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Soup Recipes

Garden Vegetable Soup

This Garden Vegetable Soup is includes cabbage, green beans, tomatoes, and more garden veggies. I puree the soup with an immersion blender, but you can leave the vegetables whole if you prefer. This recipe makes a lot...

Jerusalem Artichoke Soup

For a different and delicious soup, try this Jerusalem Artichoke soup. Jerusalem artichokes, also known as sunchoke or sunroot, have no relation to Jerusalem or artichokes. And the soup's funny brown color has no...

Barbara's Mushroom Barley Soup

Mushroom Barley Soup is easier to prepare each time you make it. And I suggest making it often. Mushroom Barley Soup is especially nice to serve before a meat dinner. This Shabbat we are having Homemade Challah,...

Zucchini Basil Soup

This Zucchini Basil Soup is super delicious and healthy, and probably our family's favorite summer soup. It is surprisingly easy to prepare. Just saute onions, garlic and zucchini, add water and spices, simmer and...

Chana's Cheese Blintzes

Blintz, which means "pancake" in Ukrainian, is a classic Ashkenazic Jewish food that probably originated in Poland. Blintzes are thin crepe-like pancakes folded around a filling. Cheese blintzes are traditionally served for Shavuot along with other dairy dishes. In this recipe, the blintzes are so delicious that there is no need to fry them after they are filled.

clock
Prep Time: 20 m
cook time
Cook Time: 30 m
yield
Yield: 8-12 blintzes
course
Course: Appetizer, Brunch, Lunch, Dinner
occasion
Occasion: Shavuot
Skill
Skill: Advanced
ingredients
Ingredients

BLINTZ

  • 4 eggs, beaten
  • 2 cups water 
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 cup flour
  • oil for frying 

FILLING

  • 1 lb. small-curd cottage cheese or farmer's cheese (400 gm. white cheese in Israel)
  • 1/4 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
instructions
Instructions

BLINTZ

  1. Mix eggs and water. Mix flour and salt in a separate bowl.
  2. Whisk flour mixture into egg and water mixture until smooth. If you are having trouble getting it smooth, let it sit for a few minutes and then whisk again. The batter should be thin. If it is too thick, add some more water.
  3. Pour a few drops of oil into a frying pan, and heat until the oil is very hot.
  4. Pour just enough blintz mixture into the hot oil to lightly cover the pan. Rotate the pan so the batter covers the whole bottom.
  5. Cook blintz until the center bubbles and the blintz slides in the pan. Be patient. If you try to turn out a blintz that isn't completely cooked through, it will tear.
  6. Turn out blintz from pan onto a plate to cool. Only one side of the blintz needs to be cooked.
  7. Continue steps 1-6 above until all the batter has been used. Stack the blintzes one on top of another on a plate.

* Be sure to stir the batter before frying a new crepe as the flour might settle at the bottom.

* Don't give up. Practice makes perfect when it comes to blintzes. Fortunately, kids will love to eat those blintzes which didn't turn out great so nothing has to go to waste.

FILLING

  1. In a bowl, mix cheese, sugar and vanilla until well blended. Taste test to arrive at the right amount of sugar and vanilla for a sweet tasting filling.
  2. Put 1-2 tablespoons (depending on the size of the blintz made) of filling in each blintz. Fold one side over, the bottom up and the top down, and then the second side over to form a neat square.

TIPS: Once the crepes are filled, they can be stored in an airtight container or bag and frozen.

NOTE: To lower the fat content in this recipe, use a nonstick vegetable spray, low fat cheese and sugar substitute instead of the oil, cheese and sugar in the above recipe.

SERVING SUGGESTIONS: Serve with fruit jams or sour cream. These blintzes can be eaten cold, warm or hot.

Salad Recipes

Sweet and Sour Lettuce

My Hungarian father makes this special Sweet and Sour Lettuce Salad, and my pickle-loving daughter gobbles it up. It is gentler than sauerkraut, but also dresses up meat sandwiches or makes a flavorful side dish.

Colorful Corn Salad

When we have guests over in the summer, I like to put a variety of fresh salads on the table. This Corn Salad is one of my favorite salads to serve because it is colorful, delicious, and easy to make. This salad also...

Tuna Pasta Salad

For a healthy and satiating salad that your children may even enjoy, try this light, colorful and tasty Tuna Pasta Salad. With tuna, pasta and vegetables, the salad makes a yummy meal-in-one.

Cauliflower Broccoli Salad

I made this Cauliflower Broccoli Salad for our Israeli Independence Day picnic. The carrots and red onion add color, and the sunflower seeds and cashews add flavor. The simple dressing consists of mayonnaise, red wine...

