views My Story jewfro A Funny Th ing Happened On Th e Way To Th e Kitchen I ’ve never met Sammy Vieder, but we live less than a mile apart and I’m pretty sure we’re related. Not related as a result of the sprawling extended family I married into almost 12 noisy years ago. Nor to be con- fused with my brother Sam, my cousin Sam, my nephew Sammy or my grandma’s second husband’s sister’s grandson from Miami Sam, Ben Falik who introduced me to Blue Apron when he worked there. No, Sammy and I are related in some cosmic/ karmic way. Or so I came to believe after watching the then-12-year-old Huntington Woods resident and Hillel Day School student conduct his culi- nary craft on Fox’s MasterChef Junior. If, like I was until six weeks ago, you are unfamiliar with the joy and anxiety of MasterChef Junior, you’re six seasons behind on the show, which is itself a spinoff of British and American versions of MasterChef and one of multiple precocious pre-teen entries into the prodi- gious genre of cooking contest television. Watching Sammy cook up a storm — his Mascarpone- Stuffed Chicken would make Julia Child feel juvenile — I knew how Salieri must have felt when he heard the pre- ternatural power of Mozart’s music. After all, I was the food editor of the Columbia Daily Spectator — the ninth largest English language daily afternoon paper in New York City — when I was but 1.5 Sammys old. Now 3 Sammys in age, I have to stare down Lola, our mouth- breathing geriatric Newfoundland, for my kids’ grilled cheese crusts, and I guess poorly one way or the other at the readiness of avocado. To say noth- ing of my propensity for spilling. So much spilling. My Sammy-induced food envy came to a fever pitch on April 13, during an episode featuring Blue Apron. If, like I was until six months ago, you are unfamiliar with the joy and anxiety of Blue Apron, it’s a service that sends a box of fresh foodstuffs to your house weekly with the ingredients for family meals. On this fateful night, the top 12 “home cooks” (the Fox Broadcasting Company does not endorse or con- done child labor) each received the same 10-by-12-by-14 inch Blue Apron box that greets/taunts me from my front porch every Wednesday. But instead of an easy-to-follow recipe replete with pictures, key words in bold and parenthetical tips that I can usually turn into a meal, the box con- tained … my incomplete taxes. Actually, it was scarier. The boxes were empty. Sammy and Co. each had a mere 45 minutes to pick out ingre- dients à la Supermarket Sweep and create and concoct an original meal entirely from scratch to be promptly adjudicated by the three world- renowned chefs and restaurateurs, adults who must feel like the old Arnold Schwarzenegger Terminator trying to understand the liquid metal capabilities of the newer Terminator sent back to the present from further in the future. Sammy wielded his slotted spatula with the fearless instinct of Jackson Pollock making fractals out of splat- ter paint and whatever fell out of his pockets onto the canvas. Did I men- tion Sammy has braces? Sammy has braces. As far as a I can tell, they are not Skynet liquid metal braces. When Sammy’s Seared Steak and Brussels Sprouts served over a bed of polenta won the judge’s admiration, my fever rose. When he won the week’s challenge and the judges announced that his recipe would be an official Blue Apron meal, ingredients and instructions shipped to porches across the coun- try, my fever broke. Through the cold sweat, I felt a sense of calm wash over me. At first, I wasn’t sure why. Then I realized that the point of all this wasn’t for me to measure the value to my family, com- munity and society of myself based on how well I could cook Sammy’s recipe. The point was for me to measure the value to my family, community and society of my children based on how well they could cook Sammy’s recipe. Think Salieri has kids and all his unaddressed issues with Mozart continued on page 6 Marcie Carr has a car that came to her used, and wasn’t in the best of repair when she received it. Marcie didn’t realize the extent of the car’s needs when she brought it home. “I’m grateful to have my car, and I depend on it,” Marcie said. “It’s my only method of transportation. But I didn’t know about all the issues, like the windshield wipers would just stop sometimes, and the heat wasn’t working. At the first oil change, I was told the brakes needed to be done. It’s a great car overall, but the repairs it needed were unexpected and expensive to deal with.” It was while Marcie was online researching options for fixing her car when she remembered Hebrew Free Loan. Years prior, her sister had applied to Hebrew Free Loan, listing Marcie as one of the co-signers. She decided to check into it. “From the website to the phone call I made to the HFL office, it was very easy to apply,” Marcie said. “I filled out the paperwork and met the Board members for an interview, and through the whole process, everyone was pleasant and kind. They based my payments on my ability to pay back, so I was really pleased and grateful I could have my vehicle fixed and it wouldn’t be a strain on me to repay.” Coming to Hebrew Free Loan was a blessing, Marcie said. “They were there for me. My advice to others is to contact HFL and not to be intimi- dated, because everyone there was courteous and friendly. I needed something, and there was no room to be shy. A closed mouth doesn’t get fed, right? I’m glad I called.” Become an HFL Donor. Click. Call. Give Now. www.hfldetroit.org 248.723.8184 Health. A fresh start. A good education. The next great business idea. Hebrew Free Loan gives interest- free loans to members of our community for a variety of personal and small business needs. HFL loans are funded entirely through community donations which continually recycle to others, generating many times the original value to help maintain the lives of local Jews. Kids in the Kitchen Meet Sammy from MasterChef Junior at a family-friendly fundraiser for Friendship Circle. Audience members will challenge Sammy’s cooking skills and hear about his experiences on the show. Professional chefs will demo and offer samples of tasty snacks. Ticket price, $30 per person, includes light refreshments and tastings. At 1:30 p.m. Sunday, June 3, at the Soul Cafe Event Hall, 5586 Drake Road, West Bloomfield. Register at friendshipcircle.org/ events/kids-in-the-kitchen. 6735 Telegraph Road, Suite 300 • Bloomfield Hills, MI 48301 Hebrew Free Loan Detroit @HFLDetroit Sammy jn May 17 • 2018 5