Much of the list will be immediately recognizable to Tablet readers: No one was going to leave out chicken soup or babka or shakshuka or... matzo. But there are also dishes here that, for many, won’t be familiar at all: unhatched chicken eggs and jellied calves’ feet as well as recipes from around the globe and ones nearly lost to history. These are foods that were generated by a people that became many peoples; a tribe at once bound together by a shared tradition and separated by radically different host countries, cultures, politics, and influences.
We found inspiration in this tension between what is shared and what is not. Instead of organizing the dishes chronologically or by originating region or—perhaps most absurdly—by numbering them one (“best”) to 100 (“least best”?), we decided to present them to you as we believe they exist in reality: all on the same table.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_cuisine
With that, there’s only one thing left to say:
https://100jewishfoods.tabletmag.com/
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