T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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659.1 | Now, how do I get this in Valbonne? | SUTRA::LEHKY | Se vuol ballare, Signor Contino? | Thu Mar 16 1989 05:16 | 5 |
| Dick,
Mind sending me a copy via internal mail? I'm @VBE/ALGO3
Let me know...
|
659.2 | Grazie | ASANA::CHERSON | Bird lives | Thu Mar 16 1989 09:44 | 7 |
| Re: .0
Thanks Dick for pointing this out. I am now on a low-cholesterol diet and
frankly wasn't looking forward to Purim without "Oznei Haman" (Hamantashen).
Now what do I do about Pesach when everything is made out of a million eggs??
David
|
659.3 | Lo Choleseteral Pesach | DELNI::GOLDBERG | | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:32 | 4 |
| > Now what do I do about Pesach when everything is made out of a million eggs??
Easy. Let the eggs hatch, remove the skin from the chicken, throw
away the dark meat, boil or bake and enjoy (maybe with a carrot).
|
659.4 | they didn't purge the sugar | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Room 101, Ministry of Love | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:54 | 6 |
| A summary of what the Glob said about Purim food:
Don't use the egg yolks. Use just the whites, plus some veggie
oil, or use egg substitutes. Choose your fats carefully.
(Well, it's faster than typing in recipes.)
|
659.5 | Almost anything is OK for a week, luckily | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Mar 16 1989 12:47 | 27 |
| To tell you the truth, I just ignore other dietary restrictions during
the week of Pesach, except to not add additional salt (it is the only
time of year we keep kosher, as most of you know, so the meat tastes very
salty to us no matter what we do, since we do not usually salt down our
meat) and of course to avoid stuff I am allergic to (especially oranges,
sigh - I *LOVE* oranges!). So we eat zillions of eggs, which we don't
eat much the rest of the time (egg yolks being not great in big
quantities, plus I am somewhat allergic to egg whites). The
alternative is to eat just meat, matzohs, and safe veggies like
broccoli and carrots - which we have tried before and which really does
a job on my digestive tract (we usually eat a lot of grains, like
barley kugels and stuff - and matzoh kugel isn't worth making, from my
perspective). I suppose you could eat mostly fish. Or move to a
Sephardic community, and eat rice (and new peas - a traditional part of
some Sephardic people's seder menu). I don't know what you do if you
are allergic to wheat and can't eat matzohs...other than that you
wouldn't be required to eat them during the seder (you don't *have* to
eat them any other times, you only have to not eat grains other than as
matzoh). I wish that someone would make matzohs out of some other
grains, such as rice, or oats, or barley (I'm not sure what "spelt"
even is, so I don't know what it tastes like - I think it is a kind of
ryegrain). You can sometimes get whole-wheat matzohs (you have to look
carefully since most of the usual brands say they are not Pesachdic),
which are less traumatic to the digestive tract, anyhow. But you can
deal with almost any change in diet - it's only for a week, after all,
and then you can go back to what your body or your doctor prefers.
|
659.6 | Low cholesterol cookbook | RABBIT::SEIDMAN | Aaron Seidman | Thu Mar 16 1989 16:06 | 3 |
| _The Kosher Low-Cholesterol Cookbook_ (or it might be _The
Low-Cholesterol Kosher Cookbook_) by Roberta Leviton has a lot of good
recipes and everyone I've tried has been tasty.
|
659.7 | Non-wheat matzo | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Mar 16 1989 16:10 | 11 |
| re wheat allergies and Pesach:
Some people *do* make matzos out of other grains, but I don't know
of any that are commercially available.
BTW, the problem with whole wheat matzo is that most commercial
WW matzo is made with apple juice, which makes it lechem ashir
("rich bread") rather than lechem oni ("poor bread"). There's
also a problem with mixing flour with any liquid other than water,
since halachically speaking this causes instant leavening.
Shmurah matzo *is* available in whole wheat.
|
659.8 | thanks | ASANA::CHERSON | Bird lives | Fri Mar 17 1989 09:20 | 8 |
| Thanks for the dietary suggestions.
Re: .5
I'm curious as to why you find kosher food "salty". I grew up eating kosher all
my life and I've never noticed that.
David
|
659.9 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Mar 17 1989 11:51 | 6 |
| >I'm curious as to why you find kosher food "salty".
Kosher meat is salted to remove blood. Kosher chicken is
definitely salty (some brands more than others) because there's
more surface area per pound than say beef (where a whole quarter
can be salted).
|
659.10 | It depend on who does the kashering | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Who's on first? | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:16 | 5 |
| When I do the kashering it sometimes ends up pretty salty 8^{). Because of
that we try to get any meat that won't be broiled already kashered. The
Butcherie seems to do a pretty good job of not over-salting during kashering.
