit slices, too.  I have yet to find these anywhere other than Saul’s Restaurant & Delicatessen (1475 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley), a place I don’t like to go .  I find them significantly overpriced – to the point of being laughable.  Their whitefish salad has celery and costs $15.75 a pound, and the sandwiches are skimpy for the price.  Whole smoked whitefish is $18.00 a pound – which is insane.  This is what happens when there’s no competition.  While I prefer to give my business to a local place, moral indignation prevents me from doing so here.

I always have high hopes for Cost Plus World Market in terms of the jelly rings and fruit slices, but no luck so far.  (That reminds me to get over there to buy what I can of the Cadbury chocolate before Kraft is involved in its production!)

There is no reason to buy cooked brisket, another popular food item this time of year.  Brisket is a primal cut of beef from the forequarter just below the chuck.  Many supermarkets have trimmed, whole briskets shrink-wrapped, and they run about 7 pounds.  Make sure you get one with the fat cap intact.  A good place to purchase brisket in the SF Bay Area is Smart & Final.  A long, boneless, flat, tough cut, it needs to be cooked for some time, after which it’ll be tender and flavorful.  Just rub with Kosher salt and pepper and roast (at a low temperature) or braise with aromatics and then slice against the grain after resting.  If you roast it, add some liquid to the pan and replenish it as it evaporates.  Whatever  your method, place it in your pan fat side up so the fat can run through and tenderize the meat during the cooking process.  Serve with potatoes or slice and pile high on good rye bread while warm.  Provide good mustard and horseradish.

I also make a small batch of chopped chicken liver, which Steve loves, having childhood memories of chopping the livers with a mezzaluna for his mother.  There are a million recipes for this on the Web, but the lowdown is that you’ll need rendered chicken fat for any reputable recipe.  This is why I tell you to freeze the bits of chicken fat you trim from whole chickens and thighs.  See my previous post about the chicken fat.  You’ll need chicken livers, of course, which should be trimmed of connective tissue, which feels like string; use kitchen shears or a paring knife against a cutting board.  Also, some finely chopped onion, hard-boiled egg that has been chopped, and salt and pepper.  This is bare-bones but very good, and I’ll give you the process, if not a full recipe:

Saute the livers in some rendered chicken fat until just done and set aside.  Do not overcook them!  Saute the onions in the same pan.  Chop the livers.  Put chopped livers, egg, onion, salt and pepper in a bowl and mix with enough extra hot rendered chicken fat to wind up with a moist spread.  Your ratio will be something like 1/2 cup of rendered chicken fat to each pound and a quarter of livers.  One egg and a very small yellow onion will be fine if you make the base quantity of livers.  Feel free to process the mass, but no need, really, unless you want it smooth.

I promise to make my own gefilte fish next year, so if you have a good recipe, please email it to me.

*In case you didn’t know this, Manischewitz owns numerous brands, including Rokeach, Mother’s, Goodman’s and Mrs. Adler’s, so these names don’t mean what they used to.

gefilte fish 2010

Whole Acme smoked whitefish at Costco for the holiday

Just a quick note about my having seen and purchased whole smoked whitefish at the Richmond, California, Costco the other day.  My guess is that they are carrying this for Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year.   Recall that this Costco carried Acme Smoked Fish Corporation’s whole smoked whitefish and smoked whitefish salad for a couple of years, and then both products disappeared all of a sudden a few months ago, to my disappointment.  I wrote them a couple of cards about this, begging them to bring back the whitefish salad, at least, and to provide samples to shoppers because most people around here have no idea what this is and how good it tastes.

I was happy to see the whole whitefish, since I can make whitefish salad from it, but I am asking the people who monitor blogs on behalf of Costco (come on – you know you do this – there are numerous indicators) to ask the Richmond branch to bring back both products for the months of December and January.  Please.  I beg you.  Have a heart for this ex-New Yorker.

Now we can ring in 5770 in style!

Happy Christmas 2008!

Prime rib roast for Christmas 2008

Prime rib roast for Christmas 2008

Happy Christmas to everyone!  Here are a couple photos of portions of our Christmas dinner.  We made prime rib with the usual suspects, like creamed spinach and a large Yorkshire pudding, which Matthew snapped while it was still in the oven.  Once New Year’s Eve is over we’ll be eating lots of chicken breast to balance things out a bit.

A large Yorkshire pudding in the oven

A large Yorkshire pudding in the oven

Merry Christmas Eve 2008!

berry the akita in front of a christmas tree in 2008

The most wonderful day of the year, Christmas Eve, and the weather outside was rainy, which is the best you can do in these parts.  Matthew, Mutti and I went to Nation’s to have a quick bite before going off to buy bread at Acme.  Acme was not an option, however, given the line of 50 people and rain nipping down smartly by that point.  We decided to buy slightly lame bread at Safeway, but even that was a drag given the traffic and lack of visibility.  Well, good sourdough bread is not something one can buy in advance, so what can you do but brave the obstacles?  Matt and Mutti came out of Safeway with an armful of Semifreddi’s baguettes, thank goodness, though we were hemmed into our parking spot for a good 15 minutes after being buckled in.  Once back home, we nested and tuned in to the yule log while waiting for Steven to come home from work so we could all watch Scrooge, the 1951 version of A Christmas Carol, starring Alastair Sim, the finest movie version of the book, as far as I’m concerned, with most of the dialogue having been exported to the screenplay verbatim. 

