Recipe Category Archives: Garden Vegetable Levana Meal Replacement

Zucchini Dip Recipe

Adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

zucchini dip

Zucchini Dip is what we do when we have too many zucchini.

We make many wonderful zucchini treats, many of which you are of course familiar with: Ratatouille, grilled vegetables, soup, breads etc… How about this zucchini dip? Just be prepared to start with a mountain of zucchini, and end up with a little bowl of amazing zucchini dip. Rustic, unpretentious and deceptively plain. What I love with zucchini is that while they are very mild by themselves, they take on the other wonderful flavors they are paired with, so you can take them in many exciting directions.

As always, here comes my war cry again: Use your food processor for all your slicing, shredding and chopping!

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Cape Cod Cold Kugel

Adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

cape cod cold kugel

Make a delicious Cape Cod Cold Kugel

Huh? Cold Kugel? What’s going on, have I lost my head? Who needs a cold kugel recipe? Who would even give cold kugel the right time of day? Or was I just playing with alliteration (Cape Cold Cold Kugel: Does sound catchy!)?
Seriously: All of us harried people racking their brains about how to make and serve interesting foods that don’t need warming up will be delighted to hear just how delicious cold potato kugel can be. Lovely Devorah Leah Alperowitz, Rebetzin of Chabad Cape Cod, where we just spent a delightful few Sukkot days, an anniversary elopement as I call it, has graciously shared her recipe, and all I did was tweak it ever so slightly to make it perfectly healthy, so it finds its rightful place in my repertoire: I’ll be making it for Yom Tov, and so will you, I’ll bet!

Don’t be alarmed at the amount of oil used for frying the onions:

That’s the whole amount going into the whole cold kugel recipe, so: not too bad!

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Baked Almond Stuffed Salmon Recipe

Stuffed Salmon recipe has been adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

stuffed salmon

My stuffed salmon is not nearly as hard as the stuffing part might make it sound.

Who knew almonds would make a wonderful stuffing for fish?

We Sephardis always did: almonds are a staple for both sweet and savory dishes. Wonderful when paired with green apples!  Stuffed salmon is perfect for a Seder dinner first course. Please ask your fishmonger to bone the fish thoroughly, as bones will be very hard to spot in a stuffed fish.

Will this work with other fish?

Yes, it will work beautifully. You can use any nice size whole fish, butterflied and thoroughly boned: Trout is great, branzino, snapper etc. In that case you might work with 6-8 fish. Follow the recipe exactly, but reduce the cooking time by about 10 minutes. This is especially wonderful when you decide to serve it as main course: 1 stuffed fish per person.

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Cottage Cheese Salad Recipe

Adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

I just had me a little cottage cheese salad party!

My granddaughter Musia and I demolished a whole bowl of it this past shabbos.

Just in case cottage cheese eaten alone sounds too plain, here’s how to jazz it up!

My Russian mother in law Z”L used to make cottage cheese salad for us all the time, and called it – mysteriously – blotte.
Here’s my lean version of cottage cheese salad (sans sour cream), straight from the Old World: It brings a smile to my husband’s face. Adjust it to your personal taste: There’s nothing you can do to ruin it!

Only please don’t use the fat-free cottage cheese.

It just doesn’t taste good enough to take the trouble. This cottage cheese salad has no oil and no dressing, so it is perfectly OK to use 4% cottage cheese. If you would like, do all your chopping in the food processor, it will save time; just be sure to use the pulse button and don’t let the vegetables get chopped too fine.

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Yerushalmi Kugel Recipe

Adapted from Levana Cooks, using Garden Vegetable Levana Nourishments

yerushalmi kugel

Yerushalmi Kugel is a great Jewish favorite

It is also a real showcase in Israeli synagogues at Kiddush time:

I have seen two burly men flip an enormous pot of Yerushalmi Kugel onto a gigantic counter, then slice it across its whole diameter in two or three places with a knife about three feet long (promise!), then cut through the whole stack of disks from top to bottom, in hundreds of cubes. It reminded me of Gulliver’s travels. I remember thinking, what a pity it’s Shabbos and we can’t take pictures of this phenomenon! Then after I watched all the hard work, and inhaled the wonderful whiffs that filled the room, I watched it disappear in minutes, barely getting the time to get a piece of the wonderful stuff for myself.

The trademark of Yerushalmi kugel is the caramelized sugar-oil mixture

That’s pretty high maintenance (first hurdle), then combining that mixture with the other ingredients (a real nuisance, as the hot sugar-oil mixture seizes and hardens, and resists combining with the rest of the ingredients: second hurdle). I tried with caramelizing the sugar in water, which is the usual way of making caramel and then combining the caramel with the remaining ingredients, and found it much easier to make the dish this way, and every bit as delicious.

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