jThg Party's Jeffrey Rosenberg recalls his kosher catering family. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Contributing Writer the idea of turning the Holiday Manor into a non-kosher facility, my father thought about doing it himself, but the Vaad [Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit] talked him out of it. B orn into the catering business, Jeffrey Rosenberg's very first memory is of sleeping in the office at his parents' business with his grandmother, while his parents worked parties at three different synagogues and two other venues. The son and grandson of kosher cater- ers, Rosenberg, of Farmington Hills, worked early on with members of his family at Rosenberg Kosher Catering and for the last three-and-a-half years at A&J Kosher Catering with business partner Chef Al Kovalenko. As he leaves a lifelong career and a near- ly 40-year post at Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington Hills — his contract was not renewed, and he was replaced recently by Matt Prentice's Milk & Honey Detroit Inc. — Rosenberg reminisces about everything from family history to feeding famous stomachs. How did your grandmother, the late Cecil Rosenberg, and your late parents, Al and Sarah Rosenberg, get started? My grandmother worked for the first kosher caterer in Detroit as a cook. In 1946, she opened the family's first kosher facility on Dexter with my father and The Rosenberg family at the opening of current Adat Shalom in 1972: Howard, Grandma Cecil, Al and Sarah, Jeffrey his youngest brother, my Uncle Bob Rosenberg. The address was 9925 Dexter; now I play those numbers in the lottery. From there they moved to Holiday Manor on Wyoming. Joe Cornell held his very first dance class in rented space in that building and stayed until he moved into his own studio. Later my father leased the building to Sammy Lieberman, who turned it into the non-kosher, very successful Raleigh House catering hall. When Sammy came up with How did your family get involved in synagogue catering? When my father was at Holiday Manor, he cooked there and took food to all dif- ferent synagogues, like B'nai Moshe and Shaarey Zedek when they were both in Detroit. My mother owned a beauty and nail salon, but left to join forces in the kitchen with my father and grandmother. For a short while, the family got out of catering and my dad worked at a non-kosher fine dining restaurant, but he was called by [Congregation] B'nai David, when it was in Southfield, and he got back in the business, catering there from 1968 to 1972. My brother, Howard, and his wife, Susan, were in college then at Wayne State and worked as head bar- tenders there and later at Adat Shalom where they were known for their spe- cialty drink, the apricot sour. My father came to Adat Shalom in 1972, when he was asked to be the caterer in their new facility in Farmington Hills, where the synagogue is today. I came with him and had a roll that lasted for 39 years. Someone New In The Kitchen Adat Shalom welcomes kosher caterer Matt Prentice. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Contributing Writer F or Matt Prentice, recent Saturday nights have been spent running from party to party and back again — with no end in sight. But that's a good thing, Prentice said. Since becoming the exclusive kosher caterer at Adat Shalom Synagogue, weekends have become filled with the back-and-forth drive between there and Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, where he is longtime resident caterer. Prentice's Milk & Honey Detroit Inc. was given a five-year contract at Adat Shalom, effec- tive Oct. 21. Until Prentice came on board, Adat Shalom's caterers since the synagogue opened in Farmington Hills in 1972, included members of the Rosenberg family. 30 December 15 2011 In a letter to Adat Shalom members, President Julie Teicher and First Vice President David Sherbin expressed the synagogue's "great appreciation to the Rosenberg family — the late Al and the late Sarah Rosenberg and [their son] Jeffrey Rosenberg — for dedication and commitment to the congregation and to [Jeffrey Rosenberg's business partner] Al Kovalenko of A&J Kosher Catering for the past four years of service Milk & Honey, owned by the Matt Prentice Restaurant Group, is based at the Jewish Community Center in West Bloomfield. Catering for Adat Shalom will take place at the synagogue and will be glatt kosher and supervised by the Council of Orthodox Rabbis of Greater Detroit (Vaad). "We started there by gutting the kitchen," Prentice said. "After that, things went pretty smoothly. We've done seven or eight parties already." His menu choices will include both dairy and meat. The synagogue's cater- ing director will be Laura Stewart of the Matt Prentice Restaurant Group. "The synagogue is beautiful, with a huge social hall that seats up to 1,000 people," Prentice said. "Because of that, we can do what most others can't. I hope to be doing more large community events in addition to bar and bat mitz- vahs and weddings." Feeling very welcomed at the syna- gogue, Prentice said he looks forward to "developing lifelong relationships with the families of Adat Shalom. "At Temple Israel, I have had the honor of catering weddings for young men and women whose bar and bat mitzvahs I have done he said. "I hope to do the Matt Prentice same at Adat Shalom. It is the ultimate compliment to be asked to be part of the most important day in a family's life. I get to do that every weekend, and I don't take that lightly." II