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More Kosher
Kosher Supplier Waffles Several Flavors Fort Worth Kosher Food Distributor Egg rolls Potato San Diego Kosher Manufacturer Egg rolls Phoenix
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| | Homemade Matzoh | | | - 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup wholewheat flour
- spring water
Preheat oven to 450 F. Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper. Mix two flours together and add water until you have a soft, kneadable dough. Knead about five minutes. Let dough rest a couple of minutes. Break off egg-sized portions of dough. Stretch as thinly as you can before rolling into thin, oval slabs that are as thin as possible. Prick each slab with a fork or pastry docker. Place on baking sheet and as soon as sheet is filled with matzohs, place in oven, and bake until crisp and buckled, about 3 minutes. Cool and eat. |
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The most unusual question I've received to date is from Kehillat Beijing, the Jewish community of Beijing, China (with perhaps the best natural pun I've seen in a while: their web site is at "Sinogogue").
Given the difficulty of importing kosher wines, they can only choose one wine for Passover this year: The cost has to be reasonable; the wine must appeal to a wide range of palates; the prices must be reasonable; imports are available from only a handful of countries; and they can only choose one wine.
I'll reveal my selection here sometime soon. This is the closest I've ever come to the problem of "If you can only have one wine with you on a desert island..."
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.
I've just received a request from someone who is traveling to Chile and Argentina for a list of kosher wineries to visit.
I don't have one; in fact, I'd be hard-pressed to provide the locations of wineries here in the US.
Here's two requests. First, if you know of kosher wineries in Chile and Argentina that tourists can (or even can't) visit, please leave a comment.
Second, if you'd like to help create a list of all such wineries for me to post on this web site, let me know and let's see if I can let you edit such a list directly. Use the contact form to reach me.
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