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Food

How far has your challah travelled?

July 10, 2008 23:00

ByNathan Jeffay, Nathan Jeffay

2 min read

It may seem local, but your Shabbat loaf may have come from Israel

No Friday-night meal is complete without an in-depth discussion about the quality of the challah. In fact, few things evoke such local pride in the Jewish community as baked goods.

But before you shower the baker round the corner with compliments, you may want to find out what, exactly, his or her role is.

In some cases, you would be better off directing your gratitude to Itzik Bechar, an Israeli businessman based in the town of Holon, south of Tel Aviv. Or more precisely, the employees of his firm, Gidron, who make and shape the dough for challah and then freeze the unbaked breads in crates which they ship around the world. The recipients need no baking experience — they just defrost them, leave them to proof, and pop them in their ovens.

In fact, you may even owe thanks to the international food giant Nestlé. Bonjour, a Kiryat Gat-based subsidiary of Nestlé-owned Osem, dispatches an enormous container of ready-to-bake dough to Britain five times a year — all of it good for six months, thanks to added preservatives. This bakery might take the credit for the challah, roll, a granary loaf or baguette that you eat from your “local” bakery.