A Celebration Of (Culinary) Freedom

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In the traditional Jewish liturgy, Passover is referred to as the “Festival of Matzah, the time of our freedom.” While the holiday may be about freedom, at times it can feel like it’s only about matzah, and its dietary restrictions can certainly make one feel anything but free.    

In truth, however, with the growth of the Passover food industry, it’s easier than ever to dine well during Passover. To help prove this point we have asked each of the culinary teams at three of New York’s best-known kosher fine-dining restaurants to provide us with a Passover-friendly recipe.

Additionally we’ve asked each restaurant to recommend a wine to accompany the dish. Finding just the right wine to go with a dish can be a daunting challenge, and chefs are often the best guides in selecting the right wines to accompany their culinary creations.

Abaita

(145 E. 49th St., [646] 805-5518)

While open less than a year, Abaita has already received general acclaim and is now known as one of the better kosher dairy restaurants in the city. The kitchen is run by Italian-born and -trained chef David Donagrandi and American-trained chef Sruli Subar, who offer the following recipe:

Grouper served with Roasted Sunchokes and Tomato Coulis
(serves four)
1 ¾ lb. of grouper (7 oz. of fish per serving)
2 medium onions, diced (small)
6 oz. extra virgin olive oil
2 jalapeños with seeds removed, minced
2 cloves of fresh garlic, minced
1/2 bunch of parsley, washed,
         leaves picked from stems
2 oz. of pitted black olives
1 lb. fresh sunchokes
3 medium-sized heirloom tomatoes
16 oz. can of peeled tomato
         (good quality, plain: no herbs, etc.)
Sea salt
Juice of a lemon

In a small pot, bring four quarts of water to a simmer. Add a handful of salt. Add the heirloom tomatoes, let them sit for 45 seconds. Remove and peel, chop and set aside

In a larger pot (5-6 qt.), over a medium-high flame, add three tbsp. of extra virgin olive oil, onions, garlic and jalapeño. Let them sweat for four to five minutes. They should not be turning colors. Add both the chopped and canned tomatoes, and cook on low heat for 35 minutes. Set aside. If the mixture starts to dry out, add a small amount of water.

Make sure your fish is clean, with the bones and skin removed; allow to rest on a paper towel. Season with sea salt, and in a non-stick pan add olive oil, allow it to sear on medium heat for three minutes per side or until each side takes on a golden color. Remove the fish from the stove, and place it in a deep baking dish.

Sunchokes need to be peeled, kept in water with lemon juice to prevent them from oxidizing. Simmer whole sunchokes in boiling water with salt and lemon for approximately16 minutes, or until they are soft but not mushy. Remove from water. Split the larger ones in half or even thirds, drizzle with a bit of olive oil and sea salt, pop them into a preheated 450 degree oven for 7-8 minutes (so they get caramelized on top). Add sunchokes, olives and tomato mixture over top of the fish. Bake for 20-22 min, at 360 degrees.

With the remaining olive oil, send the parsley and salt through a blender, use this as a garnish over the top of the plated fish.

Wine: Abaita did not provide a wine pairing for the dish, but The Jewish Week would recommend serving it with either a white Bordeaux, such as the kosher edition of ‘Le G’ from Chateau Guiraud, 2017; an Israeli sauvignon blanc, such as Yarden Sauvignon Blanc, 2018; or a Tuscan white, such as Cantina Giuliano Costa Toscana i.g.t., 2017.

UN Plaza Grill

(845 United Nations Plaza, [212] 223-1801)

Opened in 2017, the UN Plaza Grill has developed a reputation for high-end kosher fusion cuisine. The kitchen is led by James Beard Foundation Award-winning chef Hok Chin, a Hong Kong native. Chef Chin offers the following recipe:

Roasted Rack of Lamb with Garlic Lamb Jus
(serves 2-4)

An 8-chop rack of lamb
13 cloves of garlic
1 shallot
½ lb. sunchokes, roasted
10 champignon (a.k.a. white button) mushrooms, cooked
1 butternut squash, cooked
 5-6 pearl onions, cooked
1 tsp. capers
1 qt. lamb bone jus
Olive oil
Ground cumin
Smoked paprika
Dried rosemary
Dried thyme
Kosher salt
Freshly crushed ground pepper

Marinate lamb with three cloves of garlic, one sliced shallot, pinch of thyme and pinch of rosemary, pinch of ground cumin and a pinch of smoked paprika for about one hour. Then lightly sprinkle with a pinch of kosher salt and freshly crushed black pepper.

Coat a roasting pan in olive oil and pan-sear the whole rack of lamb on medium heat until light golden color on all sides. Then finish in the oven at 350 degrees for about five minutes.

Pour the lamb bone jus (i.e. the drippings) into a cup for the garlic confit sauce.

For the Garnish:
1/2 lb. roasted sunchokes
1 piece butternut squash
5-6 pieces pearl onions
10 pieces champignon
1 tsp. capers with salt and pepper

Combine the roasted sunchokes, butternut squash, pearl onions, champignon mushrooms and capers with salt and pepper.

Garlic Confit Sauce:

Slow-cook 10 cloves of garlic with two tsp. olive oil and add one quart of roasted lamb bone jus.

Stir and cook on medium heat on stovetop for five minutes.

Wine: Chef Chin recommends serving the dish with Tzora Judean Hills Red 2016, or similar.

Wolf & Lamb

(16 E. 48th St., [212] 317-1950)

For the past two decades, Wolf & Lamb has been one of Manhattan’s best-known kosher meat restaurants. Its culinary team offers the following two recipes:

Beef-Wrapped Figs & Apricots
Sugar
Dried apricots
Dried figs
Beef fry or “facon”
Chili flakes
Fresh rosemary stems

Soak dried apricots in simple syrup flavored with chili flakes and rosemary stems for at least one day, allowing them to re-hydrate and plump up.

(Author’s Note: To make simple syrup, bring equal parts sugar and water to simmer in a saucepan, stirring constantly until the sugar is dissolved.  Take saucepan off the flame and add the rosemary and chili flakes, allowing them to steep for several hours before use. Keep refrigerated.)

Wrap the apricots and dried figs in a strip of smoked beef fry or “facon.”

Place the wrapped fruit on a bamboo skewer and drop in fryer until crispy or they can also be seared in a pan. Serve with a sweet and spicy chutney or sauce. 

Wine: Wolf & Lamb recommends serving the dish with either Goblet Syrah, Mendocino or Psagot Sinai Cabernet/Shiraz, Jerusalem Hills.

Chicken Breast Roulade with Asparagus, Mushroom Garlic and Kale Stuffing

Boneless skinless chicken breasts, butterflied and pounded
Asparagus batons, blanched
Kale, chopped
Garlic, chopped
Mushrooms, chopped
Olive oil
Salt
Pepper

In olive oil, sauté a mixture of chopped garlic, kale and mushrooms, seasoned with salt and pepper to taste.

Place the mixture on the pounded chicken breast. Place the asparagus batons next to the mixture, and roll the chicken breast around the mixture and asparagus. Starting at one end, wrap the stuffed chicken breasts in cooking twine.

Heat a pan, and place the chicken in the pan. Cook on all sides until light brown. Save the pan drippings and pour over the chicken when serving.  Ideally, serve with mashed potatoes or other creamy starch dish.

Wine: Wolf & Lamb recommends serving with Goose Bay Sauvignon Blanc, New Zealand or Goblet Riesling Seneca Lake.

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