(Jewish Group) A Persian Upside-Down Cake for Rosh Hashanah
As a kid in Hebrew school, I learned that my classmates would have apples and honey and round challah at Rosh Hashanah to bring in the Jewish New Year, and that was pretty much it when it came to food traditions. But at home it was a different story.
As an Iranian Jew, Rosh Hashanah was an elaborate affair. Wed gather the extended family for the first two nights of the holiday, the first at my parents house, the second at my aunts. Dining tables, coffee tables and folding tables would be lined up to make one long dinner table covered with tablecloths to accommodate a good 20 or so family members. The table would be spread with platter after platter: mountains of saffron-laced basmati rice, crispy tahdig and flavorful stews maybe a deep green stew of celery and lots of herbs, or a tomato-based eggplant stew, tangy with unripe grapes.
But before dinner, wed (mostly) pause the loud chatter a lively mix of Persian and English for a full Sephardic Rosh Hashanah seder. Yes, there were apples and honey. But wed also have dates, beets, pomegranate seeds, slow-cooked black-eyed peas and beef tongue, Persian leeks and fried zucchini, each with a symbolic meaning and a blessing for the coming year.
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Recipe in the article (calling Ellen! LOL!).