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Passover 2011: More Passover Recipes, More Giveaways, More Gourmet!

Thursday, March 24th, 2011

Wow! Passover is coming in 22 days and GourmetPassoverCooking.com is back! GKC doesn’t want to make you nervous, just help you get organized and ready.  Over 50 new Passover recipes are ready for you now, plus all your favorites from last year in our 2010 Passover recipe index.  Each week we will add new Passover recipes, a new giveaway (Yes! Each week a new one), Kosher for Passover wine selections, great products that are perfect for your Passover seder meals and table, and of course the GKC restaurant recipes are on the way too, so stay tuned. Don’t forget to send us your favorite Passover recipes to share with everyone.  And in the markets, support our sponsors: Royal Wine Corp, Osem Foods, and Mehadrin.

Remember, Passover can be a fun time to experiment with new recipes and techniques. My kids loved these last year and already asked if I would make them again.

Super Sweet Maple-Nut Pralines

Gearing up for Pesach, Part II: Preparing the Kitchen

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

In this second installment of “Gearing up for Pesach”, we’re providing a few tips on specifically how to prepare your kitchen and pantry for the joys of kosher for Passover recipes and cooking. Again, these tips are meant for advance use, not the final days. If you wait to do these things until the Seder meal is upon you, you are guaranteed to feel stressed and frustrated year after year.

1. As we mentioned in Part I, it is important to prepare all your cooking utensils in advance of the holiday. This means checking to make sure you have all your pots and pans, plates, cutlery, and other essentials ready to go, as well as bringing all your new items to the mikveh well in advance of Passover.

2. Many ingredients we use all year round are also kosher for Passover. Take some time to do an inventory of your kitchen, and separate out all your unopened kosher for Passover foods, such as canned goods and unopened beverages. This way, you won’t re-buy the products you already have on-hand.

3. If you don’t already have the following essential Kosher for Passover ingredients on-hand, start stocking up on them early. They will be one less thing to worry about when you are doing last-minute shopping:
1. Matzah meal
2. Matzah Cake meal
3. Potato starch
4. Spices, Salt, Pepper, & Sugar
5. Wine & Grape Juice (both for cooking and drinking)
6. Semisweet chocolate

4. Start getting your Passover menu ready well in advance. This means both for the seder meals, and for all the other Passover meals you will have over the course of the holiday. Even if you don’t normally plan out your week’s worth of lunches and dinners, it will be very helpful to have a plan before the holiday begins so that you have one less thing to worry about in the days leading up to it. Collect kosher for Passover recipes together in a single folder from family, friends, old cookbooks, and of course, www.gourmetpassovercooking.com!

Gearing up for Pesach, Part I: Pre-Cleaning

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

While Passover is still a couple of months away, it never hurts to start getting ready early. Many families start thinking about their Passover meals and Passover recipes as early as possible to get a jump start on shopping and stocking up their pantries. When the real preparations begin, such as completely cleaning out the house and starting to prepare your seder meal in earnest, you’ll be glad you thought to get some of the little things out of the way in advance. In this series of blogs on gearing up for Passover, we’ll be providing some tips and ideas on how to think about your Passover menu and ambiance well in advance of the inevitable chaos that ensues around the holiday itself.

First off: some house-cleaning tips.

While this is a Passover recipes website, one cannot ignore the necessity of cleaning the home in as stress-free a way as possible, so as to leave enough time and space to actually prepare the seder meal. In the spirit of stress-free cooking, here are a few quick tips on some ways to keep your home Kosher for Passover well in advance of the holiday itself:

1. Stop allowing ANY food out of the kitchen and dining room at least a month and a half in advance. That includes the car.
2. Once you have banned food in the bedrooms, you can start some of your cleaning in those areas any time before the holiday. Do little things like checking closets and drawers throughout the weeks leading up to Pesach, so you won’t have to worry about that when the holiday arrives.
3. Check out your Pesach supplies, and make sure you are all stocked up on essentials like cooking utensils, new toothbrushes, paper goods, and Yom Tov clothing. These kinds of things should never be left to the last minute, when all you will care about is cooking those delicious Passover meals.
4. If you buy any new cookware, bring it to the Mikveh right away, as it will get very busy as the holiday gets closer.
5. Try using one of those Pesach cleaning schedules that are everywhere in books and on the internet nowadays. Some of them may go a bit overboard, but you can tailor them to your needs. Keeping a good schedule can do wonders for your time-management.

