Deb Perelman Tells Us Why the New Smitten Kitchen Cookbook Is Stacked With Jewish Recipes | The Nosher (2024)

You won’t find recipes for classic Eastern European Jewish dishes like gefilte fish, cholent or matzah ball soup in food writer Deb Perelman’s latest cookbook “Smitten Kitchen Keepers.” (Although there is an inspired recipe for a bialy babka, which New York’s Breads Bakery, known for its babkas, just added to its product line in collaboration with Perelman.) But her Jewish culinary roots peek through in many of the 100 recipes.

Perelman, a New York Times bestselling cookbook author and one of the most popular food bloggers in the United States, has 1.6 million followers on her Smitten Kitchen Instagram. This is her third book, which she dedicates to her father, Michael Rothberg, who encouraged her to write it. A Bronx-born New Yorker and child of Eastern European Jewish immigrants, Rothberg died in 2018.

Perelman credits him as the muse behind a number of the book’s recipes. She knows, for example, that he would have loved her turkey meatloaf for skeptics (he appreciated a good meatloaf, she told The Nosher), and her tangy baked eggplant and couscous, she writes, has been “welcomed on our High Holiday table, and is a dish he would have loved.” Perelman deems its sweet and sour flavor comforting — and classically Jewish.

The recipe that she unequivocally relates to her father and his Bronx childhood is for challah cheesecake buns. Her dad and his friends would often visit the corner deli after school for cream cheese and jelly sandwiches. Those were the days, he told Perelman, when “nobody balked at putting a 1-inch-thick slab of cream cheese on a sandwich.”

The pastries — best served as breakfast buns — are made with an egg-y, yeast-y challah dough, which is stuffed with raspberry jam and cream cheese, and sprinkled with poppy seeds.

It is Perelman’s rare ability to take a pedestrian dish, or one that has been made the same way for years, like the cream cheese and jelly sandwich, and dissect and rework it into something new, creative and luscious. She attributes this skill to being “a picky eater as a kid and still picky in some ways.”

When there was a dish that she didn’t like — such as roast chicken that was too dry or sweet potato fries that were too bland — she would set about coming up with a fresh preparation that satisfied her. Perelman, who describes herself as “obsessive,” will still spend countless hours coming up with the best way to braise winter squash, or test and retest her recipe for roast chicken and croutons endlessly.

Deb Perelman Tells Us Why the New Smitten Kitchen Cookbook Is Stacked With Jewish Recipes | The Nosher (1)

Perelman’s mother, a child of German Jewish immigrants who was raised in a large German Jewish community in Jackson Heights, Queens, also inspired a recipe. Her favorite cake, which Perelman’s grandparents often bought from local German bakeries, was Bienenstich (Bee Sting). Perelman’s bee sting bars are a fresh take on this traditional German bake. The recipe preserves the original’s honeyed almond topping, but sets it on a buttery shortbread cookie. The bars are “friendlier to a cookie tin,” says Perelman, though they taste similar to the cake of her mother’s childhood.

Since honey is a central ingredient, it could, says Perelman, work for Rosh Hashanah, to usher in a sweet year. But, she cautions, ever-thoughtful of her readers, “not everyone wants a dairy dessert for that holiday, and this recipe has butter in it.”

Although many of the recipes in the book mix meat with milk, a combination that is forbidden under Jewish dietary laws, Perelman specifies that one could use milk of “any kind.” So cozy chicken and dumplings — inspired more by Southern cooking than a take on chicken soup and matzah balls — can be made with plant-based milk, rather than the specified cow’s milk. Oat milk, “which has a nuttiness and richness that I [Perelman] really like,” would work best.

Perelman, however, does not make a habit of straying from dairy. Her love for sour cream, she says, “came through a Semitic line, as does my belief in the versatility of challah.”

In a nod to that “Semitic line,” Perelman’s recipe for tomatoes with cottage cheese and bagel seeds is an homage to her late grandmother Helen, who ate a scooped-out bagel filled with cottage cheese and topped with a slice of tomato every morning for breakfast. The recipe layers full-fat cottage cheese under halved cherry tomatoes, which are topped with salt, pepper and sesame and poppy seeds combined with minced onion and/or garlic.

In addition to the “Jewish-ish stuff in the cookbook that reflects what I [Perelman] grew up with,” Perelman includes a paired-down falafel recipe that does not require a lot of oil, which she encourages you to stock your freezer with “for a future falafel night.”

Of the 100 recipes in this wide-ranging collection of “keeper recipes,” which is her favorite?

