One food you’ve probably heard of, but haven’t ventured to cook is kishke. It’s a sausage-like dish that appears buried deep in some Jewish deli menus in New York (like Katz’s) and although it’s definitely a less-kvelled (to burst with pride) – about Jewish food, it’s worth a try.
Kishke comes from the Yiddish word for intestine (kishke) which is almost identical to the Polish word for the same thing, kishka. Ashkenazi (Eastern European) Jews made kishke with a grain, chicken or beef fat, onions, celery, and carrots.
Essentially, kishke is somewhat like paprika-spiced Thanksgiving stuffing packed inside of cow intestine, or more often today, in synthetic inedible casing. It can be made vegetarian, loaded with root vegetables and grains, or it can be made with schmaltz (chicken fat), matzah meal and vegetables. When cooked, kishke is soft and savory, often simmered whole inside of cholent or baked in the oven.
Michael Ruhlman, author of The Book of Schmaltz: Love Song to a Forgotten Fat, poaches kishke in chicken broth, either on the stovetop or in a casserole dish in the oven.
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You can find kishke in kosher delicatessens and butchers, or you can try to make your own with one of our recipes below:
Schmaltz and Vegetable Kishke:
Michael Ruhlman’s Kishke
Kishke from The New York Times
Vegetarian Kishke:
Vegetarian Kishke from Joy of Kosher
Vegetarian Kishke from Lovely Clear and Sweet
kishke
Pronounced: KISH-kuh, Origin: Yiddish, literally “intestine,” this usually refers to a sausage-like dish. It’s also used to connote a strong emotional connection to something, as in “I feel it in my kishkes.”
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kosher
Pronounced: KOH-sher, Origin: Hebrew, adhering to kashrut, the traditional Jewish dietary laws.
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