Thursday, August 22, 2013

OLDIES BUT GOODIES FOR ROSH HASHANAH
by Evie Lieb

Tradition is always a major factor in the celebration of holidays, with the food we prepare being no different from any other holiday elements. This month I am sharing two recipes that have gotten a lot of use among members of our family.

Brisket is a favorite for the High Holidays as well as for Pesach and Hanukkah. Being able to prepare it ahead is a boon for Jewish hosts and hostesses who want to serve a delicious special meal and still enjoy time with guests.

During the summer I discovered that the pear cake, a wonderful finale for a meat meal, was the perfect dessert for a young cousin who has severe allergies to dairy products. After having seconds when I served it for dinner, he asked for more at breakfast the next morning! It’s really a great year-round treat since pears are always available. This treat, too can be made well ahead of the time it is served.

GRANDMA JENNIE'S BRISKET

This is our family’s recipe pretty much as my mother gave it to me when Larry and I got married. I’ve handed it down to our daughter, who has in turn shared it with her friends. I like the idea that young people still want to make this traditional dish! It’s good to remember that preparing it ahead of time allows you to brown the meat and onions and then, when the meat and juices have chilled, to remove the accumulated rendered fat after it has hardened. There are no gingersnaps, no onion soup mix, no wine or ketchup—just a few simple ingredients that cook up to a delicious tender centerpiece for your holiday menu. A 3 pound roast will probably feed six people with a number of other dishes in the meal. There is considerable shrinkage in the meat when it’s done. If you want to make a bigger roast, it may take a little longer; just use the tenderness test for doneness


Buy first-cut brisket (the flatter end with less fat). Trim fat from outer side. Heat a large pan very hot and brown the fat side of the meat—even scorch it a little. Turn and brown the other side. Remove from pan.

Slice 2 large onions into the fat remaining in the pan. If meat didn't release enough fat, add a little olive or canola oil). Let brown over high heat, stirring and scraping the bottom of the pan frequently. Make sure the onion get very brown to assure a flavorful gravy.

Return meat to pan atop the onions. Mince 2 cloves garlic and spread over meat. Sprinkle with ½ teaspoon salt. Cover tightly and simmer over low heat. After 1 hour, turn meat over. Turn each hour thereafter until tender at the thickest part. A roast of about 3 pounds will take 3 to 3 ½ hours. Add water only if necessary to keep meat from drying out. (I have never had to do this—there is always an abundance of gravy.)

When meat is tender, remove from gravy and set aside to cool. Taste the gravy and adjust the seasoning. Refrigerate the meat and gravy separately. It will be easy to remove the fat from the chilled gravy, and the cold meat will be easily sliced against the grain. Layer the gravy and the meat slices in a shallow casserole and store in refrigerator, or freeze to use a later date. Reheat, covered, in a 300° to 350° oven.





PEAR DELIGHT CAKE
This is my variation of a cake that originally won a prize in the Pillsbury Bakeoff many years ago. I added the fruit, which makes it richer and also a bit bigger. It’s parve as long as you use vegetable shortening or parve non-stick spray to grease the pan. Be sure to zest the lemon before juicing it—a timesaving approach. Bosc pears are especially good here. I’ve changed to using bottled nectar from the natural foods section of the supermarket after noting that the canned variety had high fructose corn syrup.


1 TBSP baking powder
½ tsp salt
½ tsp baking soda
2 ½ C unbleached all-purpose flour
4 eggs (large or extra large)
¾ C canola oil
1 ½ C granulated sugar
2 tsp lemon extract
5 ½ oz apricot nectar
grated zest of one lemon

2 C pears (approximately 2 pears, peeled, quartered, cored, cut into 8ths and then into small slices)

Sauce:

1 ½ C sifted confectioner’s sugar
½ C fresh-squeezed, strained lemon juice

Preheat oven to 325°. Grease and flour a bundt, tube or 9”x 13” pan or spray all sides with non-stick spray. Unless using a bundt pan, line bottom of pan with parchment paper.

Sift together the baking powder, salt, baking soda and flour and set aside. In bowl of electric mixer combine the eggs, oil and sugar and beat at medium-high speed until very well blended. Add the lemon extract, zest and apricot nectar. On low speed add the sifted dry ingredients and mix just until incorporated evenly. Gently fold in the pear pieces by hand.

