As the High Holidays approach, the local Chabad's Jewish Calendar and my parents appear. I'm in the backyard, bickering with my siblings as Daddooooo takes family pictures - stills and movies - under the pin oak tree. I'm in the kitchen as G'ma takes the navy Kosher cookbook off the shelf over her sink, opening to the same stained pages as always.
I am certain that the Revere Ware pot is 72 years old; G'ma and Daddooooo received the set as a wedding present in 1952. I'm almost positive that the Tupperware with the white lid also began life in their kitchen, as did my lifelong love of the matzoh ball.
I like them all the ways G'ma made them, the fluffy ones and the dense ones, the ones she served at Seders and the ones I could cajole her into serving me for lunch just because. Consistency was never her strong suit, but I didn't care. I, the pickiest eater in a family of picky eaters, was delighted with every iteration.
That is fortunate, because I, too, have a consistency problem with the consistency of my matzoh balls. TBG claims not to notice anything beyond the Yum Quotient, which is very high. I notice every difference and consume each of them - the Manischewitz and the Streits; the boiled quickly and the frozen; the golf balls and the baseballs - with reckless abandon.
The liquid itself deserves its own post. Suffice it to say that its role is to enhance the matzoh balls, rather than take center stage.
Jewish Penicillin - it cures physical aches and pains, and soothes the soul.
As I typed that I remembered the series saying the same thing. I can see G'ma smiling, with love, at my hubris.
I told you they were with me.
I have had matzo ball soup only twice in my life -- both in the last year. The first serving was of dense and almost gummy variety and I thought to myself what is all the fuss about?? The second time and a different cook, they were light and fluffy and absolutely heavenly. I grew up with homemade noodles as the ultimate comfort food. I've only attempted that once for myself -- just not the same!
ReplyDeleteI have never had Matzoh balls, but then I am not Jewish. We Swedes eat potato lefse. :-)
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