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Food

New year, old comforts

Desperate for babka? Craving kugel? This is food to lift your spirits

September 23, 2022 07:30
9781682686980
3 min read

A world pandemic, the passing of the Commonwealth’s bubbe, HRH The Queen, plus the prospect of stratospheric heating bills this winter means we’re all in need of some consolation.

So the recent publication of Modern Jewish Comfort Food by US food writer Shannon Sarna is perfectly timed.

“I wrote it during the height of the pandemic,” she tells me. “People’s attitudes were like, ‘It’s hard, we need comfort food right now, we need real food.’”

The New Jersey-based mother of three, editor of top US Jewish food website The Nosher, says that what’s modern about the recipes is that they reflect the current culinary repertoire for many US Jewish cooks. “It’s a snapshot of foods in our midst right now.”

Sarna’s path to Jewish food maven was not an obvious one. Although she loved eating, as a child she had minimal interest in preparing it. “I started cooking after my mom died when I was 16. I kinda had to, because I had two younger siblings and I had to feed them — a lot.”
It was when she went to college that cooking became a passion: “My entry point to really loving to cook was in college when I started baking challah.

“I sort of fell in love it and that inspired me into wanting to learn how to make more dishes.”
Initially the baking was just for family: “It was in some ways very therapeutic at a time when life was a little hard and sad after my mom died.”

Food writing was not her original career plan. She studied Spanish, French, Russian and comparative government at college before moving to Washington DC to work in politics. She shifted over to the charitable sector, working for a Jewish philanthropist. The work involved telling stories online and via social media to publicise the work of her employer’s foundation.
“I had a really fantastic mentor, an Israeli lady called Donna, who I’m still close with, who really pushed me and encouraged me into writing — something my mother had also done. It was life-changing for me.”

The charity she was working for helped support her further education in journalism and social media strategy. “For me the entry point into food media was really through my expertise in social media,” she explains. She started a food blog and was approached by US website My Jewish Learning to write one for them. “That was 11 years ago — when The Nosher was born.”