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HomeBeliefsTzimmes, brisket, knish - Annual Kosher Dinner returns this weekend

Tzimmes, brisket, knish – Annual Kosher Dinner returns this weekend

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Ethel Grossman cooks at Temple Beth Shalom during Hanukkah/Tracy Simmons - SpokaneFAVS
Ethel Grossman cooks at Temple Beth Shalom during Hanukkah/Tracy Simmons – SpokaneFAVS

Her specialty is the carrot tzimmes.

First she browns the chopped onions — two 5 pound bags of them — with six cubes of pareve margarine, to keep it kosher.

She adds her own blend of spices, mixes in two cups of honey, lots of brown sugar, cornstarch, cold water and three cups of lemon juice. Then she adds her sauce, which she calls “the essence” to the sliced carrots.

Ethel Grossman’s first batch is done. She has 15 more to go.

Preparing 300 pounds of carrots this way for the annual Kosher Dinner at Temple Beth Shalom is a tradition for Grossman, who readily stepped into the kosher kitchen (then on 4th and Adams) when she moved to Spokane in the early 1950s.

She remembers her oldest son, now 57, folding silverware into napkins at the first Kosher Dinner he participated in. About 200 people from the Jewish community were there.

“So my kids grew up with the idea of community and good food and enjoying friends,” she said.

At the time Spokane had two small synagogues and they each had an annual Kosher Dinner.

Ethel Grossman looks at her carrot tzimmes recipe/Tracy Simmons - SpokaneFAVS
Ethel Grossman looks at her carrot tzimmes recipe/Tracy Simmons – SpokaneFAVS

Eventually the two congregations joined together, moved to their current location on Perry, decided to have one annual Kosher Dinner and open it up to the entire Spokane community.

Grossman, who at the time worked for her family’s paint manufacturing company, remembers prepping for the Kosher Dinner in the 1970s by taking the day off, hiring a babysitter and selling tickets downtown with a group of women from the synagogue.

“We’d each take a street. Somebody would take Riverside, somebody would take Sprague, and somebody would take First Ave. In those days businesses weren’t in such huge buildings like they are today,” Grossman said. “We had a lot of nerve going door and finding a person in charge and try to sell them tickets to the dinner.”

“They got a kick out of seeing us. Riverside was a jumping place; there weren’t so many nationally owned shops. They were all local. Local people took an interest in community activities in those days,” she said.

At noon the women would meet up for Chinese food, then go back home.

“It was a grassroots effort to raise a little money and to enjoy good food together,” Grossman said. “That’s the Jewish tradition. If nothing else, let’s just eat. No matter what’s going on in the world, let’s just sit down and break bread together.”

Volunteers prepare food at the Kosher Dinner
Volunteers prepare food at the Kosher Dinner

The Kosher Dinner, Grossman said, is a celebration.

“It’s a way to inform the public about the fact that there is a living Jewish community here, and we are unique,” she said.

But, she added, it’s also about highlighting the traditional, kosher diet.

The meal is prepared in a kosher meat kitchen, which means all milk products have been removed (since it’s a milk kitchen the rest of the year) and special dishes and silverware are brought in and surfaces are washed with boiling water.

The meal starts with challah, a braided egg bread, and an antipasto of garbanzo beans, pickled herring and pickled beets. Then guests are served brisket, carrot tzimes and potato knish.

The brisket comes from the East, as kosher brisket isn’t available in this area. Grossman explained that the meat is butchered humanely, then goes through a series of salt baths to draw out impurities and extra blood. Then it is then washed. The knish is like a ravioli wrapped in a flaky dough, Grossman said.

Apricot Kuchen Cake is served for desert.

“Everything in the dinner is healthy,” Grossman said.

The 73rd Annual Kosher Dinner, which has drawn as many as 3,000 diners, will take place March 9 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the synagogue, 1322 E 30th Ave.

Besides the dinner, there will be live entertainment, homemade baked goods, and a Jewish gift shop.

Tickets are $14 in advance or $16 at the door for adults, or $7 in advance or $9 at the door for children. Takeout is also available.

For information call 747-3304.

Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons
Tracy Simmons is an award-winning journalist specializing in religion reporting and digital entrepreneurship. In her approximate 20 years on the religion beat, Simmons has tucked a notepad in her pocket and found some of her favorite stories aboard cargo ships in New Jersey, on a police chase in Albuquerque, in dusty Texas church bell towers, on the streets of New York and in tent cities in Haiti. Simmons has worked as a multimedia journalist for newspapers across New Mexico, Texas, Connecticut and Washington. She is the executive director of FāVS.News, a digital journalism start-up covering religion news and commentary in Spokane, Washington. She also writes for The Spokesman-Review and national publications. She is a Scholarly Assistant Professor of Journalism at Washington State University.

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Deborah Bisenius
Deborah Bisenius
10 years ago

I am hungry thinking about this meal! Probably your spell check doesn’t know the difference between “pickled herring” and “pickled hearing.” I love the pickles! It’s wonderful that you have captured the “flavor” of the outreach, tradition and friendliness at Temple Beth Shalom.
Thank you!

Liv Larson Andrews
10 years ago

Tracy Simmons: capturing the flavor of outreach in Spokane since 2011. (was that the year you came? where does the time go?)

This feast sounds amazing. Pickled herrring is an essential item on my Christmas table. So awesome that it’s also kosher. Connections!

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