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Source: getty ImagesJoan Nathan's Moroccan Challah
In her recent cookbook, Quiches, Kugels, and Couscous: My Search for Jewish Cooking in France, renowned Jewish cooking maven, Joan Nathan, dishes up recipes that are festive for the Jewish holidays as well as for every day.
Even armchair cooks will relish this book in which Joan shares photos and the intimate back-stories of many of these French Jewish recipes.
During a recent phone conversation, Joan told me Jewish life in France has become alive again; recent North African arrivals have infused Parisian life with a new Jewishness.
There are kosher grocery shops and bakeries all over Paris. One of Joan's favorites is Florence Kahn's in The Marais. It's not kosher, but it has everything East European. On every one of her trips to Paris, Joan goes there, if nothing else, to enjoy the blend of aromas.
Below, I have adapted three exciting recipes and bits of their stories from Joan's book.
Honey-Coated Baked Chicken
If you read Joan's book, you will see that you can combine this dish with her recipe for preserved lemon. This chicken recipe is from Irene Weil, an American born to Viennese parents. She married a Frenchman and lived in France where she raised her children and acquired a French and Moroccan sense of adventure in her cooking.
Saffron Rice Pilaf (Riz au Safran)
Joan notes in her book, rice, and therefore pilaf, traveled with the Jews to Provence, where many Persian Jewish merchants and scholars settled and lived until the end of the fourteenth century or even later.
Carrot Torte
Joan got this recipe from the late Ruth Moos of Annecy, who, during World War II, briefly posed as a hotel maid, while her husband Rudi hid from the Gestapo among hams and pork sausages in a butcher's smoke house.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees, and grease a 9-inch springform pan with vegetable oil or spray.
What are some of your favorite holiday menus, traditions, recipes?
More recipes and other ideas (including if, like me, you fear death by chothcke) for the holidays: