Showing posts with label hanukkah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hanukkah. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 5, 2023

What the Immigrants Knew

Cranberry Pistachio Cake | recipe developed by Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #dinner



I've been thinking a lot about what's missing in our society today. Well, there's a whole lot missing, like honesty, political representation, a shared vision for this country, integrity, basic morals and values, to name a few. You probably know how I feel about these issues if you read this blog regularly.


But those are more national issues, visible on a macro level. Today I'm thinking more on a micro level, looking at the core of who we were and what we've lost.

And what we've lost is a sense of community. 

We became segregated first by Covid and now the byproduct of the virus, the convenience and options provided by online shopping, the ability many have to work from home, take out delivered to our front door, the lack of any human customer service, now to a great degree provided by online bots. We have become much more isolated, in many ways disconnected from our shared humanity, by the decline in day to day, face to face human interpersonal interaction.

Political, religious, and racial tribalism is fast becoming another nail in our collective societal coffin. 



What the Immigrants Knew | graphic designed by, featured on, and property of Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #MyGraphics #blogging




I was really lucky. I had my great grandmother, Bubbe (Yiddish for grandmother) until I was in my mid-twenties. In one way, I had her longer than that. My mother's cousin, back when Bubbe was in (I think) her 80s, sat her in front of a tape recorder and told her to talk. She told stories from all the way back to her childhoood in Russia, of the pogroms, how her cousins came to be her half siblings, how they came to this country when her half-brother was (falsely) accused of murder. After she was gone, I still had her voice, telling so many fascinating stories that could have been lost.

But, of course, she couldn't possibly imagine that the one story I've been trying to piece together lately was worth mentioning. This one took place after she came to this country, and married Zayde (Yiddish for grandfather), another Russian immigrant, who I never met.

I grew up knowing that for some amount time, they had taken someone into their home. I can't figure out whether or not at that point they'd had all of their 5 children. I do know that at least some of them were there, so they were a family of up to 7, living in a small house in Roxbury, MA in the early 1900s. I also know that even my great uncle, the youngest of them, knew him well (at some point) and spoke of him in later years. I wish I'd asked my uncle then the questions I have now.

Because now it's kind of muddled, the memories of those of us who are two and three generations removed don't completely gel. My mother seems to remember that the man they took in had a drinking problem, my uncle is pretty sure he didn't. What they agree on is that he needed help of some kind and my great grandparents stepped up. My uncle remembers that he was characterized as a friend of the Goldman (the last name assigned to Zayde and some but not all of the family, at Ellis Island) family. Bubbe and Zayde owned a very small corner store/grocery, and apparently he hung out there, even helped out both at the store and at home when he was needed.
 
I don't know what circumstances led to him living with my great grandparents, how long he was there, or even what ultimately happened to him, other than he was part of their lives for longer than he lived in the home.

Bubbe and Zayde were immigrants living in a small house, running a little community store, and trying to get by. They didn't have much. But their friend both gave what he could and accepted what he needed. He was welcome in their home and shared meals at their dinner table. He became family.


Cranberry Pistachio Cake | recipe developed by Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #dinner

Cranberry Pistachio Cake

 

Now, you may be thinking that Jewish Russian immigrants helping each other out in a new country isn't really much of a surprise. But here's where I make my point.

The man who became like family? His name was John Donovan.

Bubbe's and Zayde's inclusion, their camaraderie, their compassion, reached further than their tribe. It encompassed their entire and yes, diverse, community.