Pour batter into prepared pan, level the top surface and bake 40 to 50 minutes or until golden brown and a tester comes out clean.

While cake bakes, combine the confectioner’s sugar and lemon juice for the sauce. (If you do this in a 2-cup or larger glass measuring cup, you can dispense the sauce easily from this cup.)

When the cake is done, remove from oven and prick top all over with a wood skewer or a fork with narrow tines. Slowly pour or spoon half of the prepared sauce evenly over the hot cake, giving it time to soak in to the surface. After 10 minutes invert the cake onto a cake board or plate and carefully spoon or brush the remaining sauce over the top and sides of the cake. Allow to cool completely before serving. Cake can be stored, covered, for up to 4 days in the refrigerator, or frozen for a couple of weeks. Serve at room temperature or chilled according to your preference.

This is delicious as is, but you might want to gild the lily and add a drizzle of raspberry sauce. If you do not require a parve dessert, ice cream, whipped cream, or chocolate sauce would be—as our grandchildren would say—awesome.





Saturday, July 6, 2013

Michael Mucahy KOH Art Exhibit


Michael Mulcahy Art Exhibit
Reception and Artist Program


Sunday, July 7, 2013 

2:00 PM

KOH Library and Cultural Center






Michael Mulcahy is a self-taught artist who currently resides in Chico, CA. During his youth he traveled extensively in North Africa and after a trip to Israel and Jordan his love for Middle Eastern imagery was reignited. His paintings are acrylic on canvas. The translucent nature of the medium allows the artist to work the paint in luminous layers and capture the energy of the act of painting itself. His work emphasizes line and vivd color, combining a dynamic juxtaposition of bright shades and abstracted reality. Michael's exhibit at the KOH Library and Cultural Center will feature his Hamza and Marabout Series. Please come for Michael's opening reception and program when he will share stories about his artistic journey. Light refreshments will be served.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Mossad-The Greatest Missions of The Israeli Secret Service


Mossad
The Greatest Missions of The Israeli
Secret Service

With Hy Kashenberg



Wednesday, June 26, 2013
7:00 PM
   KOH Library and Cultural Center



On Wednesday, June 26th at 7:00pm the KOH Library and Cultural Center will proudly present Hy Kashenberg who will speak about the history of the Israeli Secret Service and the recent exciting and controversial book, “Mossad: The Greatest Missions of The Israeli Secret Service”, written by Michael Bar-Zohar and Nissim Mishal. The book focuses on the IDF’s 30 greatest operations, such as the Entebbe Raid in 1976, Sabena (the Flight 571 hijacking in 1971), up through the Pillar of Cloud that happened last November. Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense, stated “Mossad reads like a spectacular spy novel, and contains the real stories from one of the world’s premiere intelligence agencies”. Roger Howard feels that “such a blinkered vision, not only helps explain what lies at the heart of the Arab-Israeli dispute, but also makes the book, at best, superficial, lightweight and uncomfortable reading for anyone who, in the current geopolitical climate, wants more than just a collection of spy stories”.





Mossad was formed December 13, 1949 as the Central Institute for Coordination. In March of 1951 it was recognized as an independent central authority to handle overseas covert intelligence tasks. Its motto is “Without guidance do a people fall, and deliverance is a multitude of counselors.” Proverbs XI/14. Mossad’s current director is Tamir Pardo  and the parent agency is the Office of The Prime Minister.

Mr. Kashenberg will reflect on the dissenting reviews on Michael Bar-Zohar and Nissim Mishal’s book and address many of the challenges that face Mossad in today’s changing political world. Israel’s Mossad is a subject that has always been shrouded in mystery and speculation. Hy will help pull back the veil of secrecy and give us a more in-depth look at Israel’s Secret Service, its policies, the people who lead it and those who carry out the missions in the field. At a time of so much tension in the Middle East the study of Mossad comes at a particularly timely moment.
 
