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Shop
- Pre-Order Books
- New Releases
- Signed Books
- Vintage Books
- Sale Books
- Children's
- Shop All
- Vintage Menus
- Risographs
- Aprons & Totes
- Moulds
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- Americas
- Art & Design
- Asia & Oceania
- Europe
- Global
- Jewish
- Middle Eastern & African
- Baking & Sweets
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- Food Writing
- Gardening & Preserving
- General & Ingredients
- Health
- Professional
- Technique
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- Upcoming Events
- About Us
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The Jewish Gardening Cookbook: Growing Plants & Cooking for Holidays & Festivals (Michael Brown)
This guide shows how your gardening can sustain your spirit in new ways, whether you grow one fig tree on an apartment terrace, or five acres of wheat in the country. It may also help you realize, as never before, that for each fruit and vegetable associated with every holiday, there is a profound and sustaining reason.
To ancient Jews, figs symbolized prosperity, grapes signified fertility, and olives represented the renewal of life. Barley was the chief cooking staple, and dates were a honey substitute. The Jewish Gardening Cookbook gives clear and easy-to-follow instructions on how these foods—and more—can be grown and used for holidays, festivals, and life cycle events. For example, following the cycle of the Jewish year, it explains how to grow apples to bake in apple-raisin-nut cake at Rosh Hashanah, potatoes for latkes at Hanukkah, and ways to maximize use of your zucchini crop with zucchini nut bread at Purim.