Matzoh Ball Gumbo: Culinary Tales of the Jewish South by Marcie Cohen Ferris

    • Categories: Main course; Jewish
    • Ingredients: celery; dry red wine; tomato sauce with chile; onions; Worcestershire sauce; beef brisket; mustard; tomato ketchup; coffee
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Notes about this book

  • Eat Your Books

    2006 International Association of Culinary Professionals Award Winner

  • robm on November 27, 2010

    An interesting book about Jewish cooking in the South, but with few recipes, unfortunately. For those, better bets would be Jewish community cookbooks from the South, or the somewhat hokey Kosher Southern-Style, Kosher Creole and Kosher Cajun books. Or just use a standard Southern cookbook and adapt!

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Pesach fried green tomatoes

    • lorloff on July 06, 2019

      This was a winner. Easy to make. The Matzo meal works perfectly. I used Cayenne from Vij in Vancouver Canada. I served it with a mayo sriracha sauce that I made with home made Mayo and sriracha from the farmer’s market.

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  • ISBN 10 0807829781
  • ISBN 13 9780807829783
  • Linked ISBNs
  • Published Oct 31 2005
  • Format Hardcover
  • Page Count 344
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher University of North Carolina Press
  • Imprint The University of North Carolina Press

Publishers Text

Since early colonial times in America, Jewish southerners have been tempted by delectable regional foods. Because some of these foods--including pork and shellfish--have been traditionally forbidden to Jews by religious dietary laws, southern Jews face a special predicament. In a culinary journey through the Jewish South, Arkansas native Marcie Cohen Ferris explores how southern Jews embraced, avoided, and adapted southern food and, in the process, have found themselves at home.

From colonial Savannah and Charleston to Civil War era New Orleans and Natchez, from New South Atlanta to contemporary Memphis and across the Mississippi and Arkansas Deltas, Ferris examines the expressive power of food throughout southern Jewish history. She demonstrates how southern Jews reinvented traditions as they adjusted to living in a largely Christian world where they were bound by regional rules of race, class, and gender.

Featuring a trove of photographs, Matzoh Ball Gumbo also includes anecdotes, oral histories, and more than thirty recipes to try at home. Ferris's rich tour of southern Jewish foodways shows that, at the dining table, Jewish southerners created a distinctive religious expression that reflects the evolution of southern Jewish life.

From the colonial era to the present, Ferris examines the expressive power of food throughout Southern Jewish history. She demonstrates how Southern Jews reinvented culinary traditions as they adjusted to living in a largely Christian region where forbidden foods such as pork, shrimp, oysters, and crab are intensely popular. Richly illustrated, this culinary tour of the Jewish South includes anecdotes, oral histories, and more than thirty recipes to try at home.



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