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I need some Passover help

boxes of matzo for passoverPassover, the holiday that lasts for a week and requires that observant Jews give up any leavened bread/grain product for the duration, starts this Saturday. My extended family isn't particularly observant, so while we're having a Seder dinner (the traditional Passover meal that includes a lengthy service called the Haggadah) we're cutting the Haggadah section of the meal down to a manageable five minutes.

The one place where we aren't breaking from tradition is that the actual meal will be Kosher, with no leavened dishes on the table. For the first time ever, I've been assigned a dish to bring (I guess my cousins figure that since I'm nearly 29, I can handle it). They asked me to bring a savory matzo kugel (pudding). I've made noodles kugels and sweet matzo kugels in the past, but I've never made exactly the thing that I've been asked to create.

So Slashfood readers, I need your help. Point me in the direction of your favorite savory matzo kugel recipes! If you have a family recipe that you are willing to share, pop it into the comments section. My family and I thank you!

Filed under: Ingredients, Holidays

School bus as matzo oven

As a veteran of many a barbeque competition, I've seen all kinds of weird cookers ranging from offset smokers made from repurposed propane tanks to contraptions cobbled together from stacks of 50-gallon drums. But I've never seen anything like the device pictured here.

This converted school bus has never seen pound one of pork, largely because it was designed to bake matzos for Passover. It's the invention of Rabbi Aaron Winternitz, leader of Congregation Mivtzar Hatorah in Spring Valley, N.Y. The inside of the bus is one gigantic oven, which Rabbi Winternitz had used to churn out 100 pounds of matzos for each of the past three Passovers.

The rabbi may not get to bake matzos this year because his makeshift bakery was shut down by a local building inspector after a neighbor complained of smoke late last Friday night. If Winternitz provides engineer's plans and switches from using gas to wood he may just be able to fire his contraption up in time for Passover. As any 'cuemaster worth his grease-stained overalls will tell you, wood's the way to go. Gas oven, feh!

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Filed under: Food Oddities, Ingredients, Bakeries

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Cooking Live with Slashfood: Matzo Ball Soup

matzo/matzoh ball soup

My real Jewish friends are off tonight having a "Break Passover" party, a little "celebration" where they're going to indulge in all those foods they couldn't eat for eight days - yeasted breads, cakes, pretty much anything that contains wheat, all of which were replaced during the Passover holiday with matzo.

Since the holiday is over, there might be a lot of leftover matzo. Sure, eating it at three meals for eight days, one might get sick of the hard, cracker-like flatbread, but no one ever gets sick of matzo ball soup. How could they? Matzo ball soup doesn't cause sickness, it cures it. It's known as Jewish penicillin, great for anytime of the year.

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Filed under: Cooking Live with Slashfood, Ingredients, How To, Methods

Food Porn: Caramelized Matzoh Crunch

Looking for a tasty treat to make during Passover? Look no further than David Lebovitz's blog. The blogosphere's favorite chocolatier has posted an easy and delicious-looking recipe for Caramelized Matzoh Crunch topped with - what else - chocolate. Even if you don't normally celebrate Passover, you have surely noticed the influx of crispy matzoh in your local grocery store. It makes an excellent crispy base for these treats, which are topped with a simple toffee layer and coated in melted chocolate and slivered almonds. David offers several potential variations with his recipe, if dark chocolate and almonds aren't your favorite. White chocolate and pistachios, anyone?

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Filed under: Food Porn, On the Blogs, Feast Your Eyes, Ingredients

Preparing for Passover: the Seder dinner

passover seder

We already know that there are a lot of "commandments" that govern the Jewish holiday of Passover, which will be starting tomorrow evening. Many of are strict dietary rules. The first two nights of Passover are the most important because Jews hold a religious service in their homes with friends and family around the dinner table called the Seder. The Seder is a time when the Passover story is told from a book called the haggadah, and explains why the holiday even exists.

The word "seder" means "order," indicating that there is an "order" in which 15 things, or steps, take place. If you didn't figure it out by now, the Seder dinner can take a very long time. There are very detailed steps that include blessings, hand washings, asking of questions and recitals of answers, and storytelling.

Filed under: Ingredients, How To

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