Achieve Your Healthiest Passover Yet

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

By Simone Stromer, M.D., AADP
www.nutritionthroughlife.com

All year round I strive to maintain a balanced diet that is high in fiber and plant-based foods and low in saturated fats and refined, processed ingredients. But Passover is a real challenge when it comes to these universal dietary principles and I’m sure many of you can relate. Lets face it – by the time we eliminate chometz and kitniyot, options for healthy, balanced eating are quite limited and we find ourselves eating a lot of meat, dairy, matzah and potatoes as well as fatty condiments like margarine and mayonnaise. Also when it comes to matzah, you may think you’re just having a light meal, but some typical toppings can be high in fat, processed sugars and calories. Passover is definitely a time that the healthiest of eaters can find balanced and satisfying meals rather challenging for themselves and their families. The good news is that this is totally achievable with the right dietary approach and some careful planning. Here are the most important tips that I have for helping you accomplish this goal:

• Aim for a balance of starchy/carbohydrate foods, green vegetables, and protein-based foods for each meal. Starchy foods include potatoes, matzahs and fruit. Protein-based foods include meat, fish, eggs, dairy products and nuts.

• Limit quantities of processed supermarket products like cookies, cereals, cakes and other deserts. They are often full of artificial ingredients and sugar. Bake your own treats so you can control what goes in.

• Check labels of packaged foods that you purchase in the supermarket. Added sugars and artificial ingredients are common in some kosher for Passover products especially sauces, condiments, cereals, and desserts.

• Consciously increase your fiber intake by eating vegetables for lunch, dinner and snacks, sticking to whole wheat matzah and eating fruit for dessert. SEE ARTICLE ON WHOLE WHEAT MATZAH- PROVIDE LINK

• Experiment with vegetables and plant-based foods that you don’t usually eat. For example, quinoa (ask your rabbi for kosher varieties), yams, purple potatoes, root vegetables, kale, watercress, and bok choy.

• Stick to eating only one or two pieces of matzah per meal. Try to find toppings that are light, natural, healthy, and filling – like tuna fish, organic reduced-fat cheese, avocado, grilled vegetables or fruity jams.

• Eat small amounts of healthy fats like olive oil or avocado for each meal for example. This will help increase satiety so you don’t end up overindulging on matzah or other starchy foods, which can cause blood sugar fluctuations.

• Make delicious vegetable soups that can be eaten as a snack with a piece of matzah.

A Taste of History

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

We invite you to taste a bit of history in every glass of Flegmann Wine. The Flegmann family was in the wine business for generations in the small town of Maad in the Tokay region of Hungary. Our father, Mr. Tibor Flegmann a”h, was born into a legacy of the finest kosher wine enjoyed by the most renowned Hassidic masters as well as the Rothchild Family and Kaiser Franz Joseph.

After the devastation of the Holocaust, our father had a dream to revive the Flegmann Family wine label. Late in his life this became a reality when he looked to the Judean Hills to be the new home for Flegmann Wine. Unfortunately Mr. Tibor Flegmann passed away shortly before the first bottles of Flegmann Wine were introduced. Today we, his children and grandchildren, are following in his footsteps and are committed to producing exceptional wine under our family name.

Our Cabernet Sauvignon was chosen last year by Time Out New York as one of four “Seder-worthy wines” and received a 90 point rating at the Beverage Tasting Institute. The Flegmann Merlot has been very well received by wine connoisseurs and is in very high demand.

We invite you to sample a small taste of history in every glass and make a “L’chaim” to Dovid Ben Moshe who is smiling from above.

Flegmann Wine is distributed by Royal Wines and sold in the finest wine stores.

Blog

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

At GKC for Passover we’ve got more I can’t believe. Its Kosher for Passover. Try these items while they last.



