ADVERTISEMENT
Healthy Recipes, Healthy Eating, Healthy Cooking - Eating Well
 SEARCH EATINGWELL.COM
 
  ADVANCED HEALTHY RECIPES SEARCH »
 MY EATINGWELL
LEARN MORE | LOGIN

SERVES TWO

Free Eating Well Newsletters

and special offer emails.

EatingWell This Week
Healthy recipes of the season
EatingWell Diet
Healthy weight loss how-to, recipes
EatingWell for Health
Nutrition news, health how-to
HealthESavers Coupons
Valuable printable coupons
EatingWell Store
Special deals on kitchen tools
privacy policy

ADVERTISEMENT

SERVES TWO


add email print

ADVERTISEMENT

Satisfying Fall Suppers for 2

Sweet & Savory Beef Stew

Featured Recipe: Sweet & Savory Beef Stew

These easy takes on traditional Jewish holiday dishes are perfect for any crisp fall evening.

By Bruce Weinstein & Mark Scarbrough, EatingWell September/October 2008

Healthy Fall Recipes for Two

Holidays can be tricky for blended families. In our case, the Christian side of the family offers to bring the bread for a Passover Seder, and the Jewish side doesn’t understand why dinner has to be after the Christmas Eve service.

It’s a problem best solved with a little humility and grace. That said, it sometimes falls together naturally. The first holiday we spent together with our families was Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement in the Jewish calendar—a kind of once-a-year “you’re forgiven” moment. As such, it’s a solemn day, usually marked by a fast until sundown. After that, most families serve up a simple meal of smoked fish and bagels, because there are prohibitions against working on a high holy day.

It could have been fraught with tension: meeting families, packed with about a hundred years’ worth of baggage. Not knowing the customs, not knowing you don’t bring flowers to a solemn moment of repentance. But it wasn’t. We settled in, dug into the platters of cold salads and smoked fish. We honored traditions and gently educated ignorance.

These days, our families are spread across the country. On all sides, we live a plane-flight from each other. So we two often spend many of the holidays together: holidays that are quieter, less fraught—but no less traditional.

Rosh Hashanah always seems the most sensible holiday because it falls exactly where it should. It’s in mid- to late September and it marks the New Year in the Jewish calendar. January 1? No way. For most of us sometime right after Labor Day, we’re back in the saddle, back at work, back at school, starting anew, once the summer heat breaks. The French call this time of year la rentrée (the re-entry), but New Year seems an even better word for it: full of hope and rebirth. The meal for Rosh Hashanah most often includes something sweet, to symbolize a wish and a prayer for a sweet and happy new year.

For these Jewish fall holidays we have worked up delicious recipes for two that honor all the traditions. Our beef stew for Rosh Hashanah is full of butternut squash and dried cherries, an homage to the sweet new year. And for Yom Kippur, we keep it easy with trout salad that’s just a little bit of work. You can make it the day before—or anytime, really, a nice dinner for an early fall evening when you’d rather not turn on the stove.

Contributing editors Bruce Weinstein and Mark Scarbrough’s most recent book is The Ultimate Cook Book (William Morrow).

dotted line

Related Recipes

Stay current with the latest issue of EatingWell. Subscribe Risk-Free Now!

More EatingWell Resources:

Advanced Healthy Recipes Search
Today's Featured Recipes
100 + Healthy Recipes Collections
EatingWell Homepage: News, Recipes, Health
EatingWell's BEST Menu Ideas

 
USER COMMENTS — Add Your Comment
NO USER COMMENTS


Add Your Comment:
Name
City
State
Comments
(HTML is NOT allowed)


EATINGWELL EDITORS' PICKS


Introducing the EatingWell Menu Planner

Healthy recipe RSS feeds from Eating Well
Healthy recipe videos from Eating Well
Healthy recipes for your mobile phone from Eating Well


Shop now for great deals at the EatingWell Store
Save Money with HealthESavers Coupons
 

The EatingWell Market


FEATURED SPONSORS:
www.divabetic.org
Save with HealthESavers Coupons

Home   |   Recipes   |   Health   |   Eat & Drink   |   Diet   |   News & Views   |   Community   |   About Us   |   Subscribe   |   Give a Gift   |   Shop   |   Customer Service   |   My EatingWell   |   Newsletters   |   EatingWell Market   |   Professionals   |   Advertising   |   Jobs

EatingWell, 823A Ferry Rd. PO Box 1010, Charlotte, VT 05445, USA     www.eatingwell.com     Tel. (802) 425-5700

World Wide Web Health Award Winner