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Get a calf’s head, with the skin on, but cleaned from the hair. Half boil it; take all the meat off in square pieces; break the bones of the head, and boil them in some good veal and…
Contributor:
Esther Levy
Places:
Philadelphia, United States of America
Date:
1871
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Every cuisine tells a story. Jewish food tells the story of an uprooted, migrating people and their vanished worlds. It lives in people’s minds and has been kept alive because of what it evokes and…
Contributor:
Claudia Roden
Places:
New York City, United States of America
(Hampstead, United Kingdom)
Date:
1996
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Mildred Lubritz Covert was born in uptown New Orleans in 1927 and ate a rich mix of eastern European, creole, and African American foods throughout her childhood. She later chronicled this cuisine in…
Contributor:
Marcie Cohen Ferris
Places:
Chapel Hill, United States of America
Date:
2005
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Food was important not just as a means of survival, but also because, as Ma repeatedly told me, “it’s made with love that makes it taste so good.” As a toddler, perched on a chair, I watched each step…
Contributor:
Ethel G. Hofman
Places:
Philadelphia, United States of America
Date:
2005
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Miriam Steinberg of Highland Park, Illinois, would never think of making her weekly challah without first separating some dough, reciting a blessing over it, and then burning it in the oven, in…
Contributor:
Joan Nathan
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
2004
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The Street was my father’s life. He was a commission merchant in Washington Market, contracting for crops from farmers in Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, California, Texas, and just about everywhere…
Contributor:
Mimi Sheraton
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1979