KOSHER STYLE; more than 100 Jewish recipes for the modern cook (Appetite by   Random House, 2019, 245 pages, ISBN 978-0-525-60988-9 $35 CAD hardbound) is by   Amy Rosen, well-known award-winning freelance journalist and editor. She's the   author of five books, including Toronto Eats and Toronto Cooks. It's got log   rolling endorsements from Christina Tosi, Alan Richman, and Lucy Waverman. These   are all her family classics that have been modernized, but still kosher. The   range is from Jewish holidays through work-day dinners with some entertaining.   Of course, all then preps are doable at home and are  marked "meat",   "dairy" or "pareve" (neutral). It's all arranged by course, from apps through   nuts and sweets, concluding with ten menus for gettogethers, such as a   vegetarian shabbat, seder, chanukah, sukkot, and high holidays. There is even a   passover party mix. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. The book could have   been improved if it had also used metric in the recipes, or at least had that   metric conversion chart. There is also a fair bit of cultural background with   each prep, plus some memoir-ish material.
  Audience and level of use: millennials, Kosher (and kosher-style) food   eaters.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: roasted salmon with horseradish   sauce and pickled onions; bialys; roasted butternut squash soup; sweet challah;   kasha pilaf; Friday-night roast chicken; cheese blintzes.
  The downside to this book: lacks metric.
  The upside to this book: includes typical ultra modern dishes such as   quinoa-tofu bowl with greens or harissa-roasted carrots. 
  Quality/Price Rating: 91.
  Chimo!   www.deantudor.com
 
 

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