5avoir Fare Catering Rosh Hashanah fy Yom Kippur 200., 5TAKTEX5 Golden Rick Chicken E:votb with Carrots, Parsnips and Fresh Dill Light as Air Matzo halls 1.00 each Traditional Gefilte Pish (all whitefish) +.50 each Chopped Chicken Liver 8 -9 5/16. Smoked Salmon "Rugelack" 10.95/clozen Wild Mushroom Filled L Jougeres Other Hors d'oeuvres available. Please ask,/ I I.95/dozen 5ALA95 priced per serving Our ramous Caesar Salad with homemade. Croutons 3-50 itici Greens with Artichoke hearts, Hearts of rain, Grape Tomatoes and Vinaigrette Dressing 3.95 15a6,9 Anigula„ Roasted Ject s, Goat Cheese and Walnuts with ,Sherr9 Vinaigrette Dressing +.50 ENTKEE5 Gremolata Roasted Chickens (We will 6e happy to 9uarter them Oven Roasted boneless Turkey hreast Roasted Salmon with j1ack Olive Tapenacle I 1.95 each 11.95A6. 19.95Ab. Poached Salmon Fillets with Dill Mustard Sauce 18.95/16. z‘,95/16. White Miso Marinated Alaskan halibut Filet Grill e d baby Lamb Chops with Fig-Rosema 9 braised F:yeef 5riskct with Chutney and Onions Whole beef ef Tenderloin with Red Wine Sauce 1 ),95A1, - 22.55/11,. 5IDE b aby Ned 4 . Clockwise from left: at the suggestion of a Cranbrook pro- fessor familiar with her work. "I love the holiday because of the focus on plants," says the artist, a member of a Conservative congrega- tion in Key West. Goldman, married to orthopedic sur- geon Sidney Goldman for 14 years, has done other work related to plants. Before she met her husband, the artist developed Green Goods, a firm that did botanical designing by advising clients on the proper plants for environmental conditions. One project was the Jewish Federation Apartments in Oak Park. After selling her operations to a business in Ann Arbor, Goldman stayed on for a year as a consultant. "My artwork has been inspired by botanical drawings and the informa- tional pages that go with them," Goldman says. "I've also been fascinat- ed by aerial views of gardens." Goldman only titles her reliefs when there is a fixed point of inspiration. She has been working on the series "Missing Malabar, Still Counting" in reference to earlier pieces. "The series of constructions `Malabar Almond, Counting' was cre- ated in the same spirit and with simi- lar intent, that a now magnificent Malabar almond tree was planted as a memorial for a World War I soldier, Howard Sands," she explains. "His death marked his young friends' first experience of the fragile, transitory nature of life, and the tree they planted kin rotatoes Roasted with herbs, Garlic and Olive Oil - 5.95 Noodle Kugel with r)6.4 Apricots;: Cranberries an fsluebecries Toasted Israeli COus-Coos with Fort.abello Mushrooms 5.95/1 8.5'5/1 I 1.35/16. haricots Vert with Roasted Shallots `Missing Malabar, Still Counting," oil enamel on wood. Garlic Roasted Asparagus „ Oven Moasted Root Vegetables 9.95/16 individual Spinach Souffles 3.00 each "For Rachel and the Astronauts," oil enamel on wood. IMEAKING 771E FA5T5FECIALTIE5 "Green for David,'' oil enamel, collage on wood. Sinoker4Salmon bucloNheat Crepe Torte , , , , Vus, , great change of pace from usual bagels and x!!) lo (Serves 12) Albacore Tuna Salad with Fresh Dill and Lemon Ma y onnaise in his memory, now some 80 years later, serves as a vital expression of their to "Count the leaves in my pieces - as a reference to our mortality and count the leaves as an affirmation of life." Before Goldman moved into studio space in Pontiac, she worked at Pewabic Pottery in Detroit, where she completed ceramic baskets. She has been a member of the Board of Trustees of the Pewabic Society since 1992, serving as secretary in 1993 and vice president in 1994 and 1995. "I want to explore actual, non-illu- sionistic spatial relationships of fore- ground, mid-ground and background," Goldman says. "The work can be very painstaking, and I have several pieces in the works at one time." ❑ Deborah Goldman will show and sell her painted constructions 5-9 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 18, and 1-5 p.m. Friday, Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 19-21, in her stu- dio/gallery on the third floor of One Water Street, Pontiac. She also shows her work by appoint- ment. (248) 333-0111. ,• 6.95/1b• Main or horseradish Mashed Yukon Gold rotatoes Praline rrenck Toast bake (Frepared in your disk) Miniature Schnecken and Kugelach +2.00 each 01 10.95A6. 2.50/serving 9.95/dozen DL5,5EKT5 Chocolate Espresso Cake - 9 inch (Serves Rustic Plum Tart 5‘.00 each 20.00 each jour Cream Streusel Coffee Cake Mixed berry Country Cake (some assembIR reouired) 18.00 each 30.00 each 5FECIALTY MEADS Our Legendary bided Onion bread Dakota's Challah iKpund ••8.95 each .-,17;95ea ch Please riace Your Rosh Hashanah Orders 6 .9 Monday, September ZZ We Will E). Open For. Pickup Friday, September 26 10am-5pm Please race Your Yom Kippur Orders 6,9 Tuesday, September 50 We Will be Open For ricicup Monday, October 6 10am-5pm 25 859 Lakser Road 4 ' 5outhfieici 248-356-6+ fax: 2+8-35-651 iPeace You% gateicliw eldeiris Now! • • • • Gourmet M rketpl a g ce Bakery • C a ater in Rose Guttman's famous gefilte fish Noodle Kugel • Kosher Cookie Trays Dairy Trays for Yom Kippur Maya's Veggie Chopped Liver (248) 855-DELI (3354) • Fax: (248) 85S-8465 NE Corner of Maple & Farmington • W. Bloomfield 756010 9/12 2003 79