p Jewish Meals By Mildred Grosburg Benin (Copyright, 1964, JTA, Inc.) PITCHA The traditional Jewish appetizer, Pitcha, or Fisnug,ge as it is some- times called, is a robust form of calf's foot jelly. To be worthy of its name, Pitcha should be pungent with the flavor of garlic — clear, pronounced, and unabashed. If the garlic taste is lacking or is merely subtle and elusive, we have an as- pic, very nice for jellied meat dishes, but not Pitcha. We make this maichel as follows: PITCHA OR FISNUGGE cleaned calf's feet quarts cold water to 4 cloves garlic medium onions About 2 teaspoons salt 3 bay leaves 6 whole black • peppers Juice of lemon 2 hard-cooked egg. sliced . • • 2 2 2 3 • Have the bubcher saw the calf's into 2-inch pieces. Place them and feet the water in a soup kettle and bring to a boil. Dice the onions and garlic fine and add. Two cloves of garlic will give a mild flavor, three a stronger one, and four a very pronounced garlic taste. At the same time as you add the onion and garlic. add one teaspoon of the salt. the bay leaves, and the _black peppers. Cook gently, uncovered, from 2 to 21/2 hours, until the liquid is reduced to half, and the gristle on the calf's feet becomes very soft. If too much of the broth cooks away be- fore the feet are ready. add more water. gradually, as necessary to main- tan about one quart of broth. During the cooking time skim the broth occasionally. Strain, and return the broth to the sauce pan. If there was any usable meat on the calf's feet it may be shredded and added to the liquid. Add the lemon juice, bring to a boil, then sinimer for 5 minutes. Taste, and add additional salt as de- sired. Pour the broth into a shallow 6x8-inch pan and chill until .syrupy. Remove any fat which rises to the top. Arrange the sliced ,. _eggs evenly over the surface, then chill for several hours, until very firm. To serve, cut into 8 rectangles. remove from the pan carefully with a broad spatula, and arrange on lettuce. Garnish with lemon slices. tomato wedges, or pars- ley. Sometimes prepared horseradish is served with this as well. The recipe makes 8 portions. • • • VARIATIONS: 1. Serve half the pitcha hot as a soup, and chill the remainder in a 4x4-inch pan. Use one hard-cooked egg to garnish the top of the chilled por- tion. 2. For an even more pronounced garlic taste. prepare the pitcha as above with 3 cloves of garlic. Mince a fourth clove fine and add with the lemon juice. 3. One-fourth cup of vinegar may be substituted for the lemon juice. 4. Some cooks like to start with one quart of water and add another quart little by little as the first cooks away. so that there Is always a quart of liquid in the pan. Other cooks like to start with 3 quarts of water and let it cook down to one quart. 5. For a Meat Aspic. prepare the pitcha with no garlic, or one clove. as preferred. An eighth of a teaspoon of garlic powder may be substituted for the clove of fresh garlic. CHICKEN FEET JELLY There is a dish similar to pitcha which is made with a rich chicken soup. Prepare the soup according to your usual recipe. but add to it 6 or 8 cleaned chicken feet. When the soup is cooked, strain it. and measure. For each quart. add one to four cloves of garlic as for pitcha. If you like. you may also add lemon juice. Complete the jelly by chilling it just as you do pitcha. and adding the sliced hard- cooked eggs. SUEZ VON KAI.BFURSSEN Prepare the pitcha, omitting the garlic or using only one clove. After it is chilled until syrupy and all fat removed. place it in a saucepan and bring to a boil. Meanwhile beat the whites of 2 eggs stiff and fold in the egg shells crushed fine. Add to the boiling liquid and simmer for 15 min- utes. Strain through a very fine sieve. Add Y2 cup Sherry or Muscatel, pour in a 1t4 quart mold. and chill until firm. Sulz Von Kalbfucssen may ' iso be used as an aspic in jell i ed dishes of chicken or turkey. This is a very fine and delicate version of pitcha and is sometimes called Calf's Foot Jelly. Soheloff Assumes Los Angeles Post LOS ANGELES (JTA)—Isidore Sobeloff, former executive vice president of the Detroit Jewish Welfare Federation, has assumed the position executive director of the Jewish Federation-Council of Greater Los Angeles, it was an- nounced by Dr. Max W. Bay, pres- ident of the JF-C. The Federation-Council here is the organized Jewish community's central planning, budgeting and fund-raising resource. Twenty-nine local social welfare agencies, and 492 affiliated institutions are mem- bers, and serve a Jewish popula- tion estimated in excess of 425,000, the second ,largest in the Western Hemisphere. