Authors: Marlena Spieler
CHOLENT
Ashkenazi, long-simmered stew of meat and beans.
CHRAIN
Horseradish and beetroot condiment of Ashkenazi origin.
CHREMSLACH
Ashkenazi matzo meal pancakes, often eaten at Pesach.
DAFINA
A long-baked Shabbat stew, made of beef (often with a cow’s foot), potato, beans and hard-boiled eggs. It is a speciality of Moroccan Jews.
DAIRY
Refers to a meal made with milk products.
DESAYUNO
Sephardi Shabbat breakfast.
EINBREN FLOUR
Flour browned with fat. Traditionally, it is used to thicken soup in the German Ashkenazi kitchen.
EINGEMACHTS
A preserve made from beetroot (beets), radishes, carrots, cherries, lemons or walnuts. It is favoured at Pesach.
ETROG
Large yellow citron used to celebrate Sukkot.
FALAFEL
Deep-fried chickpea or broad (fava) bean croquettes, adopted from the Arabs. They are eaten with salads and pitta bread.
FARFEL
Pellet-shaped dumplings made from grated noodle dough or crumbled matzo.
FASSOULIA
White beans, often stewed with meats and vegetables, eaten as an appetizer or stew, popular with the Jews of Greece.
GEFILTE FISH
Ashkenazi balls of minced (ground) fish, eaten cold, poached and jellied or fried. Gefilte means stuffed, and originally the fish was stuffed back into its skin.
GLATT
A particularly stringent form of Kashrut.
GRAM FLOUR
It is made from ground dried chickpeas and is used in pakoras, spicy pastries, and falafel.
HALEK
Date syrup, eaten for Pesach by the Jews of Iraq, India and Yemen, in addition to or in place of charosses. In the Bible, “halek” is thought to refer to honey.
HALVA
A sweetmeat made from sesame paste and sugar or honey, and flavourings, then pressed into blocks and dried. Chocolate, pistachio nuts or almonds may also be added. Halva is popular with Jews from Middle Eastern and Balkan lands.
HAMANTASHEN
Triangular-shaped, Ashkenazi cookies with various fillings such as apricots or nuts; eaten at Purim.
HAMIM
See cholent.
HANUKKAH
See Chanukkah.
HARISSA
North African fiery paste of red chillies and spices, often served with mild foods such as couscous.
HAROSSET/HAROSSETH
See charosses/charosset.
HAVDALAH
The ceremony that marks the end of Shabbat and the start of the new week. Prayers are said over wine, special spices are smelled, and a candle is lit.
HAWAIJ
A Yemeni spice mixture that includes cardamom, saffron and turmeric, used in most Yemenite cooking.
HILBEH
A pungent spice paste of ground fenugreek seeds, often served with spicy zchug. Hilbeh is slighly bitter and has a unique aroma, almost like brown sugar.
HOLISHKES
Ashkenazi stuffed cabbage, it is often simmered or baked in a sweet-and-sour tomato sauce.
HOREF
Hebrew for hot pepper or spicy. Used in Israel to describe the spicy sauce or peppers eaten with falafel.
IKADDAIF
Shredded dough used in Middle Eastern pastries to wrap around nuts, then baked and soaked in syrup.
KAES
The Yiddish word for cheese.
KAMA
A Moroccan spice mixture of pepper, turmeric, ginger, cumin and nutmeg, used for stews and soups.
KARPAS
The parsley, lettuce or herbs placed on the Seder plate and dipped in salt water.
KASHA
Toasted buckwheat.
KASHRUT
Jewish dietary laws dictating what may be eaten.
KATCHAPURI
Flaky pastries filled with goat’s cheese or feta cheese, brought to Israel from Georgian Russia.
KHORESHT
The sweet and sour Persian stew that is ladled over rice and features in the everyday diet of Persian Jews.
KIBBEH
Dumplings of Middle Eastern origin made from minced (ground) lamb and soaked bulgur wheat, eaten either raw, formed into patties and baked or fried, or layered with vegetables and baked.
KICHELACH
Light, crisp, slightly sweet cookies of Lithuanian Ashkenazi origin. They are traditional in areas where there is a large Ashkenazi population.
KIDDUSH
Sanctifying blessing over the wine and challah.
KINDLI
Another name for Ashkenazi poppy-seed cake.
