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Books by Rochelle Krich

  • : Now You See Me...

    Now You See Me...
    A Molly Blume Mystery
    "One of this year's best mystery novels...an intriguing, engrossing, and even enchanting tale magnificently and beautifully told" - Bookreporter
    "
    "A gripping tale of deceit, revenge and murder" - Jerusalem Post

    "A well-crafted mystery that is also a powerful exploration of the tragedy of unintended consequences. Krich excels at creating suspense through her characters' struggles and mistakes...a page-turner." -- Library Journal

    "Krich puts a sure finger on the painful spots where ordinary kids' problems turn into murderous melodrama—all at a bargain price." - Kirkus Review

  • : Dream House

    Dream House
    Agatha Award Nominee
    "Tantalizing...engaging" - Booklist

  • : Blues in the Night

    Blues in the Night
    Agatha Award Nominee
    "A sleuth worth her salt" - NY Times Book Review
    "A fresh new presence...Smart, resourceful, and curious--not much escapes her." Sue Grafton

  • : GRAVE ENDINGS

    GRAVE ENDINGS
    Winner of the Mary Higgins Clark Award
    L.A.Times Bestseller
    "Krich once again expertly mixes Orthodox Jewish faith with crisp, whodunit plotting....An engaging thriller...Krich never misses a beat" (Publishers Weekly)
    Winner of the Calavera Award

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August 30, 2005

Matzah Ball Mavens

When my friend Penny from Boca Raton e-mailed yesterday and asked me to watch "A Taste of America" on the Travel channel tonight at 8 PM, I had no idea she would feature prominently in a matzoh ball cook-off, or that her rival would be the daughter-in-law of one of my college classmates.

Matoballsoup Two degrees of separation...or two matzoh balls.

The daughter-in-law, whose husband is the rabbi of the beautiful Boca Raton Synagogue, made her matzoh balls from scratch. Penny--gasp!--used a mix.

The judges--among them was the rabbi-- sampled matzoh balls identified only by letters.

Who said rabbis aren't brave?

And the winner?

Check it out for yourself tonight at 11 PM  on the Travel channel (Channel 75, if you have Comcast), or at 5 PM this Friday.

August 28, 2005

Say It Ain't So, Duncan!

I just heard this distressing news, as reported in Kosher Today:

Duncan Hines Set to Make Cake Mix Products Dairy
(Cherry Hill, NJ) A line of popular Orthodox Union (OU) certified cake mixes by Duncan Hines will soon switch to dairy ingredients, Kosher Today has learned. The decision will affect the large number of kosher consumers that have been using the cake mixes because they are pareve and can be eaten with meat as well as many of the 56 million Americans who are lactose intolerant. A similar decision by Stella Dora of Nabisco several years ago was greeted by a large outcry by consumers, which caused the company to reverse the decision. Duncan Hines was owned by Procter and Gamble for many years but when it experienced difficulty was sold to Pinnacle Foods, based in Cherry Hill, NJ, which also acquired such well-known kosher brands as Lender's Bagels. Industry sources say that Duncan Hines decided to add the dairy to improve the quality of the product. The decision by Duncan Hines comes at a time when there is growing demand for pareve products by kosher consumers and by many lactose intolerant people. The cake mixes allowed many consumers to bake their own pareve cakes for use on Shabbat and holidays. Some industry sources were privately hoping that the company would not go through with the change, but if it does, a “D” will be added to the OU indicating that dairy ingredients are being used.

If you're kosher, or lactose intolerant, or want to lend support for those who would be affected by this dairy dilemma, express your thoughts to Duncan Hines.

July 26, 2005

Kabbalah Cuisine?

From Nextbook comes this intriguing tidbit:

Where Food and Faith Collide
In the South, teams named "Grillin n' Tefillin" and "Shofar Shogood" compete in a kosher barbecue contest, reports Marcie Cohen Ferris, while Allan Nadler says that some Hasids use "kabbalistic hermeneutics" to understand kugel's "generative or creative powers." They are among contributors, with Joan Nathan and Jenna Weissman Joselit, to Food and Judaism, an anthology illustrating "disparate culinary experiences," notes Danielle Max.

I don't understand "kaballistic hermeneutics," but I have to say that my daughter-in-law makes the best potato kugel I've ever tasted.

April 28, 2005

Ludmilla

A friend asked about the recipe for the "Ludmilla" cake, the one I mentioned in yesterday's blog. As I said, it's from my friend Anita S. in Brooklyn. If I remember correctly, Anita obtained it from a Russian friend--whose name, I'm guessing, is Ludmilla.