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Cranberry Pistachio Cake
                                               ©www.BakingInATornado.com

Ingredients:
1 box white cake mix
1 box (3.4 oz) pistachio pudding mix
1/2 cup oil
1 cup milk
3 eggs
OPT: green food coloring
1/2 cup pistachios, shelled and chopped
18 fresh or frozen cranberries

1/4 cup cranberry juice

1 can (16 oz) cream cheese frosting
6 oz cream cheese, room temperature
1/2 cup powdered sugar
2 TBSP cranberry juice
OPT: red food coloring

Directions:
*Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease and flour three 9-inch cake pans.
*Sift 3 TBSP pudding mix (you want the powder only) and set aside for the frosting. Set aside 9 of the cranberries for decoration. Cut the rest of the cranberries into quarters.
*Beat cake mix, remaining pudding mix, oil, milk, eggs, (and, if desired, a few drops of green food coloring) for 2 minutes. Fold in half of the chopped pistachios. Spread evenly into the prepared pans. Sprinkle 1/3 of the quartered cranberries onto each cake batter. Gently press just barely into the batter.
*Bake for 15 to 20 minutes, until the center of the tops spring back to the touch. Cool for 10 minutes, remove from the pans and cool completely. Place the bottom layer onto a serving plate.
*Using a pastry brush, brush 1/4 cup of the cranberry juice onto each cake layer.
*Beat together the cream cheese frosting, cream cheese, reserved pudding mix, powdered sugar, remaining 2 TBSP cranberry juice, (and, if desired, a few drops of red food coloring). Reserve 1/3 cup of the frosting to a piping bag and refrigerate for decoration.
*Use about 1/4 of the remaining frosting to frost the bottom layer, place the middle layer on top and use about the same amount to frost this layer. Add the top layer, then frost the top and sides with the other half of the frosting. Refrigerate for 20 minutes.
*Decorate the top of the cake with the reserved frosting, remaining cranberries, and remaining chopped pistachios.

Friday, December 1, 2023

The Absence Theory

Brownie Bundt with Cream Cheese Frosting | recipe developed by Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #chocolate

  

I started off writing today's post as a fairy tale. Partly because I wanted to offer some fun light reading this first day of the ultra busy month of December, and partly because fairy tales have morals. And one of the many things we, in this country, seem to have a dwindling supply of, it's morals.

I wrote my first fairy tale on this blog 9 years ago. I called it, Fairy Tale. Original, I know, but it was well recieved with thousands of page views. I've written a few since, including my recent Patience and the Tooth Fairy.  

Now the thing about today's little piece of fiction, as it evolved, is that it doesn't actually have a moral per se, but a lesson learned nonetheless. So, maybe fairy tale adjacent? Well, you decide . . .


Sue had broken up with her boyfriend of six months. It was a difficult break up, mostly because, although she was the one who ended the relationship, she really hadn't seen it coming.

They'd gotten along well, she and Carl, and although it had been too early to be thinking anything permanent, she did have hope at least for the near future. In their mid twenties they were both college educated, starting their careers, and finding a comfortable balance between work, friendships, and dating.

They'd met through a mutual acquaintance, Sue's co- worker knew Carl through her previous job. When she and her co-worker, Eve, met for coffee, Carl happened to walk in and later asked Eve about Sue. Although you can't be too careful these days, Sue liked that someone she knew could sort of vouch for him. She met him for a date.

And they really got along.

But now it was over. He'd lied to her and she ended it with him.


The Absence Theory | graphic designed by, featured on, and property of Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #MyGraphics #blogging



It was a stupid lie, inconsequential really, but for Sue, who always felt that dishonesty was a relationship deal breaker, that made it even worse. If you'll lie about the little things . . .

It had been almost two weeks. Carl wanted to talk about it, explain, but Sue knew that no discussion would make that big red flag disappear. Lies erode trust and she'd lost hers in him. His calls and texts were slowing down, but the hurt was still front and center. 

She been doing the obligatory break-up activities like watching chick flicks in her PJs and eating copious amounts of chocolate. 


Brownie Bundt with Cream Cheese Frosting | recipe developed by Karen of www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #chocolate
Brownie Bundt with Cream Cheese Frosting  


Of course she poured her heart out to her two besties, Kara and Di. They felt that given this specific lie, canceling a date because he was exhausted after a tough week at work and then going out with friends, that Sue should reconsider, at least talk to him. But they also understood how she felt, fiercely supported her.