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Friday, September 11, 1964-21 Joseph Ross Gets Weisman-Langwald St. Cyprian Award Betrothal Announced Roy Wilkins, executive secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and one of the nation's outstanding civil rights leaders. will address the 26th annual appreciation ban- quet of the St. Cyprian's Church, Sept. 21. The event. which will be observed in Barth Hall of the Cathedral Center, 4800 Woodward, also will honor two Detroit citizens for "outstanding contributions to - unity." Dr. James J. McClendon and Joseph Ross are to be awarded the citations. President of the Federal De- partment Stores, Ross has been an outstanding business advocate of fair employment practices and has opened work and promtion oppor- tunities without regard for race. He is a national officer of the American Committee to Improve Our Neighborhoods (ACTION, Inc.), a member of President John- son's Business Leadership Advisory Council Against Poverty and of the President's Committee for Commu- nity Relations. Deadlines Set ' Branch 2 to OpenYear on Next 3 Issues Because of Yom Kippur. deadline for all Jewish News copy for the next issue will be at 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 14. Deadline for classified ads- for the next issue will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 15. Deadlines for the issues of Sept. 25 and Oct. 2 will be at 3 p.m. on Friday. Sept. 18 and 25, respectively. MISS ANNETTE WEISMAN Mr. and Mrs. Max Weisman of Birwood Ave. announce the en- 2agement of their daughter Annette to Shelby Langwald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Langwald of Green- lawn Ave. _ The bride-elect is a graduate of Wayne State Uni"ersity. Plans are store executive in several cities, SAVE TIME coming to Detroit in 1961. He is a member of the Citizens Committee on Equal Opoprtunity and the Gov- ernor's Commission for Higher Education. Ross is also a trustee of the Detroit Historical Society and the United Foundation. "There is no marriage settlement wherein there is no quarrel"—The Talmud (Sabbath, 130a). SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT IN YOUR HOME! MAX HOROWITZ . T .Artistry in 1 infie J ewe is 20010 JamesCouzensprive Detroit 35, Michigan as/sr/paha Occi,/04(&9.., Phone:342-5666 Kosher. Meat & Poultry Market WE WILL BE CLOSED WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 16—YOM KIPPUR KE 3-2857 For a Complete Line of eerts+. 174 4■ k NATHAN & IRVING'S INVITATION HOUSE Personalized invitations. Napkins, Matches, Ceramics, Announcements, etc. ar INCORPORATED of the last century, was instru- mental in achieving much of the in d.0 strial developmcint of the country. He was responsible for the,restoration of inland navigation in Italy. SAVE MONEY THE TH Grant - NAVIGATION PIONEER Jacur Leone Romanin, a promi- nent Jewish member of the Italian Parliament and Cabinet at the end being made for an Oct. 18 wedding A graduate of Columbia Univer- sity. Ross has been a department Branch two, LZOA, will hold its first meeting of the season 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the library of the Labor Zionist Institute. Refresh- ments will be served after the program. Please Order Your Meats and Poultry Early and Avoid Disappointment ! 18275 WYOMING UN 1-7237 Free Delivery A HAPPY & PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR TO OUR FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS NOTICE! We Will Be Closed Wednesday, September 16 (YOM KIPPUR) We Will Be Open Thursday, September 17 As Usual NEW — STREIT'S EGG N' ONION MATZO 2 Boxes 49c Delicious Repeated by Popular Demand! HOLIDAY SPECIAL! CHICAGO BRAND STRICTLY n V 2 KISHKA Lb. 4 5c Ea rly Garden SWEET PEAS No. 303 C Cans95 MA COHEN'S Homemade Pickled SCHMALTZ HERRING Qt. Ja r A Real Treat! MANISCHEWITZ WHITEFISH & PIKE 89 ` HEINZ SOUPS Cream of Mushroom Liquid or Jellied Broth Chicken Noodle ■ a t. .r $105 or 4 cans 63c RASKIN'S Homemade Style Clearfield CHEESE SLICES FRESH BLINTZES All Flavors All Flavors 69 Chase & Sanborn COFFEE Reg., Drip or Fine Grind 69c c doz. 81;1%: 29c lb. Can NO COUPON NEEDED SPECIAL SALE! GEFILTE FISH Try some today! DEL MONTE HOLIDAY SUPER SPECIAL! Whole Broccoli Spears Pkg. 15c DELICIOUS Lambrecht's PIZZAS 14-0z. 494 Pkg. %, JESSE JEWEL Grade A Chicken Livers 8-oz. 2 3 Pkg. .0 . WAKEFIELD Alaska Split King Crab Legs 12-oz. Q 9c Pkg ORE IDA NEW BAR-B-Q Flavor POTATO BITES 2 9-0z. 25 C Pkg. DELICIOUS! GEISHA GOLD'S BEET or SCHAV BORSCHT 4 jars 99c NEW! STREIT'S FLAVOURED MATZO MEAL Box 19 c FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS' FROSTY ACRES We Reserve Right to Limit Quantity. BORDEN'S CREAM CHEESE 8-0z. Pkg. 25` 2 HUNT'S IMPORTED HALIBUT 3 cans 7 A Real Taste Treat! SPECIAL SALE! Chase & Sanborn INSTANT COFFEE 10-0z. $139 Econ. Jar Whole APRICOTS 4 14.an2 2 REPEATED. BY POPULAR DEMAND! HOLIDAY SPECIAL! MEMORIAL GLASS CANDLES (Yarzeit-24 Hrs.) 2 Tumblers19` Kosher Fleischmann's Planters Peanut Oil CORN OIL Margarine 37c Salted 1-Lb. Pkg. 99 28-Oz. Decan. Btle. 53c PRODUCE SPECIALS* Wagner's ORANGE or GRAPE Breakfast DRINKS 4 ot. Bt. ls .99c Uncle Ben's QUICK RICE 'Z. 35 U.S. No. 1 Juicy Sweet, PRUNE PLUMS U.S. No. 1 Fancy Macintosh APPLES 3 lbs. 25c 4 lbs. 39 Fancy, Solid Red, Ripe TOMATOES 19c lb. • Produce Specials Good Friday, Saturday and Sunday U.S. No. 1 Sweet, Juicy BARTLET PEARS 3 lbs. 29c