 

 




Turkey and The Changing Politics in The Middle East


AIPAC—Pacific Northwest Region presents

Honored Guest Speaker

                                Dr. Soner Cagaptay

                              
The Pacific Northwest Region of AIPAC will bring esteemed historian Dr. Soner Cagaptay to Mosaic Law Congregation and the KOH Library and Cultural Center on Saturday, June 29, 2013 to speak on “Turkey and The Changing Politics in The Middle East”. Dr. Cagaptay will speak briefly in the Mosaic Law Sanctuary before Musaf Service. After Kiddush Luncheon he will elaborate on his topic and entertain questions from the audience in the KOH Library and Cultural Center.

Dr. Soner Cagaptay is a senior fellow and director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “The Washington Institute’s mission is to advance a balanced and realistic understanding of American interests in the Middle East and promote the policies that secure them.”

Dr. Cagaptay has written extensively on U.S. – Turkey relations, Turkish domestic politics and Turkish nationalism. He has published in scholarly journals and major international print media, including Wall Street Journal, Washington Times, Los Angeles Times, International Herald Tribune, Jane's Defense Weekly, and Newsweek Türkiye. He also is a regular columnist for Hürriyet Daily News, Turkey's oldest and most influential English-language paper. He appears regularly on Fox News, CNN, NPR, Voice of America, al-Jazeera, BBC, CNN-Turk, and al-Hurra.


A historian by training, Dr. Cagaptay wrote his doctoral dissertation at Yale University (2003) on Turkish nationalism. Dr. Cagaptay has taught courses at Yale and Princeton on the Middle East, Mediterranean, and Eastern Europe. His spring 2003 course on modern Turkish history was the first offered by Yale in three decades. From 2006-2007, he was Ertegun Professor at Princeton University's Department of Near Eastern Studies. He currently serves as a visiting professor at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service.
 



Dr. Cagaptay is the recipient of numerous honors, grants, and chairs, among them the Smith-Richardson, Mellon, Rice, and Leylan fellowships, as well as the Ertegun chair at Princeton. He also serves as chair of the Turkey Advanced Area Studies Program at the State Department's Foreign Service Institute. . In 2012 he was named an American Turkish Society Young Society Leader.

Please plan to join us for a wonderful opportunity to hear this international expert on Turkey, its close ties with the United States and a new relationship with Israel on Saturday, June 29
th in the KOH Library and Cultural Center starting at 12:45pm. Dr. Cagapty’s presentation will be open to the community.


Thursday, April 4, 2013


 

Ask the Rabbi with Rabbi Taff
 
Saturday, April 6, 2013
12:45 pm
KOH Library and Cultural Center
2300 Sierra Boulevard, Sacramento, CA  95825
 
 
Join Rabbi Taff at the KOH Library and Cultural Center for a stimulating question and answer session about any and all things Jewish. Rabbi Taff will accept questions for submission before the event so be sure to drop them off at the MLC office before the sixth! This session is open to the entire community.

The Real Housewives of The Hebrew Bible - Hagar

The Real Housewives of The Hebrew Bible: Hagar
with Ricki Lobel
 
                                             

Tuesday, April 9th, 2013
 7:00 pm - 8:30 pm
KOH Library and Cultural Center
2300 Sierra Boulevard, Sacramento, CA  95825
 
This month’s lecture in the ongoing series, The Real Housewives of the Hebrew Bible, spotlights Hagar. Hagar is both a revered and  criticized Biblical figure. Rabbinical commentators say she was Pharaoh's daughter who became Sarah’s handmaiden after Pharaoh claimed it was better she be Sarah’s slave than a mistress in another house. Hagar gave Abraham his first child, Ishmael, but both she and the boy were sent away when Sarah gave birth to Isaac. Some scholars view Hagar as a symbol of bondage or the sinful condition of humanity; the Islamic transition reveres her as the mother of Ishmael, who they trace back as being among the first father of Islam. Hagar may not have been a legal wife, but her story promises to spark much discussion among those attending the Real Housewives lecture. Ricki Lobel will be the guest lecturer. $5 suggested donation.
 
This program is open to the entire community. For more information or to RSVP please contact Taliah Berger at taliah@kohlcc.org or at the KOH Library and Cultural Center at 916-485-4143. RSVPs are greatly appreciated but not necessary to attend.