Although Sue had not joined her friends for drinks, this particular Friday night they'd finally talked her into it. "Come on Sue, there's a new cocktail we've discovered and you need to try it. It's made with Absinthe and champagne. You know you love champagne," Di had said. "And I have a theory I need you to help me prove," Kara added. "I even bet Di $50, we need you to settle it for us."

Sitting at the bar with her closest friends sipping drinks and chatting really was exactly what Sue needed. That drink though, called Death in the Afternoon, was a bit strong. To say the least. With each sip Sue grew more relaxed. And tipsy. It was at this point that her friends brought up Carl, how good he and Sue had been together, how it might be worth it just to hear him out.

And in her current state, Sue started to let her guard down a bit, acknowledging she'd missed him, admitted that maybe it wouldn't hurt to hear what he had to say.

"Hand it over," Kara said to Di, holding out her hand. Di plunked $50 in Kara's hand.

"Oh, the bet," Sue said, "what was that bet anyway, and how did I help you prove it?"

"You proved it by what you just said," Di reluctantly admitted.

"About missing Carl," Sue asked, confused.

"The bet wasn't so much about the result as it was about the vehicle," Kara boasted.

"Huh?" Sue was still confused. "Maybe I've had a bit much to drink, but I'm just not getting it."

"The bet was that," Kara began, with a smirk on her face, "Absinthe makes the heart grow fonder."

P.S. to my readers: Sorry, not sorry.


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Brownie Bundt with Cream Cheese Frosting         
                                                                                      ©www.BakingInATornado.com

Printable Recipe

Ingredients:
1 stick butter
1/2 stick margarine
4 oz unsweetened chocolate
1 - 2 TBSP baking cocoa powder
1 1/2 cups sugar
3/4 tsp vanilla
3 eggs
1 cup flour 
1/ tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
3/4 tsp baking powder

2 oz cream cheese, softened
1 TBSP butter, softened
1/4 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup powdered sugar
1/2 tsp milk

OPT: sanding sugar and/or sugar pearls for decorating

Directions:
*Melt together the butter, margarine, and the chocolate in the microwave at 30 second intervals, until completely smooth when stirred. Set aside.
*Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a bundt pan and "flour" it with the baking cocoa.
*Whisk the sugar and 3/4 tsp vanilla into the melted chocolate. Whisk in the eggs until completely incorporated, then whisk in the flour, salt, baking soda, and baking powder.
*Pour into the prepared pan. Bake for 35 minutes. 
*Gently run a knife around the edges and the post of the bundt pan. Allow to sit for 5 minutes, then flip over onto a serving plate. Cool to room temperature, then refrigerate to cool completely.
*Beat the cream cheese butter, and remaining vanilla until smooth. Carefully beat in the powdered sugar. Finally, beat in the milk, frosting will be thick. Drizzle or pipe onto the brownie. Decorate with sanding sugar and/or sugar pearls. 
*Store, covered, in the refrigerator, bring to room temperature for serving.

Friday, November 4, 2022

Team Desserts: Secret Subject Swap

 

(Rustic) Chocolate Peanut Butter Truffles, a rustic, no bake sweet treat | recipe developed by www.BakingInATornado | #recipe #dessert

 

 

 

Welcome to a Secret Subject Swap. This month 4 brave bloggers picked a secret subject for someone else and were assigned a secret subject to interpret in their own style. Today we are all simultaneously divulging our topics and submitting our posts. Read through mine and at the bottom you’ll find links to all of today’s other Secret Subject participants.



 

 

 

My subject is: Turkey or ham? Why?
It was submitted by: Rena of The Diary of an Alzheimer's Caregiver.

You know what my answer to turkey or ham is? Dessert.
 
Of course I'll get to that, but, since you asked, let's start with the meal. I assume you're talking about Christmas, because Thanksgiving is turkey, always turkey.
 
Coming from a Jewish home, we don't really celebrate Christmas. Well, we do in that we have the ski mountains to ourselves, followed by having the Chinese restaurants to ourselves. Well worth celebrating.
 
But, since I now live in the flat Midwest, have no family (nor ski mountain) nearby, I actually do a big dinner on Christmas day. We're here together, there's a fire in the fireplace, sports on TV, and cocktails flowing. Perfect for a big formal dinner.
 
I have to mention here that although I'm Jewish, we're not kosher. Phew, since our favorite food, a no-no, is lobster. So it's not that we didn't eat a ham sandwich or have pepperoni on our pizza, but I have to admit I don't think my mom ever made a ham. So it's not surprising that I never had either. For many people, well me anyway, we tend to at least start off making the foods we remember from our childhood. Especially when those foods hold traditional family holiday significance.

Over the years though, we've created some of our own traditions as a family. There's a lot I do that's just like my mom did, but some things have evolved. Like, I love my Mom's cornbread and cracker stuffing, but Hubs grew up with sausage stuffing. So on Thanksgiving, I make my version of Mom's cornbread stuffing, Fall Harvest Stuffing. And on Christmas, I make my version of a sausage stuffing. Nothing at all like what Hubs grew up with, but everything's better when you add Grand Marnier, right?

And then there's the ham.
 
When the boys were little, I had a friend (ironically, she was also raised Jewish), who, around holiday time, was looking for a specific brand and type of ham. I know it was spiral sliced, I think it was a honey ham, and I can't remember the brand. Anyway, we did find it, and our family were her guests when she served it. It was really good.
 
The next year I bought one and gave it a try. I heated it low and slow with a glaze I'd come up with, I'm sure it was a typical mustard, maple, orange glaze. We had it for dinner, and then the leftovers went on for miles. I served it, I think over a year's time, in many ways: soups, sandwiches, casseroles, you name it.
 
And as much as we enjoyed it, I haven't thought to do it again.
 
So for the most part, our family tradition is a turkey for Thanksgiving, Crusted Prime Rib (and Latkes, of course) for Hanukkah, another turkey on Christmas day, and an appetizer buffet for New Year's Eve.

But truly, it's all about the desserts. 
 

(Rustic) Chocolate Peanut Butter Truffles, a rustic, no bake sweet treat | recipe developed by www.BakingInATornado | #recipe #dessert
(Rustic) Chocolate Peanut Butter Truffles



My mom is the queen of desserts. Family dinners, extended family holidays, big get togethers, we all brought something of our choosing. But Mom, she was always assigned dessert. 
 
And wow, did she do dessert, and not just one, a whole assortment. There were pies, some fruit, some chocolate, made completely from scratch. And on top of that, there was always a cookie tray, full of dessert bars and all different kinds of cookies. Mom made sure to include everyone's favorites. 

So it shouldn't be any big surprise that, although I put a lot of time and effort into a traditional holiday meal, it's the desserts that have the most meaning for me. It's where I get to show my creativity, touch, as my mom did, on everyone's flavor pairing favorites, and express my own version of "food is love."

Just like mom.
 

 

Secret Subject Swap, a multi-blogger writing challenge | developed and run by www.BakingInATornado.com | #MyGraphics Here are links to all the sites now featuring Secret Subject Swap posts. Sit back, grab a cup, and check them all out. See you there:

The Diary of an Alzheimer’s Caregiver 

Climaxed

Part-time Working Hockey Mom 





Baking In A Tornado signature | www.BakingInATornado.com | #MyGraphics







(Rustic) Chocolate Peanut Butter Truffles        
                                                                                      ©www.BakingInATornado.com

Printable Recipe

Ingredients:
24 sandwich cookies
2 oz cream cheese
1/3 cup Nutella
1 cup creamy peanut butter 
1/4 cup powdered sugar
1 oz chocolate almond bark