KISHKE
Stuffed intestine filled with matzo, chicken fat, onion and paprika. It is served roasted or poached.
KLOPS
Meatloaf or meatballs of Ashkenazi German origin.
KNAIDLACH/KNAIDL
Matzo meal dumplings.
KNISH
Savoury pastry filled with meat, cheese, potato or kasha.
KOSHER
Term used to describe any food deemed fit to eat by the laws of Kashrut.
KOSHER SALT
Large grains of salt for sprinkling on to meat, to drain out blood, as stipulated in the laws of Kashrut.
KREPLACH
Small meat-filled dumplings made of noodle dough, often served in chicken soup. At Shavuot they are filled with cheese and eaten with fruit and sour cream.
KRUPNIK
Ashkenazi mushroom and barley soup. It is a traditional dish in Eastern Europe, particularly Poland, Lithuania and Ukraine.
KUBBEH
Meat dumplings favoured by Iraqi Jews as well as those who emigrated to India and Israel. Kubbeh are eaten in soups and stews, and may also be steamed or fried.
KUBANEH
A Sephardi Shabbat breakfast dish cooked for a long time, often overnight.
KUCHEN
An Ashkenazi yeast-raised cake that is slightly sweet and often stuffed with fruit. It is eaten with coffee or tea for morning or afternoon breaks, or as dessert for festivals or holiday meals.
KUGEL
Baked dish of noodles, vegetables, potatoes or bread; it may be sweet or savoury.
LAG B’OMER
Holiday falling on the 33rd day of the counting of the Omer, the days between Pesach and Shavuot.
LAHUHUA
A Yemenite flat bread that has a crumpet-like texture and is eaten with soups and stews.
LATKES
Fried potato pancakes eaten by Ashkenazi Jews at Chanukkah. Latkes can also be made with other vegetables or matzo meal.
LEKAKH
Traditional honey cake.
LOKSHEN
Yiddish for noodles.
LOX
Yiddish for smoked salmon.
LUBIA
Black-eyed beans (peas), popular in Sephardi cooking, especially in Israel where they are added to spicy soups and stews.
MAMALIGA
A creamy porridge-like mixture of cornmeal, similar to polenta. It can be eaten hot or cold.
MANDELBROT
Almond cookies resembling Italian biscotti. They are double-baked, giving a crisp, hard texture.
MANDLEN
The Yiddish word for almonds, which are favoured in Ashkenazi cooking. Also the name of the crisp, baked or fried soup garnishes made from noodle dough.
MAROR
Bitter herbs eaten at Pesach.
MATJESHERRING
See salt herring.
MATZO/MATZAH
The unleavened, thin brittle bread ritually eaten during Pesach.
MATZO
A fine flour made from crushed matzo, used to make cakes, popular among Turks.
PAREVE
Yiddish, describing the neutral foods that are neither dairy nor meat.
PASTRAMI
A cured dried beef that is a speciality of the USA.
PESACH/PASSOVER
The festival that celebrates the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt.
PETCHA
Calf’s foot jelly, a traditional Ashkenazi dish.
PIEROGI
Little pasta dumplings, of Polish origin, filled with fillings such as cabbage, mashed potatoes, onions, cheese and kasha and served with sour cream. The sweet, dessert version are varenikes.
PIROSHKI
Ashkenazi savoury pastries of Russian origin made with a yeast dough and filled with cabbage, meat, hard-boiled egg, spinach, cheese or kasha. They may be appetizers or large pastries, and baked or fried.
PITTA BREAD
Known as khubz in Arabic, pitta is a round flat bread that is cooked on a flat pan and puffs up as it cooks. The bread may be slashed open and its hollow inside filled like a sandwich.
PLAETSCHEN
Ashkenazi term for little squares of pasta, which are eaten in soup.
PLAVA
Very simple Ashkenazi sponge cake. It was once the favourite British Jewish cake and every bakery in London’s East End had its own version.
POMERANTZEN
Candied citrus peel, a classic sweet treat of the Ashkenazi Jews of Eastern Europe, especially Germany. Sometimes it may be dipped in chocolate.
PORGE
Ritually remove blood and fat from meat.
POTATO FLOUR
Used as a light and translucent thickening agent for sauces and cakes.
PRESERVED LEMONS
A North African speciality, lemons are salted and layered in jars, which imparts a tangy flavour. They are often added to dishes such as tagines and salads.