margarine

Bubby’s Sugar Cookies

September 14, 2012

Author: Yael Kornfeld

 

My Bubby was a very special individual who had an open door policy and was known in her community for being someone who would happily host anyone traveling through her city. Bubby always had these special sugar cookies ready and available for all of us. Bubby used to sprinkle them with extra sugar on top although I prefer to frost them and decorate them with all different colors. Enjoy!

Ingredients:

2 cups flour

2 tsp. baking powder

½ cup sugar+2 tbsp

¼ cup margarine

2 eggs beaten

1 tsp vanilla

Preparation:

Mix it all together and bake for about ten minutes or so.

 



 

Savtah Cookie Dough

February 6, 2013

Author: Tamar Genger

I grew up in Florida, but the rest of my family, uncles, aunts, cousins and grandparents all lived in Toronto. I didn’t get to see my grandparents all the time, but I did get to see them for a few months during the winter when they would escape the cold and a few weeks in the summer when we would escape the heat. In either Toronto or Florida, most of my memories revolve around food.

My Bubbie (my father’s mother) always gave us Nips and her friends in the condo gave us chocolate covered candy sticks. Bubbie would make cornflake crumb chicken and farfel and corn and we loved it. My mother’s mother, we called Savta, was not much of a cook, but boy could she bake.

Every time we visited Savta she would have a batch of Savta cookies waiting for us. Not much to them, they are a basic sugar cookie, but they tasted amazing and were so versatile. We used this dough to make plain cookies, to make hamantaschen and even rolled rugelach-style cookies using the dough. I still make these cookies every year! I will always call them Savta cookies and I hope that I can pass on my memories of my beloved Savta to my kids when we bake together.

This dough is wonderful as a plain cookie, which is why it also works beautifully for hamantashen and even rugelach. Visit Joy of Kosher for additional recipes.

Ingredients:

Makes about 36 cookies depending on the size

• 1 cup margarine

• 1 cup Sugar

• 2 Eggs

• 21/2 cups Flour

• 21/2 tsp. baking powder

• 2 teaspoons vanilla

Preparation:

1 Mix margarine, sugar and vanilla in food processor. Add eggs. In a separate bowl mix 2½ teaspoons baking powder with 2½ cups flour. Add the flour mixture to the wet mixture and mix until dough forms.

2 Roll out dough and use as you like.

3 Bake at 400 for 12 minutes.

4 Variation: You can substitute 1 teaspoon lemon juice for the vanilla and it will make it crispier.

 

Blueberry Crumble

March 11, 2013

Author: Aviva Kanoff

This recipe comes from No-Potato Passover, now available on Amazon.com

Ingredients:

Blueberry Filling:

4 cups fresh blueberries

¼ cup white sugar

(do not add sugar if blueberries are naturally very sweet)

juice of 1 lemon

Crust and Crumb Topping:

¾ cup white sugar

¼ cup brown sugar

1 tsp. baking powder

2 cups ground almonds

2 cups matzo cake meal

¼ tsp. salt

zest of 1 lemon

¼ cup (½ stick) unsalted butter or

margarine, cold and cut into cubes

1 egg

¼ cup toasted slivered almonds

Preparation:

1. Preheat oven to 375° and grease a 9×13-inch baking pan.

2. In a mixing bowl combine the blueberry filling ingredients. Stir until mixed well and set aside.

3. In a separate bowl, mix together the white sugar, brown sugar, baking powder, ground almonds, cake meal, salt, and lemon zest until well combined. Add the butter and egg, and use a pastry cutter to blend the ingredients until well combined and you still have pea-sized chunks of butter. Mix in the slivered almonds.

4. Place half of the crust mixture into the baking dish and press it firmly into the bottom. Spoon the blueberry mixture into crust, being careful not to add too much of the liquid.

5. Crumble the rest of the crust mixture over the blueberries so that it is evenly distributed. Bake for 50 minutes until the crumb topping is golden brown.

6. Let cool for at least an hour before cutting. Cut into 24 squares. This dish is best served just slightly above room temperature, but any leftovers can be stored in the refrigerator.

 

The Butcher’s Daughter

March 6, 2014

Author: Sarah Horowitz

It’s 9 AM. I hear the familiar voice of the nine o’clock newsman on the radio. The pots stop rattling. It’s time for my mother to stop and listen. From my bed the Yiddish news takes over the smells from the kitchen.

The smell was overpowering, the mixture of chopped liver with cooking onions and fresh made cookies. That mixture for sure did not get me out of bed for breakfast. Instead I quietly listened to news from the gentle mans voice. The news about American Jews, Israeli Jews, what the weather was.

I knew my mom would review these news items with my aunts and neighbors. So I listened carefully. It was hot out. The day was waiting for me but I knew that my mom would make me eat. She was going to make me try the fresh meat for breakfast. I hate meat but I love cookies. The only way to get the cookies was to eat the meat.

