Stuffed Cabbage For Sukkot LESLYE MICHLIN BORDEN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS Finding the perfect gift is easier than ever before since the expansion of our Gift Department. ALL GIFTS ALWAYS 30% OFF! Weddings. Bridal Showers. Bar/Bat Mitzvahs. Birthdays. Anniversaries. Great selection for any occasion. Complimentary gift wrapping. .8tuclo 6644 Orchard Lake Rd at Maple • West Bloomfield • 810 855-1600 Mon-Thur-Fri 10-9 Tue-Wed-Sat 10-6 Sun 12-5 "IRC'REIMBIN 14 I xrDiD JANICE CHARACH EPSTEIN hidia Sacharn17 Installations MEDIA' C.9910KA0T 7 119411011 CONQI)GYIRDUCGICED INT er Rei ja km(15 Painting September 29,1994 - October 27,1994 (Three Jewis h Women Artists ■ Three Voice) MUSEUM G A L L E R Opening Koception/Arti5t51 Fre5entation Thursd a y, September 29th, 6:00 - 8.::50 p.m. Public Welcome - Free Admission Friday, September 30th a -t10:00 a.m. Carol Hamoy presents "A Woman's Voice." Tickets are $18.00 & include brunch. Call 661-7641 for tickets & reservations.. This presentation i5 sponsored by the Midrasha Center for Adult Jewish Learning, a division of the Agency for Jewish Education. Jewish Community Center, 6600 W. Maple Rd., W. Dloomfield, MI 4E3522 102 Gallery Hours: Sunday 1100 - 4:00 pm., Monday - Wednesday 1100 - 6:00 pm., Thursday 11.00 - e):00 p.m. Please Call Sylvia Nelson, Director at 810 661-7641 For More Information ukkot, the Festival of Booths, merges two impor- tant events on the Jewish calendar. The first com- memorates the Israelites' wan- dering in the desert for 40 years after they left Egypt. Because they were constantly on the go, they lived in temporary homes, sukkot. The second is the autumn harvest. Modern Jews celebrate by building their own temporary homes and dec- orating them with autumn harvest fruits and vegetables. Tradition ad- vises that the appropriate ob- servance of this fun-filled festi- val includes eat- ing as many meals as possi- ble in the sukkah. Since carrying meals outside is inconvenient, Jewish homemakers somewhere along the way decided to serve one-pot meals and casseroles in the sukkah. Stuffed cabbage is a long standing favorite one-pot meal. As most Jews in the United States came from East Europe, Eastern European style sweet and sour stuffed cabbage has be- come identified with Sukkot. Yet Jews have lived in almost every- where on earth, so there is no rea- son to confine stuffed cabbage recipes to only one small area. Wherever Jews have lived, they have adapted their cooking style to local conditions and ingredi- ents. This makes Middle Easter, Italian and even Chinese recipes just as appropriate. Classic East European stuffed cabbage is so delicious due to its sauce. Generally some mixture of sweet and sour carried in toma- to sauce, the dish has made mouths water for centuries. The recipe that follows comes from the mother of a friend of my mother. Mrs. Naimark, the friend, was worried that the Jew- ish recipes she grew up with would be lost. So she spent sev- eral weeks in the kitchen with her mother, measuring out every handful, every half wine glass, every quarter of a juice glass, every half egg shell, until she had recorded all her mother's recipes. Then she gave a series of cooking classes for her friends and dis- tributed those recipes. My moth- er shared them with me when I was a new bride. Whenever I serve Mrs. Naimark's mother's stuffed cabbage, my guests wax nostalgic, remember their own grandmothers' versions, and eat up the whole pot. I always serve it with crusty seeded rye bread to wipe out the last bits of the deli- cious sauce in the bowl. Middle Eastern Jews are unique. Many, such as Persians, never left the Middle East dur- ing biblical times. They were not part of the Jew- ish diaspora af- ter the fall of the Second Temple. Moroccan Jews, another promi- nent Middle Eastern group, came originally from Spain in 1492. Morocco was one of the •-• first destina- tions since it was so close to Spain. They quickly picked up the cooking techniques of their new home. Generally, Middle Eastern cook- ing style, whether Persian, Mo- roccan, Egyptian, or Syrian, uses sweet spices, such as cinnamon, to flavor meat. So the meat stuff- ing in Middle Eastern cabbage rolls contains cinnamon. Toma- to sauce is in the filling, not the sauce. The sweet filling is bal- anced by the sauce, an aromatic combination of lemon juice, wa- ter and saffron. So up the juice with pita bread. Jews came to Italy after the fall of the Second Temple. They first settled in the south and gradually moved north. Many were prominent in the courts of Cosimo and Lorenzo de Medici. By the time of the Inquisition, they sought the protection of the powerful and independent north- ern duchies. Their numbers were augmented by those expelled from Spain. The newcomers set- tled in port cities, especially Venice and Livorno. In many in- stance, they lived with their neighbors without incident, es- pecially after the ghettoes were abolished in the eighteen centu- ry. Non-Jewish peasants fre- quently joined in the celebration of the last day of Sukkot, when the Jews prayed for rain for a suc- cessful next harvest. Today, even though most Italian Jews have immigrated to the United States, there are still a few living syna- gogues, like the one in Florence. Italian cabbage rolls are a wel- come addition to the stuffed cab- bage repertoire. Garlic is the STUFFED CABBAGE page 104