HAPPY CHANUKAH!

this to include your Jewish he-
roes and role models? Make a
poster showing family members,
Israeli leaders, your rabbi or any
other Jew you admire.

Nestle's Crunch. All right. That's
enough junk for you.

#36) If you have a hankering
for life in the old country, check
out one of the classic Yiddish
#32) There's nothing like a big films made in the early part of
bowl of blue spaghetti to warm the century. Many of these have
the stomachs of a hungry family been restored and are in excel-
lent condition. Some are avail-
on Yom Ha'atzma'ut.
Israel Independence Day will able only on film, though a
be celebrated next year on number also are now on video, in-
May 4. Why not prepare a deli- cluding a newly released (just out
cious blue-and-white meal in cel- this week) version of Yiddle With
ebration of the occasion? With a His Fiddle starring Molly Picon.
For a free catalog, contact the
little blue food coloring, the pos-
sibilities are endless. One menu National Center for Jewish Films
at Brandeis University, Lown
idea:
* Begin with an appetizer of 102, Waltham, Mass., 02244.
blue sour cream-and-onion dip Phone (617) 899-7044, or fax re-
with white taco chips or crackers. quests to (617) 736-2070.
* The main course: add blue to
#37) Host a party where every-
cheese sauce atop white pasta for
one comes dressed as his favorite
a celebratory spaghetti.
* For dessert, have blueberries Jewish figure, past or present.
Play 20 questions as guests try
with vanilla ice cream.
to guess who everyone is.
#33) President's Day is Feb.
#38) Create your own
20. Research the lives of Ameri-
miniature garden of herbs
mentioned in the Bible. (Herb
seeds are available
wherever garden prod-
ucts are sold, while fresh
moo. herbs can be found at
Westborn Market on
Woodward Avenue).
". Biblical herbs include
garlic (mentioned in
Numbers, it was one of
the foods the Israelites
craved while wandering
in the desert. Ancient rab-
bis believed it had aphro-
disiac qualities); fennel
(cited in Isaiah 28:25 and
27, it was used as a condi-
ment in talmudic times); and
cumin (also in Isaiah, 28:25-27,
can presidents to find what they it was eaten with bread).
had to say about Jews and Israel.
#39) Create your own Jewish
#34) Make your own candles adventure. Before making your
on Shabbat. Some thy and craft next trip out of Detroit, plan to
stores have candle-making kits, spend an afternoon (if it's a small
or you can decorate .candles at the town) or a few days (if it's a big
Little Dipper Shoppe at 415.N. city) learning about the area's
Fifth Street at Kerrytown Plaza Jewish life. But first, do some re-
in Ann Arbor. At the Little Dip- search. Places to look and call:
per, children can design their the city's chamber of commerce,
own candles (available in two history and/or tourist books about
shapes) by dipping them in any the area, the local Jewish com-
munity council.
combination of eight colors.

#40)For Chanukah, try the de-
#35) So what if candy is bad
for you. With all the kosher treats licious taste treat sufganiot
out there, who could be satisfied (doughnuts), served throughout
with something.like — gag — Israel.
This recipe comes from the
celery when you've got a sweet
yummy Spice and Spirit (where
tooth?
Why not allow yourself an af- former Detroiter Esther Blau
ternoon of pure, kosher indul- served as part of the editorial ex-
gence. Check out the candy ecutive board):
counteT at your favorite store and
spend, spend, spend away! 13/4 ounces fresh yeast
Among the kosher treats you 1 1/2 cups warm water
T. sugar
may want to sample: Hershey's 3 1 eggs
Cookies and Mint Candy Bar, Al- 1/2 cup oil
mond Joy, Hershey's Skor Bar, 1/2 cup sugar

1/2 cup nondairy creamer
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 tsp. grated lemon peel
6-7 cups flour
oil
confectioners' sugar

Place yeast, water and sugar
in a small bowl. Allow to stand
several minutes until bubbly.
In a large mixer bowl place
eggs, oil, sugar, nondairy cream-
er, vanilla and grated lemon peel.
Add yeast mixture. Add flour un-
. til soft dough is formed. (Dough
need not be dry; it should be soft-
er than challah dough.) Knead
for a few minutes. Cover and al-
low to rise until doubled in bulk,
about 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
Roll out dough 112-inch thick
on floured surface. Cut out circles
with a doughnut cutter.
Place 2 or 3 inches oil in a 2-
quart saucepan and heat over a
medium flame until hot. Place
four doughnuts at a time in the
oil. Brown on one side and then
on the other. Remove with slot-
ted spoon. Drain and cool on pa-
per towels. Dust with
confectioners' sugar.
Yields 5-6 dozen doughnuts.
NOTE: To test if dough is
ready for rolling, place a small
piece in a glass of water. If the
dough floats to the top, it is ready.
Reprinted with permission
from Spice and Spirit: The Com-
plete Kosher Jewish Cookbook,
published by the Lubavitch
Women's Cookbook Publications,
Brooklyn, N.Y., Copyright 1990.

#41) Jewish Art Week falls
each year with Shabbat
Vayakhel, the Torah portion cit-
ing the artists who helped build
the mishkan, the tabernacle con-
taining the Ark of the Covenant.
Shabbat Vayakhel in 1995 begins
Friday, Feb. 24.
In honor of Jewish Art Week,
why not create fun Jewish art
projects of your own. Some ideas:
* Make Chagall-like stained-
glass windows by cutting shapes
into black construction paper,
then filling the spaces with mul-
ticolored pieces of tissue paper.
* Jewish artist Camille Pis-
sarro (1830-1903) was an Im-
pressionist born in the West
Indies. Find a book of his works,
then use colored chalk to create
a faux Pissarro on your sidewalk
or driveway.
* Challenge family and friends
to design a new stamp for Israel.
* Create a mosaic like those
found during excavations on an-
cient synagogues in Israel. Tear
various colors of construction pa-
per into tiny squares, then
arrange into a design and glue on
cardboard.

#42) Make a Jewish discovery
trip to the Detroit Institute of
NIFTY FIFTY page 62

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