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Let's Eat

Jewish Food and Faith

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
The food that Jewish people eat is part of our connection to our faith, culture, and history. Not only is Jewish food comforting and delicious, it's also a link to every facet of Judaism. By learning about and cooking traditional Jewish dishes, we can understand fundamentals such as kashrut, community, and diversity. And Jewish history is so connected to food that one comedian said that the story of Judaism can be condensed into nine words: They tried to kill us. We survived. Let's eat. Let's Eat follows the calendar of Jewish holidays to include food from the many different Jewish communities around the world; in doing so, it brings the values that are the foundation of Judaism into focus. It also covers the way these foods have ended up on the Jewish menu and how Jews, as they wandered through the world, have influenced and been influenced by other nations and cuisines. Including over 40 recipes, this delicious review of the role of food in Jewish life offers a lively history alongside the traditions of
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 6, 2017
      Given the abundance of books on the history of Jewish food and recipes for preparing Jewish cuisine, Stein and Isaacs’s uninspired volume, which surveys traditions from different Jewish cultures for holidays and other celebrations in the Jewish calendar, fails to find a place in the field. The tone is uneven, with serious reflections by Isaacs, a rabbi, on a holiday’s meaning undercut by Stein’s more irreverent approach—she proclaims that Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur partially validate the stereotype that Jews are “neurotic worrywarts,” and trivializes the theme of repentance that is at the heart of both holidays (“We’re called upon to literally beat our breasts as we confess to a pre-written list of sins that we barely understand and have probably not committed”). There are inconsistencies (Sukkot is described as a “rather vague festival” on one page and “one of the most experiential of all the Jewish holidays” on the next), distracting errors (Orthodox Jews are not the only denomination to keep kosher and observe Sabbath prohibitions), and dated references (New York’s Lower East Side is no longer a focal point for Jewish food). Readers interested in the subject will be better-served by Carol Ungar’s Jewish Soul Food or Claudia Roden’s The Book of Jewish Food.

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  • English

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