Tried both and again my mom told me what a good girl I was. The butcher’s daughter has to eat meat for breakfast!

Ingredients:

10 cups flour

4 eggs

2 cups sugar

1tsp vanilla

1tbsp baking soda

1 glass orange juice

1lb margarine (salted)

1 glass oil

Preparation:

Mix-use cookie making machine. Try not to use the cutters with holiday themes e.g. trees, crosses, stars. Drop cookies brush with egg whites. Decorate with sprinkles and sugared nuts. Bake ten minutes. Cool on racks. Store in large pickle jars.

 

 

 

Tsimmes

December 10, 2012

Author: Ronna Dell Valle and Sharon Mason

 

 

Ingredients:

1 1/2 lb. carrots, peeled and slice thick or use bags of baby carrots

1 (24 oz.) pkg. of pitted prunes

2 yams or sweet potatoes, peeled and cut in large cubes or very thick slices

1/4 cup OJ

1 Tbsp. Parve Margarine

1 cup water

1 Tbsp. brown sugar

1/2 tsp. cinnamon

1/4 tsp. cloves

Preparation:

Saute carrots in margarine in covered saucepan for 15 minutes. Add everything else and bring to a boil. Place in a baking dish and bake, covered (use aluminum foil), at 350 degrees, stirring and basting with the liquid until done (carrots & yams are soft and the liquid is “syrupy” in consistency).

 

 

Mama’s Spinach Kugel

December 28, 2012

Author: Ronna Dell Valle and Sharon Mason

 

 

Our father, of blessed memory, loved this Kugel. It was his favorite as he was not a big fan of the more traditional sweet noodle kugels.

Ingredients:

8 oz. wide noodles

2 (10 oz.) pkgs. Frozen chopped spinach that has been thawed and squeezed dry

1/2 cup butter or margarine (use some to grease the pan)

1 onion, chopped

3 eggs, lightly beaten

1 cup of sour cream

Preparation:

Cook noodles according to package directions until almost done (very al dente). Mix noodles with spinach. Saute onions until slightly brown in the butter or margarine remaining after you have greased an 8 by 10 or 7 by 11 inch or 2 qt. baking dish. Mix onions with noodles and spinach. Mix eggs and sour cream together and fold into noodle, spinach and onion mixture. Pour into greased pan and bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.

If Mom had other cooked vegetables (leftovers), like carrots and broccoli, she would chop them and make a mixed vegetable kugel.

 

Bette’s Kugel

July 9, 2013

Author: Jeremy Schwartz

I see that I had misunderstood the “beyond” in “beyond bubbie.” I was worried about submitting this recipe, because it’s about as “bubbie” as you get, not “beyond” at all. This, in particular is a 50s bubbie recipe, with plenty of fat, brand name jars from the grocery store, sweet, filled with love and delicious. The bubbie I got it from actually wasn’t a bubbie at the time. She was my high school best friend, Seth’s (Shmuel’s) mother, Bette Globus.

Ingredients:

1 lg pkg broad egg noodles (cooked til not mushy)

4 eggs

1 stick margarine, melted + more unmelted for dotting

¾ large jar Stuckey’’s orange marmalade

1 c. 2% cottage cheese

¾ c. sour cream

1 sm. Philadelphia cream cheese

corn flakes

for cinnamon sugar mixture:

½ – ¾ c. sugar

3 Tsp. cinnamon.

Preparation:

Beat the eggs. Add cream cheese. Break up and beat. In 2nd bowl, mix sour cream, cottage cheese, marmalade and melted margarine. Add to egg mixture. Fold in cooked noodles. Put in greased baking dish (9 x 12). If there’s excess liquid, spoon off ~5 spoonfuls). Top w/ crushed cornflake crumbs. In 3rd bowl, mix sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle on top of kugel. Dot w/ margarine and sprinkle lightly again with cornflake crumbs. Bake at 350° ~ 45 min.

 

 

Pasta E Fagioli

July 28, 2014

Author: C Grillo

 

 

Ingredients:

1/2 bag of Great Northern beans

1/2 bag Pinto beans

1/4 cup lentils

1/4 cup split peas

1 tsp parsley

1 stalk celery (chopped)

1 cup crushed tomatoes

1 carrot (chopped)

1 large onion (chopped)

1/2 stick margarine or butter

salt to taste

1 cup broken spaghetti noodles (cooked)

1 box frozen spinach OR broccoli

Directions:

Wash and drain Great Northern & Pinto beans and add to pot. Fill the pot 3/4 full with water

Add parsley, carrots, onions, tomatoes & salt to pot. Bring to a simmer (partially covered) for 3/4 hour.

Add lentils and split peas and Oleo (margarine/butter) and cook for another 3/4 hour – stir a little every so often.

Cook separately frozen spinach or broccoli and spaghetti – add to pot when finished (Split peas should be soft) adjust salt to taste and serve.