This Is So Cheesy
Here's an easy, different recipe for cheesecake
that parents and children can make together:
Crust
1/8 pound butter; melted
1 cup cookie crumbs
Filling
1 1 /2 pounds cream cheese
1 cup sugar
I tsp. vanilla
4 eggs
Topping
1 pint sour cream
2 Tbsp. sugar
1 /2 tsp. vanilla
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Make crust by combining
melted butter and crumbs.
Press into bottom and on
sides of spring-
form cake pan.
Combine
cheese, sugar and
vanilla. Add eggs, one
at a time, beating un-
til well mixed. Turn
into crumb-
lined pan.
Bake for 35-
45 min-
utes, until
center is
firm.
Turn heat off,
but keep cake in oven until it
has cooled.
When cake has cooled, add
sour cream mixed with sugar
There's No
Stopping
These
Toppings
You can have a lot of fun deciding
what to put on top of your cheese-
cake.
Here are some ideas:
sh fruit, including strawber-
ries, blueberries, kiwi and pineap-
ple — alone or in any combination
..tnuts
-1(whipped cream
and vanilla. Cook five more
minutes in oven preheated to .Kbutterscotch bits
-1<broken cookie crumbs
425 degrees.
-Kchocolate sauce
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.4, -a•
s the spring season (do
we really get spring
anymore?) winds
down and summer be-
gins, Judaism treats us to a celebra-
tion, the holiday of Shavuot.
On English-language calendars,
the holiday often is called the
"Feast of Weeks," a good descrip-
tion of a really long party, but don't
bring out the pointy, polka-dot hats
and the painfully loud noisemakers
this time. In Hebrew, shavuot does
indeed mean "weeks," but it refers
to the fact that this particular festi-
AR ZI WSOEM IMM:S TMV -r gRAIra ff
year, Shavuot probably is the most
neglected and least understood.
Like many Jewish holidays,
Shavuot includes an agricultural a
element. Today, however, we I
observe Shavuot as the anniver-
sary of Moshe's ascent up
Mount Sinai and God's giving the
Torah to the Jewish people.
In our prayers, we refer to
Shavuot as zman matan
Torateinu, "the time of the giv-
ing of our Torah."
The Torah mandates that on
val always comes out seven weeks
after the second day of Pesach
(Passover). Sometimes, the
holiday also is called Pen-
tecost, from the Greek for
"50th day," because
Shavuot is the 50th day after
Pesach. On the Jewish calen-
dar, the 50th day falls on the
6th of Sivan, which this year
corresponds to June 11.
Outside of Israel, the holi-
day is celebrated for two
days.
Of all the holidays in the Jewish
rkW:M =W :M = 72-kWaf ritWAL
HAPPY SHAVOUT page 14
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