Pittsburgh is a city of ethnic neighborhoods, many retaining an old world flavor. Squirrel Hill is Pittsburgh's Jewish neighborhood, where one can find the best Jewish delicatessins, Kosher butchers, Judaica, tucked in amongst 1st class dress shops, shoe shops, book stores, restaurants, coffee shops and the like. For those of you tucked away in Vermont who might ask, what's a kishke? what's a kugel? I'll elucidate: To make a kishke, first you must go to a Kosher butcher and get some derma. Derma is the washed beef intestine. You make a stuffing of flour, matzoh meal, melted chicken fat. Stuff the derma, tie it off like a sausage and boil it for several hours. But you are not done yet! Then you brown it in the oven with roasting meat or chicken so that the skin of the kishke becomes brown and crisp. Slice, and serve. Kugel is a noodle pudding. Larry's mother made her kugel with cinnemon and raisins, but from the comments around the table, there are as many variations on kugel as there are cooks! Cook a pound of noodles, either wide or narrow, drain. Beat up 5 eggs, add 2 T cinnemon and 2 cups raisins. Mix into the cooked noodles, pour into greased 13" pan. Dot top with butter and bake in 350 degree oven for 30 minutes, check, bake 10 minutes more if needed. The Golem was a man of clay, created by a rabbi in Prague in the 16th century. The Rabbi used the Golem as a servant, commanding him to do the menial tasks of the household. Later, he used the Golem to guard the townspeople, and keep them from calamity. The Golem wanted the Rabbi to teach him. After a while the Rabbi tired of teaching him, so he taught him to read. That way the Golem could learn by himself. But, the more the Golem read, the unhappier he became. He wanted to be human. In the end, he worked himself into a frenzy. The people were so frightened by him that he had to be destroyed. Stanger's depiction of the Golem is very concrete, and his figures resemble the plaster body casts of Pompeii. The twisted, contorted positions indicate the anguish of the Golem. |