A few months ago I had a craving for my father’s chicken fricassee. If my father were still alive I would have called him up and he would have talked me through the process of making it. My father is no longer alive so I turned to my cookbooks and the recipes I found for chicken fricassee were nothing at all like the stew of chicken necks, gizzards and wings in a watery sweet and sour tomato sauce that I enjoyed as a kid. I assumed that the dish was an invention of my father’s. I then attempted to replicate the dish from my memory of it and failed. A couple of weeks ago I saw an article on the internet, and I can’t remember where, that talked about Jewish fricassee and it sounded an awful lot like the dish I was hankering after. This afternoon I went to the butcher and picked up all of the chicken elements of the dish, a couple of packages each of wings, necks and gizzards. My father never cooked directly from a cook book. He used to re...
A blog, mostly about my work making Jewish ritual objects, but with detours into garment making, living in New York City, cooking, and other aspects of domestic life. A note about comments: I love comments from readers, from spammers, not so much. I approve comments before posting them so comments are not cluttered with junk. It may take a few hours before your posts appear. Be patient. If you are a real person with a real comment it will be posted.
Very sorry for your loss. May God rest his soul.
ReplyDeleteMermie
To Sarah and Family,
ReplyDeleteSorry to learn of the death of your father-in-law. Your tribute to him in words and pictures over the last few days is very beautiful and a wonderful way to document his life and his legacy.
May you be comforted in your mourning,
Nancy and Family,
Halifax
I loved Morris so much! Ava and I send our love from my living room! MWAH xo MK and ALS
ReplyDeleteNancy - thank you for your kind thoughts. Shawna made tea sandwiches and strong tea for us to eat after the burial. It felt like all of that Halifax love was here in our apartment on the West Side.Even the non Haligonians felt nouirshed and comforted by that Halifax comfort.
ReplyDeleteMK...we missed you. you would have loved judi