Arthur Schwartz's Jewish Home Cooking

Arthur Schwartz's Jewish Home Cooking
Title Arthur Schwartz's Jewish Home Cooking PDF eBook
Author Arthur R. Schwartz
Publisher Random House Digital, Inc.
Total Pages 290
Release 2008
Genre Cooking
ISBN 1580088988

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Presents a collection of recipes for authentic Jewish dishes, including appetizers, soups, side dishes, main dishes, Passover dishes, breads, and desserts.

Arthur Schwartz's New York City Food

Arthur Schwartz's New York City Food
Title Arthur Schwartz's New York City Food PDF eBook
Author Arthur Schwartz
Publisher Harry N. Abrams
Total Pages 0
Release 2008-03-01
Genre Cooking
ISBN 9781584796770

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Arthur Schwartz is the Big Apple’s official foodie-about-town, a fellow who has fork-and-knived his way through the five boroughs. He knows his knish from his kasha, his bok choy from his bruschetta, his falafel from his frittata. And in Arthur Schwartz’s New York City Food, which won the IACP Award for Cookbook of the Year in 2005, he shared his gastronomic expertise, chronicling the city’s culinary history from its Dutch colonial start to its current status as the multicultural food capital of the world. The affordable new paperback edition is chock-full of the same fascinating lore, along with 160 recipes for American classics that either originated or were perfected in New York: Manhattan Clam Chowder, Eggs Benedict, Lindy’s cheesecake. Throughout the book, Schwartz’s text is transporting, taking readers back to Delmonico’s, the Colony, and the Horn & Hardart Automats. Whether revealing how an obscure dish known as Omelet Surprise was transformed into the decidedly chichi dessert Baked Alaska; investigating why some Jewish restaurants came to be known as Roumanian steakhouses; or instructing readers on the way to bake a molten chocolate minicake worthy of Jean-Georges Vongerichten, Arthur Schwartz’s New York City Food is the ideal dining companion.

The Southern Italian Table

The Southern Italian Table
Title The Southern Italian Table PDF eBook
Author Arthur R. Schwartz
Publisher Clarkson Potter
Total Pages 0
Release 2009
Genre Cooking, Italian
ISBN 9780307381347

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An award-winning authority on all things Italian, Schwartz explores the cuisines of Southern Italy with 200 classic recipes, full-color photography, and his own takes on the cultural and culinary landscapes along the way.

Pastrami on Rye

Pastrami on Rye
Title Pastrami on Rye PDF eBook
Author Ted Merwin
Publisher NYU Press
Total Pages 265
Release 2018-10-02
Genre Cooking
ISBN 1479872555

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Winner of the 2015 National Jewish Book Award in Education and Jewish Identity from the Jewish Book Council The history of an iconic food in Jewish American culture For much of the twentieth century, the New York Jewish deli was an iconic institution in both Jewish and American life. As a social space it rivaled—and in some ways surpassed—the synagogue as the primary gathering place for the Jewish community. In popular culture it has been the setting for classics like When Harry Met Sally. And today, after a long period languishing in the trenches of the hopelessly old-fashioned, it is experiencing a nostalgic resurgence. Pastrami on Rye is the first full-length history of the New York Jewish deli. The deli, argues Ted Merwin, reached its full flowering not in the immigrant period, as some might assume, but in the interwar era, when the children of Jewish immigrants celebrated the first flush of their success in America by downing sandwiches and cheesecake in theater district delis. But it was the kosher deli that followed Jews as they settled in the outer boroughs of the city, and that became the most tangible symbol of their continuing desire to maintain a connection to their heritage. Ultimately, upwardly mobile American Jews discarded the deli as they transitioned from outsider to insider status in the middle of the century. Now contemporary Jews are returning the deli to cult status as they seek to reclaim their cultural identities. Richly researched and compellingly told, Pastrami on Rye gives us the surprising story of a quintessential New York institution.

The New York Times Jewish Cookbook

The New York Times Jewish Cookbook
Title The New York Times Jewish Cookbook PDF eBook
Author Linda Amster
Publisher Macmillan
Total Pages 648
Release 2003-09-15
Genre Cooking
ISBN 9780312290931

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Publisher Description

New York Jews and Great Depression

New York Jews and Great Depression
Title New York Jews and Great Depression PDF eBook
Author Beth S. Wenger
Publisher Syracuse University Press
Total Pages 292
Release 1999-10-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780815606178

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Chronicling the experience of New York City's Jewish families during the Great Depression, this work tells the story of a generation of immigrants and their children as they faced an uncertain future in America.

The Gefilte Manifesto

The Gefilte Manifesto
Title The Gefilte Manifesto PDF eBook
Author Jeffrey Yoskowitz
Publisher Macmillan
Total Pages 354
Release 2016-09-13
Genre Cooking
ISBN 1250071380

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Jeffrey Yoskowitz and Liz Alpern are two of the leaders of the movement to revolutionise Ashkenazi cuisine. Together, they co-founded The Gefilteria in 2012, a Brooklyn-grown business that sets out to reimagine Jewish classics while championing Old World slow food techniques. Here in their first-ever cookbook including 100-plus recipes pulled deep from the culinary histories of Eastern Europe and the diaspora community of North America, they draw inspiration from the legacies of Jewish pickle shops, bakeries, appetising shops, dairy restaurants, delicatessens, and holiday kitchens. Tapping into the zeitgeist of rediscovering Old World food traditions like pickling, fermenting, and baking, at the heart of which are the values of resourcefulness and seasonality, The Gefilte Manifesto encourages anyone and everyone to incorporate healthy and vital Ashkenazi recipes into their everyday repertoire.