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Joan Nathan: Eating from King Solomon’s table

Nathan is the Grande Dame of US Jewish cooking

April 20, 2017 10:22
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By

Victoria Prever,

victoria prever

3 min read

The last time I spoke to Joan Nathan, back in 2014, she was deeply involved in research for King Solomon’s Table: a culinary exploration of Jewish cooking from around the world, her 11th book, published earlier this month.

Nathan is the Grande Dame of US Jewish cooking but could be your favourite auntie — the one who cooks the best. In common with our high lady of Jewish food, Claudia Roden, her writing is more food anthropology than simple recipes; telling stories of the recipe writers and of each dish’s evolution. Her mission is to preserve ancestors’ recipes by telling their stories while sharing their recipes.

This book is a collection of more than 170 dishes gathered worldwide — from Yemen to Hungary and from India to El Salvador. They include traditional festival dishes (hamantaschen and six types of charoset); Ashkenazi classics, like gefilte fish and mandelbrot, and Sephardi staples which include Libyan Saefra — aka King Solomon’s cake — and herbed labneh. Her research — over six years — brought her to the UK.

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