2 oz semi sweet chocolate
3 oz chocolate almond bark

36 peanut halves

Directions:
*In a food processor, blend the sandwich cookies, cream cheese, Nutella, peanut butter and powdered sugar until the cookies are broken up and the mixture is grainy.
*Place a piece of plastic wrap flat into the bottom and up the sides of an 8 X 8 pan. Lightly grease the bottom, and press the peant butter mixture firmly into the pan, evening out the top.
*Melt 1 oz chocolate almond bark and spread evenly over the peanut butter mixture in the pan. Refrigerate 1 hour.
*Using the plastic wrap, remove the truffles from the pan. Move to a cutting board, trim off the rounded edges, and cut into 36 squares.
*Place a lightly greased cooking rack onto a piece of wax paper. Arrange the truffle squares, leaving space between each, onto the cooling rack.
*Melt the semisweet chocolate with the remaining chocolate bark. Dollop onto the truffles, top each with a peanut half. Remove the truffles from the cooling rack and place onto parchment paper in the refrigerator. Once set, move to a closed container. Store in the refrigerator.

Monday, December 6, 2021

Life of a Dreidel: Poetry Monday


Candy Cane Crescent Rounds, an easy dessert or snack for chocolate and mint lovers. | recipe developed by www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #dessert




Poetry Monday's once a week.
I bet you know which day.
I don't participate every time,
But today I've come out to play.

My friends assign each week a theme,
Hanukkah's what they chose.
Now it's up to all of us,
to put our thoughts into prose.
 
 
 
Life of a Dreidel | picture taken by, featured on, and property of www.BakingInATornado.com | #blogging #Hanukkah

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Life of a Dreidel
 
Life of a dreidel, it must be
one that's filled with joy.
Work only 8 days a year,
and more than just a toy.
 
Rest with my family all year long,
then for 8 days, on display.
Everyone can hardly wait,
for that Hanukkah game to play. 

Out comes the menorah,
for this festival of lights,
Dinner, of course with latkes,
and special treats on all 8 nights.

 
Candy Cane Crescent Rounds, an easy dessert or snack for chocolate and mint lovers. | recipe developed by www.BakingInATornado.com | #recipe #dessert
Candy Cane Crescent Rounds
 

Then grab your pile of pennies,
or you can use chocolate gelt.
How much you end the game with,
your fate, by me, is dealt.

Now it's my turn, all eyes on me.
I alone will tell you all,
what you need to do this turn.
Will you win? Winner takes all.
 

Life of a Dreidel | picture taken by, featured on, and property of www.BakingInATornado.com | #blogging #Hanukkah


 
Nun means nothing, status quo,
but if I land on shin,
you'll lose a piece of gelt because,
shin means you put one in.
  
Hay's for when I'm generous,
you take half from the pot.
But if I land on gimmel,
take all, you win on the spot!
 
Life of a Dreidel | picture taken by, featured on, and property of www.BakingInATornado.com | #blogging #Hanukkah
 
Wait! A problem I can see,
with spin and spin and spin.
This may not be the life for me,
I'd be too dizzy to see who'd win! 
 
 
 
Poetry Monday | Graphic designed by and property of www.BakingInATornado.com | #poem #poetryWait!
Read more poetry, 
you're not through.
Some talented writers
are in this crew:
 
 

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Candy Cane Crescent Rounds       

                                                       ©www.BakingInATornado.com

Printable Recipe

Ingredients:
4 oz candy canes or starlight mints
1 tube (8oz) refrigerated crescent sheet
1/3 cup mini chocolate chips
 
 Directions:
*Crush the candy canes. Set aside.
*Unroll the crescent sheet onto a piece of plastic wrap. Top with a second sheet. Using a rolling pin, roll the crescent sheet out to about a 10 X 15 rectangle, remove the top piece of plastic wrap.
*Sprinkle the crushed candy canes over the crescent sheet, press in gently. Sprinkle the mini chocolate chips over the top.
*Using the long end, rolled the filled crescent sheet up, as tightly as you can to create about a 15 inch tube. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1/2 hour. 
*Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Cover a baking sheet with parchment paper.
*Remove the rolled crescent sheet from the refrigerator, discard the plastic wrap and slice the dough into about 30 rounds. Place on the prepared baking sheet and bake for 12 minutes. Allow to cool completely on the parchment paper. 
*NOTE: Some of the candy will ooze out while baking. Once the rolls are cooled, you can easily just snap the excess candy off of the edges.