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Cooking Demo with Danielle Renov

Date and time: Wednesday, September 9, 2020, 1 pm Eastern Daylight Time (UTC-4)

Tickets ($5.00+$1.94 fee) here [1].

Live from Israel: Cook along with Danielle and make Moroccan Matzah Ball Soup!

In partnership with the JCC Literary Consortium. Hosted by CNN journalist Holly Firfer. Zoom link will be made available to registrants two days, two hours and 10 minutes before the program. This means registration will end 15 minutes before the program.

Get your High Holidays shopping list ready and prep the kitchen: food blogger and Israeli chef extraordinaire, Danielle Renov, is coming to your kitchen to help you dish up some deliciousness for the holidays! Renov will be making her famous Moroccan Matzah Ball Soup, which also graces the cover of her beautiful new cookbook, Peas Love and Carrots! The cookbook features 254+ approachable recipes and full color photos drawing inspiration from her Sephardic and Ashkenazi roots.

Renov is the blogger/influencer behind the popular brand, peaslovencarrots.com [2] and the Instagram account @peaslovencarrots. From her kitchen in Israel, she creates delicious recipes that reflect her multi-cultural background. Part Moroccan and part Ashkenaz, she was born and raised in Long Island, New York but moved to Israel where she has lived for the last 10 years with her husband and children. Danielle loves to impart lifestyle tips and hacks, but mostly, she’s just all about good food.

Purchase of the cookbook [3] is not required but encouraged.

Moroccan Matzah Ball Soup Recipe:

“This soup is the cover of the book because it’s basically me in a bowl: half Moroccan, half Ashkenaz, influenced by the flavors of the shuk in Jerusalem where I’ve done my shopping for the past 13 years, full of flavor, easy to prepare, and approachable enough that it appeals to the youngest and oldest amongst us!”

  1. Combine saffron and boiling water in a cup. Set aside.
  2. Set a medium pot over high heat. Add olive oil.
  3. Add onions, carrots, fennel, and garlic; stir to combine. Cook vegetables on high heat for about 6 minutes.
  4. We are looking for a quick sear on high heat to develop a bit of char on the edges of the vegetables.
  5. Once veggies are charred, add coriander, Hawaij, salt, and pepper.
  6. Stir spices and harissa with vegetables for 2 minutes to extract natural oils from the spices.
  7. Once spices become fragrant, add arak.
  8. Use a wooden spoon to scrape up any bits stuck to the bottom of the pan.
  9. Allow arak to reduce for 3 minutes. Add saffron water and stock. Add drained chickpeas.
  10. Bring mixture to a boil (uncovered), then lower heat, cover the pot, and simmer soup for 2 hours.
  11. 40 minutes before serving, bring soup to a boil again.
  12. Using lightly oiled hands, form 2 tablespoons of matzah ball mixture into a smooth ball and add to the pot.
  13. Repeat until all the matzah balls are in the pot.
  14. Add Swiss chard.
  15. Reduce heat back, cover the pot, and simmer for 30 minutes.
  16. Serve hot soup with a matzah ball in each bowl, and garnish with what you like!

garnish

variations

“I chose to keep this soup free of actual chicken pieces so that it could be thrown together quickly at all times, without having to run to the grocery store (or your freezer) for chicken or meat. However, if possible, I highly recommend adding a few pieces of chicken into the pot with the carrots, onion, and fennel and turning this into a full-on Moroccan chicken soup.

If you don’t want to bother with raw chicken but want that bite of chicken anyway, you can always add already cooked shredded chicken to each bowl!”

matzah balls

  1. In a medium bowl, combine matzah meal, baking powder, and salt.
  2. Add eggs and oil.
  3. Mix well to fully incorporate.
  4. Place plastic wrap directly on the mixture to cover well; place in the fridge for at least 1 hour or overnight.
  5. To make matzah balls, bring soup or salted water up to a boil.
  6. Lightly oil your hands and then scoop up 2 tablespoons of the mixture. Roll into a ball and drop into the boiling liquid.
  7. Once all the matzah balls are in the liquid, reduce heat to low, cover the pot, and cook matzah balls 30 minutes, until cooked through.

Excerpted from Peas Love and Carrots by Danielle Renov. Copyright 2020 by ArtScroll Mesorah Publications, photos by Moshe Wulliger. Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. All rights reserved.