Dayton Daily News

Hanukkah: food and stories

Cheese pastries celebrate tale of Judith.

- By Peggy Wolff

At the culinary heart of Hanukkah (which began at sundown Tuesday) are foods fried in oil to commemorat­e the triumph of the Maccabees, who won back their sacred temple, and the miracle of the oil that burned for eight days.

But there’s another Hanukkah story, not as well-known, that shifts the culinary narrative to a brave woman and her killer cheese. This story from the Book of Judith explains why dairy makes it onto the holiday table.

According to “The Interprete­r’s Dictionary of the Bible,” the Assyrian leader Nebuchadne­zzar sent one of his generals, Holofernes, to destroy the Jews of Bethulia, a town that commanded access to the road to Jerusalem. The plan was to seize the spring at the foot of the mountain, so the Jews would be deprived of their water supply.

When the cisterns in the

town were empty, the people began to lose heart. It seemed better to live as slaves than to die in vain. One woman in town, a beautiful widow named Judith, had another plan.

She left Bethulia, dressed in festival garments to entice any man she might meet, and equipped with wine and food. The Assyrian guards — entranced by Judith’s looks — opened the gates of the city and escorted her up the hill to the enemy camp.

Pleased by her appearance, her beauty and her wit, Holofernes invited Judith to a banquet in his tent. When his officers left him alone with her, the general was so charmed by her that he ate the salty cheese cakes she had prepared, then quenched his thirst with her wine. More cheese cakes, much more wine. Until he fell drunkenly asleep.

And then, Judith pulled out his sword, and cut off his head.

She left the camp without arousing suspicion, her maid carrying the head in a bag. When the threatenin­g army saw their general’s head, they panicked and fled.

Because Judith saved the Jews from a death order, many Jews honor her by eating cheese and dairy dishes: rugelach, blintzes, cheesecake, cheese latkes, even sour cream on potato latkes.

“We used to have a cake that was made out of cheese, like a fried-cheese-type thing,” says chef Laura Frankel, culinary director for Kosher Media Internatio­nal. Until the fried cheese tradition made it to northern and eastern Europe where they fried things in schmaltz (animal fat).

“Obviously, with kosher rules,” Frankel explained, “you can’t fry anything with cheese in schmaltz.” Mixing dairy and meat is banned in Jewish dietary laws. “So they changed the cheese out for potatoes. It was something people ate a lot of, they were filling, they were plentiful.”

This brings us to a shocking revelation. Though the original latkes were cheese latkes, the Ashkenazic Jews (who brought the latke to America) subbed potatoes.

And thus was born the latke that we all love today.

BLINTZ FRENCH TOAST CASSEROLE WITH BLUEBERRY SAUCE

Prep: 30 minutes Cook: 50-60 minutes Makes: 6 to 8 servings.

If you’re a blintz lover but need an easy-to-prepare dish, this recipe shared by cookbook author Marlene Sorosky Gray makes a great choice. Hardly traditiona­l, it combines the flavors of crusty French toast with the creaminess of a cheese blintz. It’s great for a buffet because it stays warm for a long time. Sorosky Gray’s cookbooks have sold over a million copies and have won best book awards from both James Beard and the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Culinary Profession­als. Serve with her blueberry sauce, recipe below, or a store-bought sauce.

12 slices sturdy white or egg bread, sliced, crusts removed

4 large eggs

3 egg whites

1 cup milk, whole or low fat 1/4 cup maple syrup

3/4 cup orange juice 8 ounces cream cheese, regular or low-fat, at room temperatur­e

1 cup ricotta, whole or

low-fat

1 cup small curd cottage

cheese, whole or low-fat 2 large eggs

⅓ cup sugar

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

1. Place bread in a single layer on a rimmed baking sheet.

2. In a large bowl, whisk eggs, egg whites, milk, syrup and orange juice until blended. Pour over bread; turn slices over to coat both sides. Set aside.

3. For the filling, place cream cheese, ricotta and cottage cheese in a food processor or a bowl of an electric mixer; blend until smooth. Mix in eggs, sugar and vanilla.

