Cookbook created by quarantine
Isolated by the pandemic, book meant to connect families, friends, communities
PHILADELPHIA — It took a nightmare to make Ellen Zinn’s longtime dream of publishing a cookbook a reality. But “Pots & Pandemic” is not only a collection of recipes, it’s also a memento of a strange and scary year in which making and sharing comfort food has become a new kind of essential work.
Subtitled “Cooking in Quarantine,” the book includes 125 recipes from 75 contributors. Most were submitted by South Jersey home cooks, although outof-state friends and relatives, as well as local restaurants and food stores, also participated. The book offers concise, straightforward instructions for preparing traditional and contemporary American, European, Middle Eastern, and Mediterranean starters, soups, salads, sides, breads, main dishes and desserts.
Oh, those desserts: They roam whole realms of lusciousness, from the familiar (coconut cream pie) to the fanciful (peanut butter lasagna) to the fabulous (cheesecake-stuffed cookies); from Bubbe’s Chocolate Meringues to Grandma
Jackie’s Fruitcake to hummingbird cake. That’s a confection best known in the South; simply skimming its ingredients should be enough to inspire any sweet tooth, regardless of geography.
“Our dessert chapter is called ‘Fattening the Curve’ and it’s longer than any other chapter,” said Marsha Seader, who along with Zinn served as the cookbook’s “executive chefs.” They and other volunteers (“sous chefs”) created “Pots & Pandemic” as a fundraising project for Congregation M’kor Shalom in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. Some of the proceeds also are earmarked for the Betsy & Peter Fischer Food Pantries of the Jewish Family & Children’s Service of Southern New Jersey.
Seader and Zinn said the eightmonths-long effort to compile, edit, illustrate and arrange for professional printing and production of “Pots and Pandemic” by Morris Press Cookbooks helped anchor the early days of being in lockdown at home. Cooks found themselves using and tweaking beloved old recipes; people who usually didn’t cook found themselves falling in love with it. And the project also was something of a family affair, with Seader’s daughter Stephanie Zinn, who’s married to Ellen Zinn’s son, Andrew, playing a key role.
“It was just such a joy to have both my mom and my mother-in-law jump in with both feet and take on this huge endeavor — and perform such a service for the synagogue,” said Stephanie Zinn, a 46-year-old former teacher, now a “professional volunteer” who also serves as M’kor’s vice president.
Early in the pandemic, “when you couldn’t find flour and you couldn’t find anything, all of us were almost obsessed with cooking and baking,” said her mother, 74, a retired job coach whose recipes for sourdough bread and Armenian Wedding Cookies are in “Pots & Pandemic.”
“I am an accomplished home cook. But the only way I was going to do this book was if Marsha were involved.”
Said Seader, 71, a retired event planner: “I’m a very organized person, and Ellen is very good at recruiting restaurants, and Stephanie knows everybody at the temple. So we all kind of took our part and ran with it.”