Delice de Borgogne

Delice de Bourgogne

After the movie it was time to tuck into all the German goodies from Karl Ehmer and the various cheeses, like Delice de Bourgogne and Cambozola.  Finally – presents!  Steve scored The Alfred Hitchcock Presents Companion, by Martin Grams Jr. & Patrik Wikstrom, which really got a rise out of him.  He also got The Twilight Zone: Unlocking the Door to a Television Classic, also by Grams (he obviously needs to get a life – like the rest of us obsessed with these shows).  Matt was happy with The Celluloid Closet DVD and the other gay-themed items he received.  My take included two books by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich, the Istrian who started out working in Christopher Walken’s parents’ bakery in Astoria, Queens, before founding her cooking empire, and a mini-box set of Stax recordings.  Berry had a good night until I dressed him up as the Christmas dog.  For some reason this really pissed him off this year and he was so nasty I was forced to take off his bells.  I like the demonic look in his eyes in the photo above, so I didn’t do any correction.

Food from QVC and HSN

Mrs. Prindable's candy apples

Mrs. Prindable's candy apples

Like other cooking-obsessed people, I’m easily lured by certain kinds of marketing.  When I’m home by myself and have a bite of lunch I sometimes sit in the living room and watch a little TV.  If the shopping channels happen to be hawking food-related stuff I’ll tune in.  Over the past couple of years I have been tempted to order a few things that looked good to me, namely David’s crumb cakes, Kim & Scott’s pretzels and Mrs. Prindable’s apples.  The crumb cakes have to do with my love of New York-style crumb cake, with its 3 to 1 topping-to-cake ratio, and my 1980’s obsession with David’s ice cream, which Steven and I would have at the David’s shop on Broadway near Astor Place.  The early to mid-80’s were the glory days of high-end retail cookies as well as my relationship with Steven.  He lived in the East Village and I in Astoria, and we spent our evenings after dinner walking around lower Manhattan, often stopping for a snack we could carry with us.  I don’t know why the stuffed pretzels appealed to me – maybe it’s another New York City thing.  Mrs. Prindable’s apples, however, always inspired lust in my heart when they were sliced by the host.  I told myself I would order some of them for the hell of it one day.  Fully aware that many things on TV look better than they are, that I would have to order in volume, and that the shipping and handling costs would be an outrage, I took the plunge.  First off, I purchased a 3 pound David’s crumb cake assortment from HSN for just under $30, including shipping, which included three squares each of regular, apple and triple chocolate in a festive box with tissue paper.  The shipment was prompt and everything arrived in one piece.  To make a long story short, the regular version was by far the best, the apple and chocolate being too sweet for me.  That’s not to say they were not also good, but it’s been three weeks now and we still have a couple cuts of apple and chocolate hanging around.  Next, I visited the QVC site and placed an order for 16 individual-size Mrs. Prindable’s “candy bar assortment” apples for $47, inclusive of shipping.  Granny Smith apples are dipped in an excellent soft caramel and then rolled in candy bar material.  They come individually wrapped and are shipped in a big box lined with foam.  All apples arrived in pristine condition, and I received 4 each of candy-coated milk chocolate (think M&Ms), dark chocolate coconut, white chocolate peanut butter cup and milk chocolate crunch (think Nestlé’s Crunch).  Unfortunately, all but the dark chocolate coconut are barely edible unless you are a 5 year-old, in my opinion, the candy coatings being sickeningly sweet.  Too bad, because the apples are great — nice and tart — and the soft caramel is good.  Maybe the knock-off candy bar coating is made from poor quality chocolate, who knows, but whatever it is, you have been warned.  The dark chocolate coconut is very good, though, and does not suffer from the above-mentioned issues.  Next time I may order the nut variety.  I mean, what can you do to a plain nut?  Also from QVC came a 16-piece set of mozzarella-stuffed pretzels from Kim & Scott’s for $47 , including shipping.  Oh, man, these are good.  You are dealing with a high-quality hand-rolled pretzel with nothing but good, solid, ingredients involved.  Then they add stuffing, which, in this case, is like a cross between mozzarella and cream cheese.  This would be my only gripe – that the mozzarella is processed.  However, this is minor, as these pretzels are fab.  They are packed individually in an attractive wrapper that shows the product to full potential.  The other bonus here is that they are heated directly in the wrapper, which makes them super-convenient.  Take my advice and avoid the microwave, though, for the best result.  These were so popular at my house that I was not able to find one in the freezer to photograph for the website a week after they came in.

A piece of David's apple coffee cake

A piece of David's apple coffee cake