4. Butter a 9-by-13-inch glass baking dish (or coat with nonstick cooking spray). Arrange 6 slices of bread on the bottom. Spoon filling over and spread evenly. With a spatula, place remaining bread over filling. Cover and refrigerat­e 8 hours or overnight.

5. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Bake French toast until top is golden and casserole is puffed, 50 to 60 minutes. Serve with blueberry sauce or a storebough­t sauce of your choice. Nutrition informatio­n per serving: 528 calories, 22 g fat, 11 g saturated fat, 193 mg cholestero­l, 62 g carbohydra­tes, 26 g sugar, 21 g protein, 711 mg sodium, 2 g fiber

BLUEBERRY SAUCE

Prep: 10 minutes Cook: 8 to 10 minutes Makes: 2 ½ cups sauce 1 pint fresh or frozen

blueberrie­s

1/2 cup sugar

1 teaspoon grated lemon

peel

1/2 teaspoon ground

cinnamon

1/4 teaspoon ground

nutmeg

1/4 cup water

In a medium saucepan, stir all ingredient­s together. Bring to a boil over moderate heat, and cook, stirring often, until sauce thickens slightly and sugar is dissolved, 8 to10 minutes. The sauce will continue to thicken as it cools. Sauce may be covered and refrigerat­ed, up to 2 weeks. Nutrition informatio­n per tablespoon: 14 calories, 0 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholestero­l, 4 g carbohydra­tes, 3 g sugar, 0 g protein, 0 mg sodium, 0 g fiber

MINI RICOTTA LATKES WITH SOUR CHERRY SAUCE

Prep: 20 minutes Cook: 30 minutes Makes: 34 latkes

These are light and delicious for breakfast, snacks or as a selection on a latke buffet bar at a party. Adapted from “The Essential Book of Jewish Festival Cooking: 200 Seasonal Holiday Recipes and Their Traditions” by Phyllis Glazer with Miriam Glazer. For larger latkes, use 3 tablespoon­s batter per piece.

SOUR CHERRY SAUCE: 1 cup canned or bottled tart cherries in syrup (measure without liquid)

1 cup syrup from the can or

bottle

1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 tablespoon water 1 tablespoon cherry liqueur,

optional LATKES:

1 pound whole or part-skim

milk ricotta cheese 4 eggs

6 tablespoon­s flour

1/2 teaspoon baking powder 1 tablespoon walnut oil 2 tablespoon­s sugar,

granulated or turbinado 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1 teaspoon vanilla extract Vegetable oil

1. For the sauce, mix the cherries and syrup in a small saucepan; heat over medium-low heat.

2. In a small bowl, mix the cornstarch and water until smooth. Add to the saucepan; heat, stirring, until the mixture thickens.

3. Stir in the cherry liqueur, if using, cover, and keep warm while preparing the latkes. Sauce may also be prepared in advance and reheated.

4. For the mini latkes, put all of the ingredient­s (except the vegetable oil) in a blender; process until smooth.

5. Heat a small amount of oil in a skillet over mediumhigh heat; drop in batter by heaping tablespoon­s. Flatten them with the back of a spoon to make circles. Cook until lightly brown on the bottoms; flip and cook the other sides. Repeat with remaining batter. Serve immediatel­y, with the sauce. Nutrition informatio­n per latke: 57 calories, 3 g fat, 2 g saturated fat, 29 mg cholestero­l, 4 g carbohydra­tes, 1 g sugar, 2 g protein, 46 mg sodium, 0 g fiber

 ?? ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Judith’s cheese pastries, from “A Treasury of Jewish Holiday Baking” by Marcy Goldman, are filled with cream cheese and farmer cheese and flavored with lemon zest and vanilla.
ABEL URIBE/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Judith’s cheese pastries, from “A Treasury of Jewish Holiday Baking” by Marcy Goldman, are filled with cream cheese and farmer cheese and flavored with lemon zest and vanilla.

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