Here's the recipe:

10 eggs, separated

1 1/2 c. sugar

3/4 c. potato starch (used on Passover in lieu of flour, which is verbotten), or 1 c. flour*

1/2 c. cocoa

1 tsp. vanilla (kosher for Passover vanilla is hard to find; I use vanilla sugar)

a pinch of baking soda

1/2 c.oil

1/4 c. water

You need two bowls for this recipe--one for the egg whites, another for the yolks.

Preheat the oven to 350.

Separate the eggs as soon as you take them out of the fridge (when separating a cold egg, there's less chance that a yolk will invade the white; even a speck of yolk will render a white meringue-dead), but let the whites reach room temperature (or close to it, if you're rushed) before you beat them.

In a clean, dry bowl beat the egg whites. When they begin to stiffen, add 3/4 c. sugar and the vanilla (or vanilla sugar). Continue to beat the whites until they're stiff but not dry. (They should glisten.) Set the bowl aside.

In the second bowl beat the yolks with the remaining 3/4 c. sugar until the batter is a thick, smooth pale yellow. Add the oil, baking soda, potato starch, cocoa, and water.

IN THAT ORDER. That's what Anita says, and I take her at her word.

Fold the yolk batter into the egg whites. Do this slowly and calmly, probably not while listening to a talk radio host who annoys or enrages you with his politics.

Pour the batter into an ungreased ten-inch tube pan.** Raise the pan an inch or two off the counter and let it drop onto the counter. (This move, which I learned from a friend, is supposed to eliminate air bubbles. Does it? I don't know. But what can you lose?)

Place the tube pan into the oven. Bake for one hour. Do not, under any circumstance, open the oven door before the cake is done. Do not bang cabinet doors or stomp on the floor in glee or frustration or slam a nearby door.

When the cake is done, remove the pan, invert it quickly, and set it on a cooling rack.

This is when you pray that the cake won't slide out of the pan. Worrying won't help. You'll know within a few minutes.

Let the cake cool for an hour. Turn the pan right side up. Cool another hour. To loosen the cake, run a knife around the edges of the pan and around the center tube. Lift the cake out of the pan. Run the knife under the cake to loosen it from the bottom of the tube pan.

*About the potato starch. You can substitute flour for the starch. I'm not sure about the quantity, but my daughter's mother-in-law, Edith, suggested using 1 cup of flour instead of the 3/4 cup potato starch.

**About the tube pan: My daughter-in-law bought one with a Teflon coating at Target two weeks ago. I advised her to return it. Because the point of Teflon is to prevent food from sticking to a surface, right? I was worried that the cake would slide right out of the pan. Like it doesn't have enough problems hanging in there...

Then I thought, what if I'm wrong? So I phoned William Sonoma and spoke to a pleasant young man who assured me that a Teflon-coated tube pan would work fine for an angel-type cake.

But my friend Liz says otherwise.

And I trust Liz.

You should, too.

April 27, 2005

Great Balls of ... Matzo Meal

A few weeks ago I was invited to participate in THE GREAT MATZO BALL DEBATE--DOUGHY SINKERS VS. FLUFFY FLOATERS--conducted by Palm Beach Post staff writer Charles Passy.

My response, alas, didn't float. So I thought I would share it here:

As a mother blessed with six grown children, some of whom are married and have children of their own, I've made many Passover Seders and matzo balls. So has my protagonist Molly Blume, a Jewish tabloid sleuth who comes from a large mishpacha and knows the perfect matzo ball when she sees it. (In previous books Molly has shared family recipes. Maybe she'll include a recipe for matzo balls in the next book.)

But the perfect matzo ball? That's a matter of taste. Some prefer their matzo balls dense and chewy, a challenge for teeth and stomach. Molly and I like them buoyant but not too fluffy, soft enough so that the soup spoon can slice through the ball "like buttah," but not so airy that you can't savor the texture and flavor.

I use Streit's Matzo Meal, and I've been substituting club soda (or selzter) for the water in the recipe posted on the side of the box long before Streit's advised doing it. I enjoy making the matzoh balls almost as much as eating them: scooping a small amount of the mixture and rolling it between the palms of my hands, gently plopping the ball into the boiling salted water, watching solicitously until it rises to the surface and begins bobbing and spinning merrily, oblivious to the dangers posed by the churning water.

My family loves my matzo balls. I have to admit they're pretty good, although each time I make them they're never quite the same as before.

I guess you could say it's "pot" luck.

April 21, 2005

High Hopes

Passover cakes can bring heartache.