Matzel Toff

Mouth-watering, sweet, crunchy toffee atop crispy matza and then covered in rich chocolate. What could be better on Passover or more indulgent? Matzel Toff is a scrumptious gourmet Toffee-Chocolate-Matza treat, and is available in both pareve and milk chocolate flavors and are kosher for Passover. I would eat it anytime of year though! To purchase or get more information go to www.matzeltoff.com

Zelda’s Chocolate Dipped Brownies and Crunchy Mandelbreit

Fresh, moist and delicious define all the Zelda’s bakery products. How often do you find baked items that could be eaten all year? These Zelda’s treats could be and they won’t last long in your house (or in mine). Try it all, chiffon cake, chocolate-covered marshmallow frogs, brownies, cookies, and candy platters. To purchase go to http://gourmetkoshercooking.theopenskyproject.com/
Use check out code PASSOVER15 for a 15% discount.

Cabot Cheddar Cheese

I can’t believe it, Award-winning Cabot Cheddar cheese is kosher for Passover. It’s white and natural and perfectly sharp and so flavorful. Check out our giveaway and enter to win some. You will be amazed at how delicious cheese can be. For more information go to http://www.cabotcheese.coop/

Bissli

This year Osem made the bissli kosher for Passover and packed in a great 6 pack for kids. Perfect for those day trips. They have no kitniyos, are super crunchy and filled with flavor. Good enough for all year round. All kosher markets nationwide have them while they last. For more information go to www.osemusa.com or comments@osemusa.com

I can’t believe they are kosher for Passover!

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

We love tasting new products and especially enjoy to share them with you. Here are a few new items that we really can’t believe are kosher for Passover. Try them while they last in stores, and let us know what you think!

Kessem Cheese N’Rolls: OMG! These cheesy soft rolls are incredible. They look like chometz, they taste like chometz but they are not! Crispy on the outside and soft and cheesy on the inside, they taste like a melted cheese roll. I dipped mine in a homemade marinara sauce and created a kosher for Passover pizza roll (now my kids are going to be thrilled and actually full this Passover). The bread like texture is made from a manioc starch, which is a derivative of root vegetables and tapioca. The product is available nationwide for Passover and year round. For more information go to www.kessemfoods.com

Osem Passover Mini Mandels: The mini-mandel, or soup crouton, devoured by children and adults year round, has been greatly improved this year by Osem Foods. Passover mini-mandels were a little mushy in the past and the taste was very bland. The new Osem Passover Mini Mandels are crispier, tastier, and crunchier than ever. Made from potato starch, they are light and airy, just like the chometz ones. No kitniyos, and non-gebrokts these are great for everyone. I may buy extra bags and use them after Passover. The product is available nationwide. For more information go to www.osemusa.com or comments@osemusa.com
osemlogominimandel-small

Homemade Marinara Dipping Sauce

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

marinara

10 vine-ripened tomatoes, cut in ½ inch pieces
4 shallots or 1 onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
¼ cup olive oil
½ red pepper, chopped
¼ cup sun-dried tomatoes in oil, chopped
2 teaspoons kosher salt
2 tablespoons red wine
¼ cup fresh basil, chopped

Heat the olive oil over medium-high heat in a sauté pan. Add the onions and cook for 5 minutes. Add the red pepper and cook for 5 more minutes. Add the sun-dried tomatoes, garlic, and fresh tomatoes. Turn down the heat and cook for approximately 20 – 30 minutes until all vegetables are soft and blended. Add the kosher salt and red wine. Turn up the heat and boil the sauce for 2 minutes. Add the basil and turn off the heat and serve as a dipping sauce or add pasta and make into a meal.

This can be made 3 days in advance and kept in the refrigerator.

Blog

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Welcome to gourmetpassovercooking.com, the most comprehensive and exciting online kosher for Passover cookbook. We cannot wait for you to enjoy all the amazing Passover recipes (over 200!), the fabulous chef recipes from restaurants we love, the beautiful table top items on the photographed Passover tables, the special Passover giveaways, and the Passover wine and health articles. If you would like to share your own Passover recipe, we would love to try it and include the recipe in our index with your name on it. Just submit it here. Also, we will be posting Passover questions and ideas in the comments section so go ahead and share your Passover secrets and ask all your holiday questions. Enjoy and Happy Passover to all our GKC readers!

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