fbpx
| From My Table |

From My Table

If you’re ready to start sourdough, check out Chaya Suri Leitner’s method. She makes it so easy. Yes, it’s on your mind for a day, but anyone can pull it off. Really!!

Isuccumbed. I fell for the trend, hook, line, and sinker. Like thousands of other people in quarantine, I started my own sourdough starter (thanks to Chaya Suri Leitner, of Spice and Zest, and her amazing courses), and I’ve been making a few loaves a week ever since.

My joining the bandwagon had nothing to do with trendiness (unfortunate coincidence), it was just timing. I was primarily excited about the health benefits, secondly motivated by the fantastic flavor, and ultimately challenged by the creative and scientific process.

Many times over the past few months, I found myself questioning why in the world I’d thought a new “pet” was a good idea with everyone at home. When I really considered it, though, that was actually why I was able to pull it off: I was in the kitchen anyway, so babysitting the starter was just one more thing to check off. (For the record, I’ve accumulated lots of pets that require TLC these days: vegetable plants, an above-ground pool, and my trusty Roomba.)

What I came to love about the sourdough process is how it engaged my kids — from naming it, to making it, to eating it. It felt like a healthy meeting point between my job and my family, and one the kids were proud of. My goal, as always, is not to put deeply golden loaves on a pedestal, with pictures of the perfect crumb and hydration level (industry jargon, you know), but to appreciate the process of getting there. Projects are a good way to spend your time during the Nine Days: keeping things low key, on the quieter side, and building bonds while you’re at it.

Chanie Nayman

Food Editor, Family Table

My Easiest Lasagna in the World:
  • 1 9×13-inch pan
  • 1 jar marinara sauce (use a good one, this is crucial)
  • 1 16-oz container cottage cheese
  • almost a full box of oven-ready lasagna noodles
  • hefty amount of mozzarella (whatever you think you need, use twice that)

Layer together. Put in the oven at 350°F (175°C), covered, for about 45 minutes, then uncover for another 25 minutes or so.

Single-Serve Portions for the Win
  1. I’d love to buy my favorite condiments (especially the ones that no one else in my family likes, for example sauerkraut) in individual packaging, so they don’t clutter up my fridge!
  2. This doesn’t exist yet, but it should! Frozen pop-out butter (similar to frozen herb cubes) so you can make a quick omelet with zero greasy mess from the butter stick wrapper. Kosherfood companies, I’m looking at you!

(Originally featured in Family Table, Issue 701)

Oops! We could not locate your form.