“My favorite recipe changes literally every day by what I am craving,” Perelman said. “Cook what you feel like cooking when you feel like cooking it. It makes cooking 100% more enjoyable.”

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Deb Perelman Tells Us Why the New Smitten Kitchen Cookbook Is Stacked With Jewish Recipes | The Nosher (2024)

FAQs

Who is behind Smitten Kitchen? ›

Smitten Kitchen is a blog for home cooks created and maintained by Deb Perelman. Perelman received undergraduate and graduate degrees from George Washington University, where she studied psychology and art therapy.

Who wrote the Smitten Kitchen cookbook? ›

Serious Eats says “it's about time [Deb Perelman] published a cookbook!” and cooks the book. Deb Perelman was on Let's Talk Live (WJLA-TV, Washington DC). The Forward says of The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook, “not only are the dishes good, Perelman is a deft, funny, and vivid mentor.”

Where does Deb from Smitten Kitchen live? ›

She lives in the East Village with her husband Alex (likes: salt, shellfish, things wrapped, stuffed or balanced on bacon, steak frites, milk chocolate, Bloody Marys, pretty much anything pickled, and Deb, although she is usually not), son Jacob (likes: chocolate, bananas, spaghetti, pizza, cheeseburgers) and daughter ...

Where did Deb Perelman go to college? ›

I graduated from George Washington University with a major in psychology and a minor in fine art, but I had no idea what to do with either of them until I heard about a program at my alma mater that combined the two.

How many kids does Deb Perelman have? ›

We're a stone's throw from the apartment that she shares with her husband, Alex, and their two children, Jacob, 13, and Anna, 7.

Was Katie Lee from The Kitchen married before? ›

After nearly five years of marriage, Billy and Katie Lee separated in June 2009. On March 22, 2018, Lee got engaged to television producer Ryan Biegel at La Réserve Hotel and Spa in Paris.

How many Smitten Kitchen cookbooks are there? ›

Smitten Kitchen Keepers: New Classics For Your Forever Files, my third cookbook, came out November 2022.

Who wrote the book How to cheat at cooking? ›

How to Cheat at Cooking is a cookbook by television chef Delia Smith, published in 2008 by Ebury Publishing.

Where does the Skinnytaste lady live? ›

I'm Gina hom*olka, a mom of two girls residing on Long Island.

What is Katie's name on the kitchen? ›

Host Katie Lee poses for a portrait on the set of Food Network's The Kitchen, Season 1. For Katie Lee, cooking wasn't just a hobby growing up — it was a way of life.

Where does Alex on the kitchen live? ›

“I want cell phone reception in my kitchen, and when someone asks me the weather, I want to know that it's raining.” Guarnaschelli recently finished an extensive renovation of her 1925 bungalow-style farmhouse in Bridgehampton, New York.

Does Grigori Perelman have a PHD? ›

He was the first mathematician ever to decline the Fields Medal. Perelman earned a doctorate from St. Petersburg State University and then spent much of the 1990s in the United States, including at the University of California, Berkeley. He was still listed as a researcher at the Steklov Institute of Mathematics, St.

Who is the former CEO of Revlon? ›

“I don't like the word 'balance,'” former Revlon CEO Debbie Perelman told Cate Luzio, founder and CEO of professional education and networking platform Luminary, during the Luminary Women's History Month Summit. Perelman served as CEO between 2018 and 2023. Today, she advises other businesses in how to find success.

Who is the CEO of Revlon? ›

Liz Smith, Executive Chair & Chief Executive Officer - CEO of Executive Leadership Team at Revlon Consumer Products LLC.

Does Girl Meets Farm cook in her own kitchen? ›

Yeh films the show at her farm in Minnesota, but the filming kitchen is separate from her everyday, household kitchen. No matter how many steps the recipe might have or how involved the cooking techniques are, Yeh explains everything in a soft, confident tone, all while throwing in a few jokes.

Where did Julia Child donate her kitchen? ›

She donated her kitchen to the Smithsonian just before she retired to Santa Barbara, California. Her kitchen was completely disassembled and moved to the National Museum of American History, where it reopened as an exhibit in 2001.

Who is the Hispanic lady on The Kitchen? ›

Marcela grew up around expert cooks and shares her passion for food as a host on The Kitchen, as a judge on Best Baker in America and in her cooking show, Mexican Made Easy.

Are the hosts of The Kitchen friends? ›

"The first thing everybody says who stops to ask me about The Kitchen is [if the hosts] really like each other... and it's true, we really like each other... we all bring really different skill sets to the that show. That's why the show is so successful," he says.

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