T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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427.2 | mezonot vs. hamotzi | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Mon Jan 18 1988 09:52 | 45 |
| >> I made pizza the other night from scratch. It occured to me (and I
>> could not find it in my sources) that I did not know whether pizza
>> and the dough for the crust should be treated as a bread or a cake.
Most sources have two (and a half) tests:
1) The weight of what you consume, i. e., in a 12 or
14 inch pizza, two pieces are "mezonot" and three
or more are "hamotzi". (This is also supported
by the idea of making "hamotzi" when you're going
to be eating a full meal in which you will satisfy your
hunger, i. e., "hamotzi", eat, then full birkat
hamazon.
2) Some people make pizza dough with apple juice instead
of water; there's a psak that this renders the product
mezonot. Our Rav doesn't hold by this psak.
2.5) One of the distinctions is whether something looks
like bread, i. e., something which is clearly
a chocolate layer cake can never be "hamotzi"
by itself. "Bread", in general, has to look like bread
before it's "hamotzi".
Pizza could be argued, but the "normal" psak we
use is 1), above.
>> The dough itself is pareve but it is covered with cheese before cooking.
So?
>> So, which blessing do you say and do you take challah?
As above. As a meal, say "hamotzi". As a snack, or
so called "occasional food", say "mezonot" and
bracha acharona.
Taking challah is based on weight of the dough. I think that
the lower limit is around four five pounds of dough (but I
could look it up). This means, for small baking --
a pizza or two, a couple of breads -- no challah is
taken. For many loaves (by weight), then challah is
taken.
/don feinberg
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427.3 | Not always sure what info. is important | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Dick (Gavriel ben Avraham) Schoeller | Mon Jan 18 1988 12:06 | 9 |
| >>> The dough itself is pareve but it is covered with cheese before cooking.
>
> So?
I remember having read, that if it is dairy then it is not bread. I
thought that this might have some bearing. I don't remember the
source, but it was not a book that I own.
Gavriel
|
427.4 | nope | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Mon Jan 18 1988 14:03 | 6 |
| >> I remember having read, that if it is dairy then it is not bread.
It's perfrectly possible to bake bread using butter (=dairy) as
an ingredient. It's still bread and still "hamotzi".
/don feinberg
|
427.5 | What makes the difference between cake and bread | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Dick (Gavriel ben Avraham) Schoeller | Tue Jan 19 1988 08:19 | 6 |
| > It's perfrectly possible to bake bread using butter (=dairy) as
> an ingredient. It's still bread and still "hamotzi".
Then what makes the difference between being cake and being bread?
Gavriel
|
427.6 | See the Kupel's discussion | BEOWLF::STERN | | Tue Jan 19 1988 12:47 | 10 |
|
> It's perfrectly possible to bake bread using butter (=dairy) as
> an ingredient. It's still bread and still "hamotzi".
No, I do not think so. Bread is something that one must be able to
eat with any meal, and as such, must be pareve. I believe that this
is covered fairly well in the discussion about Kupel's bakery and
Freedman's certification by the Vaad Haabronim.
Chuck
|
427.7 | An aside | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Tue Jan 19 1988 13:58 | 17 |
| This may be a "dumb question", but here it is, anyhow: how does
an individual person (not a bakery, I mean) with an ordinary home
gas oven take challah, anyhow?? Don't you end up with a really
nasty mess to clean up on the bottom of the oven?
I never bake FIVE POUNDS of bread - it would take weeks and weeks
for the two of us to eat that much bread, since we usually do not
eat bread at all except on Shabbos (I bake the challot on Thursday
nights, since of course I am not home that early on Fridays even
in the summer) - so this is probably also an academic question,
anyhow.
I usually bake dairy challah, too - makes better French toast! Also,
it tastes better - I can't eat corn, which restricts what kind of
margarine (that tastes tolerable - e.g., pesachdic margarine is
dreadful tasting, but isn't corn) I can use if I am going to eat
the finished product.
|
427.8 | to be or not to be... | EINSTN::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Jan 19 1988 21:06 | 30 |
| reply to: < Note 427.6 by BEOWLF::STERN >
> -< See the Kupel's discussion >-
>
>
>> It's perfrectly possible to bake bread using butter (=dairy) as
>> an ingredient. It's still bread and still "hamotzi".
>
>No, I do not think so. Bread is something that one must be able to
>eat with any meal, and as such, must be pareve. I believe that this
>is covered fairly well in the discussion about Kupel's bakery and
>Freedman's certification by the Vaad Haabronim.
Sorry, but there is no requirement that bread be pareve.
Bread _can_ be milchig (and it still requires hamotzi).
(I don't remember the discussion re: Kupel's and Freedman's,
but I do know that all the Va'ad certifies is the kashrut of the
ingredients. I'd assume that because they bake other milchigs that
those who will buy from Kupel and Freedman should consider their
bread products milchig.)
To be sure, there IS a general minhag that we eat only pareve bread.
The reason for this is only because of the difficulty of
labelling and the resulting likely confusion and mistakes. This is
not a halacha, for sure. (Of course, it's always a convenience to
know that all the bread is pareve!)
(BTW, I checked the sources on this tonight, to make sure.)
/don feinberg
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427.9 | I sense confusion... | TAVENG::CHAIM | The bagel nosher | Wed Jan 20 1988 06:52 | 29 |
| There is apparently lots of confusion among most people concerning
the laws which pertain to Ha'motze vis-a-vis "bread" and "mizonot".
