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Food

Lublin’s non-Jewish restaurateur with a big Yiddish heart

Mandragora’s owner Izabela Kozlowska-Dechnik is on a mission to preserve the dishes of a lost generation

August 19, 2024 12:44
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Izabela is keeping tradition alive Photo: Piotr Arnoldes
2 min read

She makes gefilte fish from her grandmother’s recipes, bakes her own matzah and feeds the citizens of Lublin and visitors to the Polish city with kreplach, chopped liver and delicious salt beef. But although the menu at her restaurant Mandragora is Jewish, chef-patron Izabela Kozlowska-Dechnik is not.

And yet it remains her mission to preserve the dishes of the Jews who once lived there.

Almost the entire Jewish population of Lublin, 95 miles southeast of Warsaw, was wiped out during the Shoah. Among the 40,000 Jews who were murdered were the two families who co-owned the 16th century building which now houses the restaurant.

Mandragora is full of Jewish flavour[Missing Credit]

This year Mandragora, which takes its name from the Bible’s Song of Songs, celebrating the mandrake as a symbol of love, fertility and happiness, will have been open for 20 years.