Jewish Heritage Month: Baseball & Chocolate!
When I nibbled on chocolate at the Cyclones Game in Coney Island the other day, I felt as though I had hit a triple header of Jewish life in America. Not only was it Jewish Heritage Night at Maimonides Stadium (resonant of Jewish greats like Hank Greenberg and Sandy Koufax), but I was eating a product mixed in with the earliest Jewish experience in our country. Long before baseball existed, America’s first Jews, most of them Sephardim from Spain and Portugal sought religious freedom and economic opportunity. They arrived early in New Amsterdam, now New York City, where they contributed financially, civilly, and religiously to founding our country.
In these days of rising antisemitism, remembering America’s Jewish heritage becomes especially important. As President Biden wrote about those Jewish pioneers in his recent proclamation for Jewish American Heritage Month, 2023:
Early on, they fought for religious freedom, helping define one of the bedrock principles upon which America was built.
Fortunately, our government opposes the current anti-semitism and works to protect the Jewish community through the COVID-19 Hate Crimes Act, through the appointment of Deborah Lipstadt to ambassador level status to monitor and combat antisemitism, and through funding to heighten security at Jewish facilities.
Jews were here from the very beginning, a story told, in part, in my recent children’s book called The Boston Chocolate Party, co-authored with Tami Lehman-Wilzig. Our Jewish forebears in America supported each other in tough times. They proudly celebrated Jewish holiday and continued Jewish traditions. They contributed to new commercial enterprises, including the chocolate trade. When tea was deemed politically incorrect because of British taxation, they supplied their neighbors with the chocolate drink which was consumed at breakfast and supper. Indeed, the parallel stories of American and Jewish freedom coincided when the Boston Tea Party fell on the last night of Hanukkah in 1773. This month, we can dip into our past with pride in our Jewish resilience and our many contributions to American life.
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On the Chocolate Trail in Bariloche, Argentina
In March, Mark and I finally extended our chocolate trail explorations in celebration of our special anniversary to Bariloche…via Miami, Buenos Aires, Ushuaia, Antarctica, and Buenos Aires again. There were international flights, a cruise, a couple of domestic flights to get there. All of the travel was amazing, but Bariloche, sometimes called the chocolate capital
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Sunday Yeast Polemics: On the Bread Trail
Leavened bread or not? While some of us may think of Passover, the question applied to Eucharistic bread and created significant division in the early Christian Church. The leavened bread for Sunday use was often baked at home by women. Over time, preferences shifted to clergy, church-produced, breads… and, the Eastern Orthodox Church preferred a
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Sweet Treat: Chocolate and the Making of American Jews
You may wonder: how did chocolate help define American Jews? Through chocolate, we see that Jews were part of America since its earliest days. Well, since 1701 at least, Jews in the Colonies made part of their living through chocolate. Several Sephardim, leaders of their New York and Newport Jewish and secular communities, participated in
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How About Some Uterus Challah?
When Logan Zinman Gerber felt enraged about the loss of reproductive rights in the U.S., she baked challah. Not any challah. She shaped it into a uterus. It wasn’t long after the birth of her daughter that Gerber, a longtime challah baker and staff member of the Religious Action Center of the Reform movement, considered
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Some Previous Posts
(in alphabetical order)
- "Boston Chocolate Party" Q&As with Deborah Kalb
- 2022 Media for The "Boston Chocolate Party"
- A Manhattan synagogue explores the rich, surprising history of Jews and chocolate
- About Rabbi Deborah Prinz
- Baking Prayers into High Holiday Breads
- Boston Chocolate Party
- Digging into Biblical Breads
- Exhibit Opens! Sweet Treat! Chocolate & the Making of American Jews
- For the Easiest Hanukah Doughnuts Ever
- Forthcoming! On the Bread Trail
- Funny Faced Purim Pastries
- Good Riddance Chameitz or, The Polemics of Passover's Leaven
- How About Some Uterus Challah?
- Injera*
- Jewish Heritage Month: Baseball & Chocolate!
- Matzah - But, the Dough Did Rise!
- Plan a Choco-Hanukkah Party: 250th Anniversary Tea Party
- Prayers Into Breads
- To Shape Dough: A Trio of Techniques