Last night I baked a banana cake. The recipe is from Edith, my son-in-law's mother, who is a culinary queen. I made the cake last year, and it was delicious. The ingredients are eggs, sugar, bananas, lemon juice, ground nuts, vanilla, baking powder, oil, liquor. No flour during Passover, so we use potato starch instead.

And prayers.

I separate the eggs. I beat the whites, adding half the sugar, until they have formed glistening peaks. Into the yolks I add the rest of the sugar and vanilla, the mashed bananas (I flash to the days of my young motherhood, when I would coax spoonfuls of the mashed fruit into the mouths of a child), lemon juice, oil, a teasing few tablespoons of brandy. Then half the potato starch-baking powder-nuts mixture.

I fold the whites into the yolk batter. I work in slow movements, careful not to stir. I don't want to disturb the magic of the egg whites, which began as a small amount of liquid and have been transformed--how?--into tall glorious, Alpine mounds. (The Yiddish for meringue is "shnei," which means snow.) I fold in the remainder of the potato starch mixture and pour the batter into a tube pan. Last year a friend advised me to lift the tube pan an inch or so above the counter and let it drop to the counter. "That will get rid of any air bubbles," she told me. I follow her advice.

These cakes are delicate. When I was a newlywed, some thirty years ago, I made five Passover cakes. Two sponge, three with walnuts. Each cake died. My husband tried to console me. "We can still eat it," he said. He scooped up a chunkful of the cake that had plopped from the inverted tube pan onto the counter. "Delicious!" he pronounced.

I cried.

The cake is in the oven. A while ago--I'm not sure when--the bulb in the top oven flickered and died. I never replaced it. But I peer through the dark oven window every few five or ten minutes. The cake isn't as high as last year's--last year, the batter rose and threatened to spill over the sides. I caution my husband and my son. "Don't slam any doors," I say. "Don't make noise. Cake in the oven."

Baby on board.

An hour later the oven timer buzzes. I slip my hands into mitts and remove the cake. The top is a golden brown. Firm. I smell a hint of bananas and brandy. I quickly turn the tube pan over and set it on the cooling rack on the counter.

I bend down and gaze at the cake. It looks fine. Stationary.

I shut off the oven, but my eyes are on the tube pan. A few seconds later--ten, fifteen--I bend down again and look at the underside of the pan. I see a barely noticeable bulge.

A second later the cake falls. A silent earthquake, not even a hiss, as the insides slither to the counter.

This morning my husband took a chunk of the fallen cake with him to work. "My snack," he told me before he kissed me good-bye.

I am past crying about fallen cakes, but I replay the scene. Too much liquid? Too much folding? Too many people walking back and forth in our small kitchen? (I transferred a load of laundry from washer to dryer and was less than careful in shutting the dryer door. "I thought you said not to slam anything," my husband said.)

Having a book published, I think, is like baking Passover cakes. I create the story, the characters. I have high hopes that, like with the meringue, my words will turn into magic.

Sometimes, even if the words produce magic, hopes are dashed.

I plan to attempt another banana cake today.

April 19, 2005

Marooned

Our breakfast room has become an island of "chametz," the depository for all the leavened, non-Passover items we plan to consume or use before the holiday begins in just a few days.

On the table: an almost empty box of Fruit Loops, one and a half bottles of caffeine free Diet Coke, nine bottles of diet peach Snapple, half a rye bread, half a whole-wheat challa, a can of roasted (unsalted) almonds, two small bags of pistachio nuts, three packets of Quaker Oats instant oatmeal (low sugar), biscotti, pumkin seeds, a mini bottle of Pellogrino, three bottles of Martinelli's sparkling cider (they may be a tad old, so I'm not sure how "sparkling" they are), a mini packet of peanuts that I took home from some flight, one-and-a-half chocolate cheese Danish.

On a utility cart: our toaster oven.

In the scrupulously-cleaned-for-Passover fridge, quarantined from the food that is kosher for Passover: half a loaf of seven-grain bread, French Vanilla non-fat creamer (an interesting oxymoron), two pieces of broiled chicken, a salami.

I'm a creature of habit. I need my creamer in my morning and mid-afternoon coffee. I figure that I will have just enough creamer to last until Friday, when the entire house will be "chametz" free. We probably won't finish the bread, and certainly not the Fruit Loops. We bought it for our grandchildren, and I don't even like it. But we are loath to toss anything, in case we run short before Friday. (My friend Judy Gruen writes about her pre-Passover meals.)

It's not as though there's a shortage of kosher-for-Passover edibles in the house. I spent the equivalent of our mortgage payment on Sunday for food to sustain us through the eight days of Passover. And I can live without bread or rice or pasta for eight days.

But it's almost like a game -- rationing  the "chametz," making it last.

And there's always chocolate...