BY KENNETH M. HORWITZ
If you’re looking for delicious, homemade, meals that taste like home.. you’re in for a treat! This cookbook is a collection of kosher style foods that are a celebration of life around the heart of the home.. our kitchen table – with those we love. No matter where we come from, food reminds us that we can come together, and enjoy one of life’s greatest pleasures.. eating, and sharing delicious food!
Author Kenneth M. Horwitz
With fifty-one years in a general tax and transaction practice as a CPA and lawyer, Ken Horwitz developed a creative and sharp approach to finding and fixing problems—a skill that translates well to the development of and modification of recipes based on traditional family favorites but tailored to one’s personal tastes and dietary needs.
Cookbook
Deep Flavors is an eclectic anthology of family recipes as well as original Jewish, regional American, and international recipes, including reminiscences and insights about food and its preparation in a Kosher style from the perspective of a southern Jew.
Deep Flavors Cookbook
An eclectic anthology of family recipes as well as original Jewish, regional American, and international recipes, including reminiscences and insights about food and its preparation in a Kosher style from theperspective of a southern Jew.
A BOOK FOR FOODIES, VEGETARIANS, AND JEWS WHO COOK TRADITIONAL AND NONTRADITIONAL KOSHER FOOD.
Deep Flavors: A Celebration of Recipes for Foodies in a Kosher Style
This book was written for my son, Seth, and my daughter, Lisa, both of whom inherited my love of good food and cooking. It is intended to communicate some of what I have learned over many years of study (and practice) and to share my original recipes, family recipes, and thoughts about food in an organized fashion—from generation to generation. It gives me great pleasure that Lisa has collaborated on significant parts, both by drafting recipes and by adding editorial assistance. Also, a number of recipes are those of my wife, Bobbie—including, for example, Bobbie’s Piecrust, Chopped Chicken Liver, and Apple Cake. This book is more than just a recipe compendium; it is meant to be read. I hope you read and learn from it with pleasure and use it as a resource for recipes, techniques, ideas, and other information.
I cannot count the times I have given a recipe to somebody who said, “This is too complicated” or “This has too many ingredients.” Most cooking is simply not that complicated, but there are correct (read: effective to produce a delicious result) techniques, steps, and ingredients that are necessary to improve the complexity and taste of the food on the table. One of our dear friends—Ann Cole, who has tested some of the recipes—commented that she found it very useful to read the recipe through before starting the preparation process and suggested that I share that perspective with my readers.