osem passover

March, 2011

Mulligatawny Soup

Saturday, March 26th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

¼ cup margarine
1 small onion, chopped
2 stalks celery, chopped
4 carrots, chopped
1 tablespoon potato starch
2 teaspoons curry
10 cups chicken broth
1 Granny Smith apple, chopped
1- 2 pounds skinless, boneless chicken breasts, cut into chunks
½ teaspoon black pepper
½ cup nondairy creamer

In a large stockpot, melt margarine over medium-high heat. Add onions, celery and carrots and sauté for about 5 minutes. Whisk in potato starch and curry. Add broth and bring to a boil. Add apple and chicken and reduce heat to simmer. Simmer for about 30 minutes. Stir in pepper and nondairy creamer.

Mozzarella Sticks

Saturday, March 26th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating


1 ½ cups matzo meal, toasted (you can toast matzah farfel and then grind it up)
16 ounces blocked mozzarella cheese, cut into ½ – ¾ inch thick pieces (or cut mozzarella cheese sticks in half)
4 large eggs, beaten
3 cups potato starch
1 ½ cups vegetable oil
4 cups marinara sauce (homemade if possible)

Place the potato starch, eggs and breadcrumbs in separate bowls and put them on the counter in that order. Dip the cheese in the potato starch and coat completely. Then dip the cheese stick into the eggs. Dip them into the matzo crumbs, coating completely. Dip the coated cheese sticks into the egg again and then again into the matzo crumbs. You should have a thickly coated cheese stick. Repeat process with remaining sticks. Cover and freeze until frozen, about two hours or up to two days.

Heat oil n a large frying pan over medium heat. Fry the coated cheese sticks in batches, until golden brown, about two minutes. Serve immediately with homemade or store-bought marinara sauce.

Potato-Yogurt Cakes

Saturday, March 26th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

3 potatoes
2 onions, grated
4 tablespoons margarine
2 tablespoons, chopped dill
½ tablespoon salt
3 tablespoons potato starch
2 eggs
2 cups plain yogurt or vanilla yogurt

Peel, slice and cook the potatoes in boiling for about 20 minutes. Drain water.

Heat the margarine in a sauté pan and cook the onions until golden.

Mash the potatoes and mix with all the remaining ingredients. Make sure the margarine in which the onions were sautéed is incorporated in the mixture.

Grease a 12- muffin tin and heat in a preheated oven for 5 minutes.

Divide the potato mixture between the muffin cups and bake at 325° for 45 minutes or until golden brown.

Mesclun Salad with Lemon Honey Vinaigrette

Saturday, March 26th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating


¼ cup white wine vinegar
3 tablespoons honey
1 teaspoon kosher for Passover mustard (optional)
½ teaspoon kosher salt
2/3 cup olive oil
Juice of 1 lemon
6 cups Mesclun salad greens, or lettuce of your choice
3 scallions, sliced
1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved
¼ cup craisins
¼ cup pine nuts, toasted

For the Vinaigrette:

Combine the vinegar, honey, salt, mustard, and lemon juice in a container. Seal and shake. Whisk in the he olive oil to emulsify (thicken) the dressing.

For the Salad:

Mix ingredients together. Toss with the dressing and serve.

A Little Known Best Kept Secret… How I Cook Kosher for Passover Recipes without a Passover Kitchen

Friday, March 25th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

Many articles are published this time of year regarding the pre-preparation time for Passover. They focus mainly on cleaning the house, and possibly buying ingredients for your Passover recipes. But it’s rare to find any practical advice for someone who wishes to cook their Kosher for Passover foods well in advance of the holiday. In this special guest blog, Rivka Slatkin offers an innovative and time-saving way to start cooking Kosher for Passover recipes, well before kashering your entire kitchen.

I used to think that preparing for Passover in advance meant cleaning every room in the house BUT the Kitchen. For weeks I’d scrub and deep clean and go through everything except the kitchen. Why even bother starting on the kitchen when I still needed it!? Sure it felt great to know that I had completed much of the needed Passover cleaning responsibilities for the entire house but I would always feel that my job was unfinished, like I had a nagging feeling that all of my work was futile because there was no way I could cook until the last minute, until I would eventually turn over the kitchen.