Sara's Pepper, Cheese, Sugared Pecan Salad

Sara Adar's Pepper, Cheese and Sugared Pecan Salad was chosen by Israel's Tnuva Dairy company for inclusion in their special Shavuot recipe magazine. This winning recipe has been translated from Hebrew and posted here...

Dessert Recipes

Chocolate Raspberry Bars

Want to serve a great tasting and easy to make dessert that isn't the same-old same-old? Paula Levine Weinstein and Julie Komerofsky Remer published this delicious kosher Chocolate Raspberry Bars recipe in their...

3 Ingredient Peanut Butter Cookies

If you are looking for a cookie recipe to make together with your young children, this is it. In addition to being extremely simple and quick to make, these cookies are great fun because of their old-fashioned taste....

Butter Pecan Turtle Bars

I brought this Butter Pecan Turtle Cookies recipe to Israel from the States. I made it often early in my marriage, when we could use the pecans from my in-laws pecan tree. In later years (when the pecan tree was no...

Chef Gabi's Chocolate Walnut Cookies

As he took me on a tour of his parve bakery in the Dan Eilat hotel, head Pastry Chef Gabi Elmakeas shared this recipe for kosher Chocolate Walnut Cookies. They have a uniquely light, meringue-like texture and a...

Dairy Fudge Brownies with Peanut Butter Chips

I found this recipe on the Internet after buying peanut butter chips on sale at the grocery store. I was surprised by the positive reactions and requests for the recipe I got after serving them for Seudah Shlishit. So...

Brownies

This easy-to-bake, moist, chocolately, tasty brownie is my go-to Shabbat dessert when I have a crowd for Shabbat lunch. You can make it ahead of time and freeze. They taste good frozen or defrosted. To make it more...

Jo's Techina Cookies

When my friend Jo served these tasty Techina Cookies for Shabbat dessert, I immediately asked for the recipe for my daughter and son-in-law who love techina. It was a nice surprise to get a recipe that happens to be...

Meryll's Mandelbrot

I like this Mandelbrot recipe, contributed by Meryll Levine Page, because the cookies are toasted through, rather than cake-like. And while Mandlebrot literally means almond (mandel) bread (brot), the addition of...

Pumpkin Doodles

This is another unique, easy to make, and amazingly delicious recipe from Susie Fishbein. The recipe comes from her Kosher by Design - Entertains cookbook. I serve these parve Pumpkin Doodle Cookies, next to Chocolate...

Meryll's Adaptable Fruit Torte

Our cousin from Minneapolis, who regularly hosts Shabbos meals for large crowds, has become reliant on this Adaptable Shabbat Torte lately. Meryll claims that once you get the hang of the cake, you can make it on...

Applesauce

Why buy expensive canned applesauce from the grocery store when it is so easy to make it at home. The homemade applesauce tastes better anyway. And you don't need any preservatives because it gets eaten up so quickly.

Frozen Lemon Dessert

This is the perfect summer Shabbat lunch or Seudah Shlishit dessert, especially when you have invited guests. This Frozen Lemon Dessert is pareve, easy to make, and a light, sweet ending to a festive meal.

Buckeyes

My kids love these peanut butter chocolate bonbons (Buckeyes). They are easy to make, can be made in advance, pareve and sinfully delicious. However, I can't make them too often because I end up eating too many of them...

Meringue Kisses

Meringue cookies take time to prepare and bake, but the work itself is simple. I made these meringues with my 6-year-old, as the recipe came from Susie Fishbein's Kosher by Design: Kids in the Kitchen cookbook. When...

Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream

Our friends in Modiin served us this tasty Mint Chocolate Chip Ice Cream after Shabbat lunch. Since this Ice Cream is non-dairy, it can be served after a meat Sabbath or Jewish holiday meal. I simplified the recipe to...

Monica’s Chocolate Mint Brownies

My friend Monica always serves delicious food in a very aesthetic way. She served us these yummy, pareve, Chocolate Mint Brownies for Shabbat dessert, and then generously sent me the recipe when I requested.

Lemon-Poppy Seed Angel Cake

I like to serve this cake when I want to impress my guests. There is something a bit more sophisticated in its lite texture and gentle lemon flavor than many of my other baked treats.

Oreo Balls

I came back from Atlanta with this recipe for Oreo Balls, where these extraordinatry cookies were served at my nephew's bar mitzvah. These no-bake (but messy-to-make) cookies, which can be prepared in advance by...

White Chocolate Lemon Bark

Our Shavuot guests brought us this White Chocolate Lemon Bark. I plan to make it for this and every Shavuot from now on. It is easy to make, delicious and a memorable end to a festive dairy meal. Sometimes simple is...

Chocolate Chip Cookies

I grew up in a home in which Chocolate Chip Cookies were favored. In fact, my grandparents used to call them "Donny Cookies" because my father Don Katz loved them so much. So it shouldn't be a surprise that rarely did...