metro » Why Dairy? Many explanations exist for the tradition of dairy dishes to celebrate Shavuot. that surround Pitigliano, with our paper bags full of broken pieces of our handmade matzot. … The fish seemed to know that we would come because they were there by the hundreds as soon as the first crumbs reached the water.” Louis Finkelman | Contributing Writer A famous food custom for Shavuot: cheesecake and other dairy delights, like cheesecake and blintzes. In the 16th century, Rabbi Moshe Isserles observed “the custom everywhere is to eat dairy foods on the first day of Shavuot” (Orah Hayyim 494:3). By every- where, he meant everywhere in Poland, where he lived, in Italy, in Greece and in North Africa, where Shavuot comes with fancy dairy foods. Rabbinic literature provides us with at least a dozen ingenious explanations for why we serve dairy on Shavuot, which begins this year the night of June 11. Perhaps milk, the food of innocent babies who have never sinned, befits Shavuot, when we commemorate receiving the pure Torah. Another explanation: The male lover, in the erotic biblical book Song of Songs, compares kissing his beloved to tasting “milk and honey under your tongue” (4:11). The rabbis read the delicious kiss as a metaphor for the ecstatic revelation at Sinai, which we commemorate on Shavuot. Or maybe our ancestors first heard the laws of kashrut on Shavuot and dis- covered that they had no kosher meat, so, of course, they made dairy. Rabbi Nathan Laufer, in his forthcoming book Rendezvous with God, suggests that because at Sinai our ancestors ate manna, which tasted “like rich creme” (Numbers 11:8), so we also eat creamy foods. Perhaps the most convincing reason for dairy foods on Shavuot is that milk and cream are plentiful this time of year. In the era of factory farms and supermarkets, we do not often realize that cows produce much more milk in May. Rabbi Isserles wrote “dairy foods” not “drinking milk.” All human babies drink milk, but, except for Northern Europeans, most adults have trouble digesting milk. Many Jews, even blue-eyed Ashkenazic Jews from Northern Europe, true to our Middle Eastern ancestry, tend to do better with cheese than with fresh milk. Recipes from Northern Jewry include the beloved cheesecake, cheese pancakes and blintzes; recipes from Greece and North Africa include “Siete Cielos,” Ladino for “Seven Heavens,” seven layers of pro- gressively smaller circlets of cake piled up with symbolic shapes baked on the tiniest top circlet. 30 June 9 • 2016 * Rabbinic literature provides us with at least a dozen ingenious explanations for why we ser ve dair y on Shavuot. MATZAH ON SHAVUOT A little-known food custom for Shavuot: eat- ing food made from matzah. The source for this custom seems clear because we count the days from the Festival of Matzot until Shavuot. Rabbi Mordechai Greenberg observes that “Pesach and Shavuot are one festival. Just as Sukkot is seven days,” capped off by an eighth day called “atzeret,” so, too, Pesach” lasts seven days, and, seven weeks later, it gets capped off by Shavuot. Emphasizing this relation- ship, the Talmudic rabbis called Shavuot “Atzeret.” Edda Servi Machlin, in her book The Classical Cuisine of the Italian Jews, combines recipes with recollections of her childhood in Italy. “In Pitigliano, in addition to the dairy dishes, a typical Shavuot menu would include Matza Coperta, a Passover dish repeated on this occasion because Shavuot … comes exactly seven weeks after Passover,” she writes. The Jews in Pitigliano baked their own handmade matzah in time for Passover. After Shavuot, they ate no more matzah until the next year, “yet no matzah should be thrown away. Feeding it to fish was a beautiful solution. After the Shavuot mid- day meal, we would go in groups of families to the banks of one of the clear water rivers EDDA SERVI MACHLIN’S MATZA COPERTA MATZAH OMELET 6 matzot 12 eggs, lightly beaten ½ teaspoon salt ½ cup dark, seedless raisins ¼ cup pinoli (pine nuts) Freshly grated rind of 1 lemon 6 Tbls. olive oil (or other vegetable oil) ¼ cup granulated sugar 1 tsp. cinnamon Soak the matzot in cold water until they are soft. Squeeze the water out, but do not leave the matzot too dry. Combine with eggs, salt, raisins, nuts and lemon rind. Heat 3 Tbls. oil in a large, heavy skil- let. Add the mixture slowly and flatten with a rubber spatula. Fry on a low heat until a light crust is formed on the bottom of the omelet. Invert into a large dish. Add the remaining 3 Tbls. of oil to the skillet, and slide the other side of the omelet into it. Fry gently until a light crust is formed on that side. The omelet is done when it is firm all the way through. Place on a serving plate and pat dry with a paper towel. Combine sugar and cin- namon and top omelet with this mixture. Serves 8. TRADITIONAL CHEESECAKE 1½ cups graham cracker crumbs 3 Tbls. sugar 1/3 cup butter or margarine, melted 4 pkg. (8 oz. each) cream cheese, softened 1 cup sugar 1 tsp. vanilla 4 eggs Heat oven to 325°F. Combine graham crumbs, 3 Tbls. sugar and butter; press onto bottom of 9-inch springform pan. Beat cream cheese, 1 cup sugar and vanilla with mixer until blended. Add eggs, 1 at a time, mixing on low speed after each just until blended. Pour over crust. Bake 55 min. or until center is almost set. Run knife around rim of pan to loosen cake; cool before removing rim. Refrigerate cheesecake four hours. Source: Kraft