There is also some confusion regarding what is "bread". I recall
learning this particular subject while learning the section of Pesachim
which deals with Matzah (some 20 years ago). I recall that we covered
most of the commentaries on this subject in many different places
and acording to some even spaghetti noodles could be considered
"bread", though we don't hold this view. Rabbi Soloveitchik did
state that the relevant areas of concern are contents, consistency,
mode of cooking/baking, final form. His contention was that any
object that contains a considerable amount of flour and whose
consistency before being baked is solid and which is baked and has
the appearance of what we normally consider "bread" is indeed "bread".
He differs quite strongly with those who put some fruit juice in
the dough and call it "mizonot bread". He maintains that this is
100% "bread". I recall that he was uncertain regarding bagels if
these are cooked in water before being baked.
With regard to Hamotzi, "bread" by definition requires washing and
Hamotzi, "mizonot" in large quantities especially when one is planning
to base a meal around them also require washing and Hamotzi.
Thanks,
Cb.
|
427.10 | Thanks | BEOWLF::STERN | | Wed Jan 20 1988 20:03 | 9 |
| Re .8
Thanks, Don. I was not *really* sure, but I know some people
are still bitching that Kupels has a hescher. Live and learn.
Chuck
|
427.11 | halachot of "taking challah" | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Thu Jan 21 1988 10:44 | 21 |
| > Live and learn.
Indeed.
Well, as seems to be usual, this exchange has caused me
to look at the texts a little. Of course, every time
I do that, I find great complexifications! :-) :-)
In this case, I read up on "taking challah".
Anyway, I found that I have a practical, 4-page guide to
the halachot of "taking challah", and also the
practice of it. (It IS in English!)
I will make a limited number of xerox copies for those
who would be interested. Please send me mail on
CURIE:: -- please don't reply here.
If I get a chance, I will try to summarize some of it
here.
/don feinberg
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427.12 | | LABC::FRIEDMAN | | Thu Jan 21 1988 10:47 | 2 |
| I believe that the blessing for sausage pizza is "Ave Maria."
|
427.13 | | HPSVAX::ROSENBLUH | | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:44 | 15 |
| re .-1
> I believe that the blessing for sausage pizza is "Ave Maria."
But Wait! What about ...
...
...
TOFU CHEESE?
Really, has anybody tried this stuff? I !believe! I've seen it at
Bread and Circus with a hechsher, and pareve. The texture looks
close enough to mozarella. We might be approaching the day of
kosher sausage pizza!
|
427.14 | Tell you what, YOU try it first! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Jan 22 1988 13:49 | 13 |
| Tell you waht, Kathy - YOU try the "tofu cheese", and let us all
know if it is edible! Anyhow, someone will probably declare that
even if it is good enough to eat, you shouldn't eat it with meat
anyhow because people might think it really is cheese, like people
who believe they shouldn't use a non-dairy coffee creamer with a
meat meal because someone might think they put cream in the coffee
- of course most nondairy creamers wouldn't fool anyone who tasted
them, but they LOOK like cream. I hope the tofu cheese tastes more
like cheese than tofu ice cream tastes like ice cream - that stuff
is really only palatable in strong flavors; otherwise it tastes
like aged tofu, which is pretty bad (fresh tofu is fine; it doesn't
have much taste - old tofu tastes like soy beans, which isn't really
too surprising).
|
427.15 | I'd be happy without milch; some fakes are okay | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Baba ROM DOS | Fri Jan 22 1988 15:28 | 15 |
| I cannot eat real cheese, so I make pizza with the synthetic stuff.
It tastes sort of like the real thing (bland and gooey), so it's
sometimes better than nothing. (A good lamejune will also do.)
Some brands of parvine are okay; I find Tofutti (regular) to be
pretty good, Tofutti (litelite) to be poor, and Baracini's Tofulite
to be mediocre at best. In some, there's more "tofu" on the label
than inside it. Ice Bean is seriously heavy on soy and tastes it,
but it isn't sugary either. For drinking, Vitasoy coconut-maple
and Edensoy Vanilla are both very good soymilks. (If they tasted
like real milk did to me, I'd retch. Alas, a few soymilks do.)
Given the frequency of lactose intolerance among our people, I'm
surprised so many Jewish events are milchig.
fred
|
427.16 | do it yourself | RICKS::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Sun Jan 24 1988 18:12 | 6 |
| I've used plain tofu before to make fleischig lasagna. My mother
told me the technique: Mash up the tofu, add a little olive oil,
garlic powder and herbs. The appearance when baked is much like
ricotta cheese, although the taste is different.
Dave
|
427.17 | I *LIKE* soy milk!! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Mon Jan 25 1988 12:22 | 12 |
| (Hi, Fred! You are *much* more lactose-intolerant than I am.)
If you really like soy milk, the Chinese kind is MUCH better than
the health-food store kind, which often tastes kind of powdery and
heavy on the bean flavor. You can buy the Chinese kind bottled
in Chinese grocery stores, or, if you are concerned that it is not
marked kosher to your standards, it is pretty easy to make if you
have a blender or food processor (that you keep pareve) -- a bit
messy, but not very hard to do, and the result is very tasty. There's
nothing in it but soy beans, water, and sugar (which you can omit
if you want to - some people also add salt). If you're really curious
about it, I'll dredge up the recipe; the result really does taste
like milk (so maybe Fred wouldn't like it, at that).
|
427.18 | tofu ricotta with some egg for good measure | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Baba ROM DOS | Mon Jan 25 1988 13:26 | 7 |
| The Chinese-grocery soymilk I've tried was too sweet, and it went bad
in a couple of days (faster than real milk!). I suppose I could
try my own...
I often make tofu lasagna. I mix one egg with half a pound of soft
tofu and some garlic to make phoney ricotta. I don't think it would
be very good without meat sauce, though, to contribute the flavor.
|