Love, Israeli Style — and All the Weekly Dish
Israel’s got , the “holiday of love.” We’ve got Valentine’s Day. Somewhere in between is New York’s Israeli-owned Breads Bakery, which is cooking up seductive sweets with February 14 in mind.
Look for decorated shortbread “True Love” cookies, dark-chocolate truffles with hazelnut filling, heart-shaped marzipan cookies and heart-shaped raspberry macarons.
No heart-shaped babka to report — yet — but there is more news coming out of the bakery: February 10 marks the opening of a new location, near Lincoln Center on New York’s Upper West Side.
Only in L.A.
The half-Mexican, half-Japanese proprietor of MexiKosher — yes, it’s kosher Mexican — reveals his favorite “Kosher corridor” restaurants to L.A. Weekly this week.
Related
Making Kosher Mexican Food at Home
Among Chef Katsuji Tanabe’s picks: Ta-eem Grill (“the best shawarma in the city”); Bibi’s Bakery Café, beloved for Israeli breakfasts; Tunisian spot Got Kosher?; and the self-explanatory Beverly Hills Kosher Thai.
Katsuji competes in Top Chef Mexico starting February 18.
Food Hall Wars
Miami chef Michelle Bernstein — she of “Jewish and Latin descent” — is the brains behind the intriguingly named Crumb on Parchment stall at Macy’s new Chef Street food hall in New York. Bernstein’s original has been a hit in Miami’s Design District. On the menu: salads and veg/protein bowls.
Across the street, Chef Franklin Becker is one of the stars at The Pennsy, the glitzy new food hall inside New York Penn Station. Joining machers like Mario Batali and Marc Forgione, Becker’s opened a third location of Little Beet, his “healthy fast-casual” brand.
Ben & Jerry’s Non-Dairy
Now that they’ve honored Bernie Sanders with his own ice-cream flavor, Ben & Jerry’s have done mitzvah No. 2 for the year. The company finally released its first-ever non-dairy flavors last week, all certified kosher DE — manufactured with dairy equipment.
It’s big news if you’ve always craved Ben & Jerry’s after, say, a burger. “Or maybe you’re among the 75% of Ashkenazi Jews who are lactose intolerant,” MyJewishLearning notes.
Look for Chunky Monkey, Chocolate Fudge Brownie, Coffee Caramel Fudge and PB & Cookies.
New in Toronto
You’ll find the usual salads, sandwiches and gluten-free items at The Shmooz, in the city’s east end. But the item that’s getting buzz is “Bubbie’s chicken soup.” Shmooz owner Tzabia Siegel is also known as wellness consultant The Food Coach. No word if the soup recipe comes from her bubbie or that of husband Barry.
The Shmooz, 590 Pape Ave., Toronto
Fresh-From-the-Oven News From Atlanta
TGM Bread, the wholesale bakery of very cool “Southern Jewish del*i” The General Muir, has opened to the public for first time.
Along with croissants, baguettes, multigrain and ciabatta loaves — all to be sampled at bread tastings — TGM Bread’s offering preserves and olive oils.
Melodrama With a Schmear
Montreal’s iconic Fairmount Bagel is the subject of a short film that premiered online last week.
A late-night visit to their favorite bagel haunt inspired L.A.-based Montreal transplants Jonathan Keijser and Daniel Beresh to make Bagels in the Blood.
The film profiles Irwin Shlafman, grandson of founder Isadore Shlafman — and reveals some long-baking family melodrama. “It was surprising to find despite the triumphant success of Fairmount Bagel, the sad story behind the grandson of the founder,” Kaijser told Dish.
U.K. Foodies
Foodies dot the annual Faces to Watch list in the U.K. Jewish Chronicle.
Keep an eye out for Tom Benn, 22, creator of the Pip & Nut line of kosher nut butters, and Charlot Conway, also 22, who launched health-food brand Raw Ecstasy — and recently appeared in British Vogue.
Michael Kaminer is a contributing editor at the Forward.
A message from our CEO & publisher Rachel Fishman Feddersen
I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.
At a time when other newsrooms are closing or cutting back, the Forward has removed its paywall and invested additional resources to report on the ground from Israel and around the U.S. on the impact of the war, rising antisemitism and polarized discourse.
Readers like you make it all possible. Support our work by becoming a Forward Member and connect with our journalism and your community.
— Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO