Jewish Nostalgia
If you are not Jewish, I
cannot even begin to explain it to you.
This goes back 3 generations, if you are over 50.
Schmaltlz- the Delocay
SCHMALTZ has, for centuries, been the prime ingredient in almost every Jewish
dish, and I feel it’s time to revive it to its rightful place in our homes. (I
have plans to distribute it in a green glass Gucci bottle with a label clearly
saying: “low fat, no cholesterol, Newman’s Choice, extra virgin SCHMALTZ.” (It
can’t miss!) Then there are grebenes – pieces of chicken skin, deep fried in
SCHMALTZ, onions and salt until crispy brown (Jewish bacon). This makes a great
appetizer for the next cardiologist’s convention.
There’s also a nice chicken fricassee (stew) using the heart, gorgle (neck), pipick (gizzard – a great delicacy, given to the
favorite child), a fleegle (wing) or two, some ayelech (little premature eggs)
and other various chicken innards, in a broth of SCHMALTZ, water, paprika, etc.
We also have knishes (filled dough) and the eternal question, “Will that be
liver, beef or potatoes, or all three?”
Other time-tested favorites are kishkeh, and its poor cousin, helzel (chicken
or goose neck). Kishkeh is the gut of the cow, bought by the foot at the Kosher
butcher. It is turned inside out, scalded and scraped. One end is sewn up and a
mixture of flour, SCHMALTZ, onions, eggs, salt, pepper, etc., is spooned into
the open end and squished down until it is full. The other end is sewn and the
whole thing is boiled. Often, after boiling, it is browned in the oven so the
skin becomes crispy. Yummy!
My personal all-time favorite is watching my Zaida (grandpa) munch on boiled
chicken feet. (Oh no, that was ME!)
For our next course we always had chicken soup with pieces of yellow-white,
rubbery chicken skin floating in a greasy sea of lokshen (noodles), farfel
(broken bits of matzah), tzibbeles (onions), mondlech (soup nuts), kneidlach
(dumplings), kasha (groats), kliskelech and marech (marrow bones) . The main
course, as I recall, was either boiled chicken, flanken, kackletten, hockfleish
(chopped meat), and sometimes rib steaks, which were served either well done,
burned or cremated. Occasionally we had barbecued liver done to a burned and
hardened perfection in our own coal furnace.
Since we couldn’t have milk with our meat meals, beverages consisted of cheap
soda (Kik, Dominion Dry, seltzer in the shpritz bottles). In Philadelphia it
was usually Franks Black Cherry Wishniak (vishnik).
No comments:
Post a Comment