T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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120.1 | | NAAD::GOLDBERG | Len Goldberg | Thu May 01 1986 12:06 | 16 |
| I was wondering about that myself since we have 9 month old twins.
Since we make a lot of our own baby food anyway, fruit and vegetables
weren't much of a problem. It's pretty easy to avoid legumes. Our
kids are old enough to eat soft table foods, and they loved fried
matzo, Passover "rolls", and gefilte fish. (Even my wife doesn't like
gefilte fish.)
What we had a lot of trouble avoiding was cereal, since this is
the main source of carbohydrates in their diet. They don't have
teeth yet, and plain matzo got stuck in the roof of their mouths.
I tried to soak some in milk, but that was unsatisfactory. The
rolls and fried matzo contained more egg than we like to give them.
I guess we'll have to wait till next year for them to be fully
observant of Passover.
|
120.2 | Passover hot cereal exists | KATIE::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 01 1986 13:02 | 13 |
| Well, there is Passover hot cereal, which comes out rather like
cream of wheat; I had some for breakfast this morning. It doesn't
taste nearly as much like wet matzoh as you would think. It would
probably be fine for kids, unless they are allergic to wheat or
something (well, my husband won't eat the cereal, but *I* like it).
I also wish every year that someone would decide to make matzohs
out of other grains besides wheat (at least you can get Pesachdic
whole-wheat ones now). I'm not allergic to wheat (though I am to
a lot of other things, like potatoes), but I don't like it a whole
lot unless it is whole-wheat, and the rest of the year we eat a
lot of rice and oats. It ought to be possible to make oatmeal matzohs
and rice ones, if anyone besides me would buy them.
|
120.3 | How do you make fried matzos | SWATT::POLIKOFF | Arnie Polikoff | Thu May 01 1986 16:50 | 6 |
| Since you mentioned fried matzos, does anyone have a good recipe
for it. I would like an exact recipe rather than the one I use which
is:
Beat two eggs in a bowl with some milk and salt. Soak some broken
matzos for a while. Pour into a frying pan and heat until the liquid
is not runny.
|
120.4 | Matzoh Brie Recipe | CURIE::GOLD | | Thu May 01 1986 17:32 | 25 |
| There are a number of ways to make matzoh brie. My mother used to
make it by first breaking up the matzohs, and then soaking them
in warm water. When they were soft, she would pour off all the water
and queeze them to get out all the excess water. Then she would
fry them with eggs in the traditional way. This made for a soft,
somewhat soggy mix of matzoh and scrambled eggs. It did taste very
good, however.
My wife and I prefer to make it taste less soggy and more eggy. We use
the following recipe. First, saute some onions in a frying pan. We
really like onion, so we use lots. While you are sauteing the onion,
soak broken up pieces of matzoh in an egg batter. As a rule, use one
more egg than the number of matzohs you have. You can adjust the number
of eggs based on your tastes. So, for instance, if you have 4 matzohs,
beat five eggs in a bowl. Add a little milk to the egg mix if you like.
This will make the eggs a little fluffier. Break the matzohs into small
pieces, and let soak in the eggs until soft. You will need to stir the
batter over the matzohs every minute or two. When soft, fry the matzoh
and egg in the frying pan with the Sauteed onions, stiring just as if
you were making scrambled eggs.
This is one of my favorite breakfast foods, both during Pesach and
the rest of the year.
Jack
|
120.5 | A kashya (problem) | NY1MM::BCOHEN | | Fri May 02 1986 12:51 | 15 |
|
Back to the original question.
I don't believe that there is a restriction on babies for eating
strictly KP. I will ask my rabbi for the details and mail them
to you, but I think you keep the food by a neighbor and own a hometz
spoon to feed with. The problem I don't think is so much in that
they must eat for pesach, in as much as that you are not allowed
to own the chametz.
Bruce Cohen
(will further research)
BC
|
120.6 | Back to baby food | WHAT::SCHWARTZ | Steven H. Schwartz | Mon May 05 1986 10:31 | 2 |
| I'm almost certain I've seen KP baby food at the local butcheries.
|
120.7 | Canadian Kosher baby food | CURIE::GOLD | | Mon May 05 1986 13:47 | 8 |
| Yesterday, while shopping at the Butcherie in Worcester, I saw Gerber
baby food with a Hebrew label on one side and an English label on
the other. On closer examination, it was vegetables and meat, and
had an OU stamp on the label. It was made in Canada. It was not
Pesadich, however. In any event, there is some hope for those who
would like to buy kosher baby food.
Jack
|
120.8 | A few possibilities | STAR::FENSTER | Yaacov Fenster, Process Improvement, Quality & Testing tools @ZK | Mon Jul 24 1995 22:11 | 16 |
| I know that this note is quite old, but just in case someone needs the
information:
a) There does exist (highly priced) Matza baby cereal. The same
company also makes regular cereal, and our little one had no problem
with it. Note: Some doctors recommend against giving "heavy" stuff to
small babies.
b) Most of American Jews take after the Ashkenazi customs of not eating
Kitniyot (Rice, etc) on Passover, and as such you don't find Kitniyot
products certified for Passover. You might try asking around the local
Sephardic community (if such exists) for stuff which is certified - and
feed it your baby. Another possibility is getting from Israel some KP
baby food made out of Kitniyot.
c) If you are REALLY up to it, buy rice ahead of time, clean it and
make cereal.
Hope this helps somebody.
|