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Passover Con Guacamole
….For Original Article Click Here
During Passover, most American Jews forgo the zesty tacos and tortillas they
savor all year. But what if someone knew how to prepare Mexican food without
flour or leavening? What if his recipes were served during the holiday’s
eight days in an upscale restaurant?
“Several years ago I began experimenting with the infusion of Mexican
ingredients and Jewish foods,” says Julian Medina, chef and owner of
Toloache, a contemporary Mexican bistro in Manhattan’s theater district.
He started small, offering clients guacamole with matzah instead of the
usual chips. Then his creativity blossomed into a complete holiday menu,
featuring chipotle-braised brisket and matzah ball soup seasoned with
aromatic herbs and jalapeno peppers.
Why would a chef from Mexico City who had dazzled clients at Maya and
Pampano, two of Manhattan’s best Mexican restaurants, turn to Jewish cuisine
for inspiration?
Although Medina was born a Catholic, he converted to Judaism. Six years ago,
when he was dating the Jewish woman who would become his wife, he started
spending holidays with her family. It sparked a curiosity about her religion
that continued to grow the more he learned about Jewish rituals.
From the beginning he was intrigued by each holiday’s traditional fare as he
tasted the foods his future mother-in-law prepared. It wasn’t long before he
started seasoning Jewish recipes with the flavors of his youth.
Medina explored Jewish cooking, both Sephardi and Ashkenazi.
“This is what chefs do when exposed to cuisines that excite them – they
conduct research to develop new recipes,” he says. “Food is never static. It
changes every day.”
His Matzah Tostada recipe was influenced directly by Sephardic cuisine, as
were the Matzah Tortillas that accompany his brisket, a signature dish of
Ashkenazi fare.
Many of his recipes benefit from the marriage of both cuisines.
While Julian’s Matzah Ball Soup bears the stamp of Ashkenazi cooking, it is
seasoned with cilantro and jalapeno and finished with a squeeze of lime. His
Roasted Halibut recipe is served with a Passover Cauliflower Pancake
reminiscent of a latke made from cauliflower rather than potatoes.
Soon after Medina opened Toloache, which is named for a flowering plant used
in Mexican love potions, several friends asked him to serve a Passover menu
at the restaurant. Typical of many New Yorkers, they adore fine dining but
were not inclined to cook. Yet that didn’t stop them from craving seder
foods, which they knew Medina would bring to a new level.
He responded by offering a dazzling Passover menu at Toloache, from first
course through a dessert of Matzah Pudding with Roasted Bananas.
Four years ago, 10 people were his first holiday patrons, arriving with
friends, family and kosher wine, Medina recalls.
“I wanted them to feel at home while celebrating Passover,” he says.
Word traveled and customers flocked to Toloache for Jewish foods with a
piquant twist.
“I still can’t believe the menu has become so popular,” says Medina,
explaining that articles about his Mexican-Jewish fusion cuisine have been
published in The New York Times, among other New York newspapers and
magazines.
On the first and second nights of the holiday, some customers bring kosher
wine and read the Haggadah, performing an entire seder. Others simply relish
Passover food Mexican style. During Passover week, nearly 100 people order
holiday fare at Toloache as an alternative to cooking at home.
“People can adapt our Passover menu in any way they want,” Medina says.
While the kitchen at Toloache is not made kosher for Passover, Medina’s
recipes conform to the Passover laws of kashrut. By sharing his recipes,
Medina has offered home cooks the option of turning one of the holiday’s
eight nights into a celebration of Mexican Jewish food.
With his Passover menu becoming so popular at Toloache, Medina now offers
Rosh HaShanah and Chanukah dishes infused with Mexican spices.
Medina’s wife suspects that at some point the Medina family was Jewish. Some
early settlers in Mexico who had emigrated from Spain were Conversos, Jews
forced to convert to Catholicism during the Spanish Inquisition.
Perhaps the Medina family had been Conversos. The origin of their name is
Hebrew and Arabic. Several Jewish families in Spain have carried the surname
Medina. In the Spanish province of Cadiz, in the city Medina-Sidonia, it was
customary among Sephardim to be named for the city of origin.
Regardless of his family origins, these days Medina celebrates Passover like
most Jews around the world – at home.
“I cook dinner with my wife’s mom,” he says, explaining how he learned
Jewish cooking by standing at her side in the kitchen. “Now we plan the menu
together.”
Medina’s mother-in-law likes how he has tweaked her recipes and approves of
the foods he has added to the family repertoire.
“Passover is always a special occasion,” Medina says. “There is something
awe inspiring about repeating the story of the ancient Israelites journey
from slavery to freedom, from Pharaoh’s tyranny in Egypt to the Promised
Land.”
The holiday is even more meaningful now that Medina is the father of a
year-old daughter. While she is too young to recite the Four Questions,
she’s already tasted matzah tortillas – served with chipotle salsa, of
course.
The recipes below are by Medina.
JULIAN’S MATZAH BALL SOUP
Chicken Soup
Preparation: In a stock pot, bring the water and salt to a boil. Add chicken
and remaining soup ingredients and simmer for 30 minutes. Skim the fat.
Strain broth and set aside. (Use caution when handling hot soup.)
Matzah Balls
Preparation: Mix all matzah ball ingredients together and let mixture rest
in the refrigerator for 15 minutes. With wet hands, roll into 8 balls. Do
not over roll. Add matzah balls to soup and simmer for 5 minutes. Check
seasoning. If necessary, add kosher salt.
Finishing Touches
Preparation: Cook the carrot and zucchini in the chicken soup. Serve 2
matzah balls per bowl with some chicken soup, carrots and zucchini. Garnish
with a teaspoon of red onion and a squirt of lime.
BRISKET CON CHIPOTLE
Ingredients:
Preparation:
MATZAH TORTILLAS
Ingredients:
Preparation: Place the matzah cake meal, salt, warm water and 1 tablespoon
oil in a bowl. Mix ingredients very well with your hands, until you form
soft dough. With your hands, form 1 1/2-inch balls. Roll balls between
plastic wrap to form a tortilla shape. Preheat additional oil on a nonstick
griddle or pan on a medium flame. Fry the matzah tortillas until browned.
MATZAH TOSTADA YUCATAN STYLE
Smoked Sea Bass
Preparation:
Matzah Tostaditas
Preparation:
Salsa
Preparation:
ROASTED HALIBUT, PASSOVER CAULIFLOWER PANCAKE AND HIBISCUS CHIPOTLE GLAZE
Pancakes
Preparation:
Sauce
Preparation:
Roasted Halibut
To serve, place a pancake on each plate and drizzle with the hibiscus sauce.
Place a halibut fillet beside pancake.
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