That all changed one particular year when I decided to go on a trip one week before Passover. This was a work trip, just for me, without my family, and perhaps out of guilt- I really racked my brain about how I could leave with a happy conscience one week before Passover. I really didn’t want to leave my husband with turning over of the kitchen and the cooking so I worked hard to get creative with both and justify my departure with most of the Passover work complete.

I guess you could say some good came out of my pre-Passover departure because before I left I had cooked ALL of my main Passover dishes and many of my side dishes for the Seder meals. “What? How?” you may ask. No, I don’t have a Passover kitchen. No, I didn’t turn over 2 weeks in advance. I created a makeshift Passover kitchen and now I do this every year, highly recommending that all of my readers at Jewish-life-organized.com do the same.

If you want to prepare for Passover in advance, (we are now about 4 weeks away and the best time is now,) not only will you want to begin cleaning all of the rooms in your home as well as other performing other tasks related to Passover such as clothes shopping and appointment scheduling, but you’ll also want to cook Passover food.

After all, that’s what you love to do, right?

And you, readers of GourmetKosherCooking.com are SUPER lucky to have the most wonderful access to gourmet Kosher Passover recipes so you are one step ahead of the rest when it comes to planning and eventually serving delicious Passover meals.

If you want to begin cooking Passover food – here’s what you need to do to get started.

1. Go through GKC and select the Passover recipes that you think will work for your family. Pick recipes that are specially designated for Passover, or go ahead and ask the GKC founders how you can convert your favorite GKC recipe into a Kosher for Passover recipe.

2. Next, purchase a crock pot to be strictly used for Passover. If you have the room and $$$, you could purchase a separate Passover oven but you don’t need to. You could really just dedicate 1 crock pot towards Passover and begin cooking meats and poultry in the crock pot.

Your browser may not support display of this image. I know crock pots tend to get a bad reputation when it comes to flavors and “cholent”esque meals, but if you watch the amount of time your food is spending in the crock pot and you purchase one that is not going to merge flavors meant to be kept separate into one big “mush“, you’ll be fine. Here’s one that I personally use and find it to be just what I need: Click here to find out more about my Hamilton Beach 6 Quart Crockpot.

Think of your crock pot only as an alternate heat/cooking source and don’t feel as if you are sacrificing your typically gourmet meal preparation. Take your favorite Gourmetkoshercooking.com recipes and simply prepare them and cook them as you would in the oven, keeping an eye on how long the food is cooking for. You’ll also need a Passover cutting board and stash of Kosher for Passover spices and a knife.

Your browser may not support display of this image. If you really can’t get over the idea of using a crock pot for cooking Passover meals, if you have a wall outlet for your makeshift Passover kitchen, you may also use a separate burner or range for cooking Passover recipes in advance. Follow this link to purchase your own small range for Passover cooking.

3. Prepare a work surface, sink, and pantry area. In your makeshift Passover kitchen, you’ll need 2 more items: a table and a sink. Even in the most dungeon-like of laundry rooms, you’ll have at least a laundry sink to work with! All that is left to put into your makeshift kitchen is a folding table and perhaps a cabinet or shelf to store Passover non-perishables.

That’s it! Your Passover kitchen is ready to be used so all you have left to do is select your recipes and go shopping! I know that for some of you, creating a mini Passover kitchen weeks before Passover is going to be tremendously helpful J

I hope you find this tip as useful as my readers do and I can’t wait to hear how successful your Passover preparation is this year!

Rivka Slatkin is the founder of Jewish-life-organized.com, a website dedicated to creating Confident, Capable, and Happy Jewish Homemakers. She is currently working on a *NEW* gadget designed to make Passover meal planning, grocery shopping, and cooking simple and fun! Test drive the new gadget today!

Shredded Beef Brisket

Friday, March 25th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating


6 pounds beef brisket, cut in 1½ inch squares
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
¾ cup oil
1 carrot, peeled and chopped
1 whole leek, trimmed, washed and diced
1 celery stalk, diced
2 tablespoons minced garlic
1 onion, chopped
2 cups Cabarnet Sauvignon wine
12 cups beef stock
1 bay leaf
2 tablespoons dried thyme
½ cup Cognac, or other kosher for Passover liquor

Season the meat with salt and pepper. Heat half of the oil in a skillet. Add the meat and cook over medium-high heat until browned on all sides. Remove the meat and set aside.

