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Kosher Manufacturer French Toast New York Kosher Manufacturer Fried Onions Memphis Kosher Manufacturer Corn Fritters Los Angeles Kosher Supplier Potato Pancakes Los Angeles Kosher Food Distributor French Toast Fort Worth Kosher Supplier Potato Latka San Diego Kosher Manufacturer Egg rolls Cabbage Houston
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| | Egg & Onion Matzoh Brei | | | - One piece of matzoh for each person
- 2 Tablespoons chopped onion for each piece
- salt & pepper to taste
- 1 egg for each piece
- butter for pan
break up each piece of matzoh & lightly cover with water saute onions in small amount of butter squeeze water out of matzoh,mix with egg,and onions,season to taste-and pour in pan and cook until brown,turn over cook other side. Bon Apetit... |
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Welcome to The Kosher Wine Review. We provide: reviews of strictly kosher wines from around the world; advice and consulting for wine connoisseurs; professional reviews and articles for newspapers, magazines, web sites, and other media.
We have reviews of wines from Israel, the United States, South Africa, Australia, Chile, Argentina, Austria, and France, as well as a surprising number of other countries. Kosher wines are often good, sometimes excellent, and occasionally outstanding; kosher wines can be just as rewarding as any other wine.
On this web site you can search for wines, read about kosher wine etiquette, find out what makes a wine kosher, or contact us.
The first couple of people have signed up to leave comments; once I'm more comfortable with how the site is working, I'll entertain suggestions about blogs for individual users and perhaps enable wine reviews.
In the meantime, the site-wide contact form is now working. You can use it to contact me about the site, about reviews, about consulting, and with any questions you might have about kosher wine.
All of these ratings are my personal opinions, and while I've had some of these wines multiple times, at other times I've had just a single tasting. You may disagree with these ratings, or you may find that the bottle you purchase doesn't meet your expectations. This is the nature of wine, which remains an art rather than a science. And of course everyone's taste is different.
I rate the wine on a scale of 1 (lowest) to 5 (highest). I have reserved a rating of 0 to wines that are unpalatable when I am unable to resolve to my satisfaction that the problem is a corked bottle rather than an error at the winery. A few wine have no rating at all; these are wines that I was unable to judge.
Ratings provide a guideline, not a guarantee; each vintage and each bottle is different. The other day I poured a bottle wine down the sink; this was a wine I usually like, and in fact I still recommend that wine, but this particular bottle was bad. A bottle will go bad, either because of a mistake by the winery, improper handling in shipment, or neglect by the wine merchant. In at least one case, I've seen a wine ruined by its success: one year the wine was excellent and the next year the winery overproduced the wine to meet demand.
Finally, I'd like to paraphrase the Wall Street Journal's wine reviewers, Gaiter and Brecher, who said something very important. If you find a wine that's inexpensive that you enjoy, this doesn't mean you have poor taste — this means you've found a bargain. It's your and your friends' enjoyment of the wine that's important, not what I or anyone else thinks of the wine.
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