Gavriel
|
659.11 | Yes, I mostly meant chicken; I mostly EAT chicken | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:59 | 5 |
| We eat a lot of chicken, and during Passover I buy it already kashered
too, and it is lot saltier than non-kosher chicken and is very
noticeable to us (since we do not cook with salt at all). We don't eat
much beef anyhow. You wouldn't notice it if you always eat kosher
meat, or salt on your meat.
|
659.12 | I know... | ASANA::CHERSON | Bird lives | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:01 | 11 |
| re: .9
I know very well about salting meat, my father was a kosher butcher and my
in-laws are in the same business (probably why I have to watch my
cholesterol :-). I don't know it never tasted salty to me.
re: .11
Funny, I've found kosher chicken to taste much better than non-kosher chicken.
David
|
659.13 | When you are used to salt, you can't taste it | DECSIM::GROSS | I need a short slogan that won't overflow the space available | Mon Mar 20 1989 14:15 | 21 |
| >re: .9
>
>I know very well about salting meat, my father was a kosher butcher and my
>in-laws are in the same business (probably why I have to watch my
>cholesterol :-). I don't know it never tasted salty to me.
>
>re: .11
>
>Funny, I've found kosher chicken to taste much better than non-kosher chicken.
You are so used to the salt that you don't taste it anymore. In fact, for you
food doesn't taste good unless it is salty. My father was brought up Orthodox
but lived non-observant. When he had to give up salt for his blood pressure
he really suffered because all his food tasted flat. I decided not to wait for
high-blood pressure and gave up adding salt. For a long while unsalted foods
just tasted flat. Now I can really taste the salt in food. Some foods,
especially soups, are very salty.
As a matter of interest, how does an Orthodox person handle a salt-free diet?
Dave
|
659.14 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Mar 20 1989 14:54 | 8 |
| >As a matter of interest, how does an Orthodox person handle a salt-free diet?
If meat is broiled over a flame, it doesn't have to be salted. This
is the only kosher way to prepare liver since it's impossible to
soak/salt the blood out.
Also, I would suspect that you can get most of the salt out of meat
by soaking repeatedly.
|
659.15 | As an aside... | SUTRA::LEHKY | Se vuol ballare, Signor Contino? | Tue Mar 21 1989 05:29 | 8 |
| re. salt free diet:
There is a powder extract made from celery (sp?), which tastes salty
(now, isn't that used in Bloody Marys?). If your father can eat celery
branches, he could use this salt replacement, as well. He should check
with his doctor.
Chris
|
659.16 | Exceptions are made to save a life | DECSIM::GROSS | I need a short slogan that won't overflow the space available | Tue Mar 21 1989 10:56 | 18 |
| I used the past tense with respect to my father. I am sorry to say that he died
about 10 years ago of complications of his high blood pressure (heart attack).
Decent salt substitutes came too late for him.
I understand that almost any law in Halacha can be set aside to save a life.
If a doctor were to advise a person to eat unsalted meat (either because the
iron in the blood was essential for life or because the sodium was too
dangerous) and no substitute was available, I am sure an Orthodox person
could comply. The heart valve case must fall in the same category. So would
fighting a war on Shabbos.
Was it in Bagels or elsewhere that I read the story about the Jew whose
doctors decided he must eat some pork product or else risk his life? The rabbis
selected an animal and ritually slaughtered it. When the lungs were inspected
a lesion was found and the carcass was declared treif. Somehow it all makes
sense.
Dave
|
659.17 | | ACESMK::MALMBERG | | Mon Mar 27 1989 14:29 | 12 |
| RE: some remarks about Pesach digestive problems in preceding replies.
The first year I kept all of Pesach was when I was working in Israel
and living in a hotel. Around day four I was quite sick, but continued
working anyway. People said I didn't have to keep Pesach, but I
toughed it out. The next year I used Metamucil every morning in
juice -- it's Kosher l'Pesach as long as you use a new jar. It
works wonders to maintain normal digestive activity in the face
of matzoh by the pound. Also, brocolli and related members of the
cabbage family like cauliflower do cause problems. Try parsnips
for a change -- raw or cooked and mashed or in a stew or sliced
thinly and sauted. They have fewer calories than carrots.
|
659.18 | Question regarding unleavened bread in the Temple | DECSIM::GROSS | I need a short slogan that won't overflow the space available | Mon Mar 27 1989 15:12 | 9 |
| I have been following the weekly Torah portions lately. For 2 weeks we have been
reading from the beginning of Leviticus where it talks about the procedures for
sacrifices and I noticed several references to unleavened bread. The priests
were apparantly expected to eat unleavened bread at all times of the year, not
just during Passover. A supply of unleavened bread was to be kept near the
altar. Did the priests have iron digestive systems or were they merely required
to eat token ammounts of the stuff?
Dave
|
659.19 | Breakfast, lunch, and dinner | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Mar 27 1989 16:04 | 5 |
| The Kohanim must have eaten not just vast quantities of matza of various
kinds (baked, pan fried, deep fried, etc.), but also large amounts of meat.
It's interesting to speculate about the general health (cardiac as well
as digestive) of the Kohanim. Of course, since the food they were eating
was holy, it might have had miraculous properties.
|