Add the remaining oil to the same skillet, lower heat to medium and lightly brown the carrot, leek, celery, garlic and onion. Remove the vegetables and add 1/3 cup of the red wine to deglaze the pan.

Place the meat, vegetables, and deglazed juices in a stockpot. Add the remaining ingredients with the exception of 2 tablespoons of Cognac. Add salt and pepper to taste. Bring to a simmer, cover and cook until the meat is tender, about 2 hours.

Remove the meat and, using a fork, split apart into shreds. While doing this, allow the sauce to reduce over low heat, uncovered, until thick enough to coat a spoon. Adjust the seasoning and return the shredded meat to the sauce. You can do this much a day or so ahead. When ready to serve, reheat if necessary.

Add the remaining Cognac and re-warm. Serve mounded up on a platter.

Jean-Georges Molten Chocolate Cakes

Friday, March 25th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

By Jean-Georges Vongerichten and Mark Bittman

Makes 8

Here is some cool trivia. These cakes were supposedly created when Jean-Georges was creating a new dessert recipe and pulled them out of the oven precipitately. When he cut into it one, instead of the dense crumb he expected, a center of molten chocolate oozed out, and a classic was born.

1 cup unsalted margarine, plus more to grease the molds
8 ounces bittersweet chocolate, preferably good quality
4 eggs
4 egg yolks
1/2 cup sugar
4 teaspoons potato starch, plus more for dusting

In the top of a double boiler set over simmering water, heat the margarine and chocolate together until the chocolate is almost completely melted. While that’s heating, beat together the eggs, yolks, and sugar with a whisk or electric beater until light and thick.
Beat together the melted chocolate and margarine (it should be quite warm). Pour in the egg mixture, and then quickly beat in the potato starch, just until combined.
Grease and lightly dust the ramekins or molds with potato starch (use eight 4-ounce molds, custard cups, or ramekins). Tap out the excess potato starch, then grease and dust them again. Divide the batter among the molds. (At this point you can refrigerate the desserts until you are ready to eat, for up to several hours; bring them back to room temperature before baking.)
Preheat the oven to 450 degrees. Bake the molds on a tray for 6 to 7 minutes; the center will still be quite soft, but the sides will be set.
Invert each mold onto a plate and let sit for about 10 seconds. Unmold by lifting up one corner of the mold; the cake will fall out onto the plate. Serve immediately with pareve ice cream or pareve whipped cream.

Meat Tzimmes with Knaidlach

Friday, March 25th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

This is a special treat that I make only at Passover time.

2 tablespoons oil
2 pounds beef stew meat (boneless chuck, American cholent meat – butchers have different names for it!)
1 onion, chopped
4 cups beef broth (or 4 cups water plus 3 tablespoons beef soup powder)
½ cup brown sugar
8 carrots, peeled and chopped
½ teaspoon pepper

Knaidlach:
¼ cup oil
1 cup grated onion
4 eggs
½ cup chicken broth
¾ cup matzah meal

Heat oil in a large Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add beef and brown on all sides. Add onion and sauté for a few minutes. Add broth and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for about 1 hour. Stir in brown sugar, carrots and pepper and simmer for an additional 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 325 degrees and prepare the knaidlach. Heat oil in a medium saucepan over medium heat. Add onion and sauté until soft. Cool. In a medium-sized bowl, beat the eggs until fluffy. Stir in cooled onion in oil and broth. Whisk in matzah meal until thoroughly combined. Uncover pot and drop by large spoonfuls (from 2 tablespoons up to ¼ cup) on top of tzimmes. Cover pot and bake in oven for an additional 45 minutes.

Wine List with Sugar and Mevushal

Thursday, March 24th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

click for larger view

Frogs Here Frogs There…

Thursday, March 24th, 2011 Print This Post Print This Post USer rating

Frogs are jumping all over the Passover table. These two frogs are so much fun and the perfect “kitsch” at every seder. Each green frog is handblown and made in Murano, Italy. The wine stopper fits any standard wine bottle and the plate measures 5 inches in diameter. We use it for salt, truffles, nuts, or for extra charoses.


Bottle Stopper $15 shipping $6.95
{SOLD OUT}


Frog Plate $24 shipping $10.95
{SOLD OUT}

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