The first of our nightly lightings of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Civic Center Menorah will be 5:30 pm on Saturday, December 8. See you there!
FOUR JEWISH NEW YEARS?
A Taste of Torah
EDITOR’S NOTE: The following was sent to me by Elliott Magalnick, a student of the Melton School sponsored by the Colorado Agency for Jewish Education. I thought it was interesting enough to share with you.
We just celebrated the Gregorian New Year on January 1, but there’s another New Year right around the corner — and it’s one of four Jewish new years. We think mainly about Rosh HaShanah as the Jewish New Year, but there are three others that coordinate with harvest times. This month, January 25-26 marks Tu B’Shevat, the “new year for trees.” According to the Torah, fruits cannot be consumed from trees less than three years old (this is where the Upsherin celebration comes from), so Tu B’Shevat was used as the starting date for determining tree ages. In modern times, many view this holiday as a “Jewish Earth Day” and mark the day with a Tu B’Shevat seder.
Here are some fun facts and websites to check out to learn more about new year’s celebrations and Tu B’Shevat.
- Did you know that up until 1752 England observed March 25 as New Year’s Day?
- If you’re wondering how to mark the day with your children, PJ Library has some stellar suggestions.
- For more information on the practices and beliefs of Tu B’Shevat, check out My Jewish Learning!
Copyright © 2013 Colorado Agency for Jewish Education, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
Colorado Agency for Jewish Education
300 S. Dahlia Street #101
Denver, CO 80246
A SHORT-LIVED RESOLUTION
THE PARKING SPACE
Moishe is driving in NYC .
He’s late for a meeting, he’s looking for a parking place, and can’t find one.
In desperation, he turns towards heaven and says:
“Lord, if you find me a parking place, I promise that I’ll follow all of your commandments and live my life as an exemplary Jew. ”
Miraculously, a place opens up just in front of him.
He turns his face up to heaven and says,
“Never mind, I just found one!”
THE EIGHT NIGHTS OF CHANUKAH
On the first night of Chanukah, my Jewish mother said,
“You’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the second night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the third night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the fourth night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Taste my sugar cookies,
here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the fifth night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“YOU’RE GETTING FAT!
taste my sugar cookies,
here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the sixth night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Don’t you like the doughnuts?
YOU’RE GETTING FAT!
taste my sugar cookies,
here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the seventh night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Take another brownie,
Don’t you like the doughnuts?
YOU’RE GETTING FAT!
taste my sugar cookies,
here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
On the eighth night of Chanukah, my mother said to me,
“Try my home-made strudel,
take another brownie,
Don’t you like the doughnuts?
YOU’RE GETTING FAT!
taste my sugar cookies,
here’s your chocolate dreidel,
have a few more latkes, but
you’d better lose some weight or you’ll be dead.”
CRISPY POTATO LATKES
CRISPY POTATO LATKES
Published November 1, 2012. From Cook’s Illustrated.
For truly crisp latkes, we had to eliminate the one thing potatoes are loaded with.
WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
We wanted latkes that were light and not greasy, with buttery soft interiors surrounded by a shatteringly crisp outer shell. To achieve all of these goals, we needed to remove as much water as possible from the potato shreds by wringing them out in a kitchen towel and to minimize the release of what remained by microwaving the shreds briefly to cause the starches in the potatoes to form a gel. With the water taken care of, the latkes crisped up quickly and absorbed minimal oil. (
SERVES 4 TO 6 AS A SIDE DISH
We prefer shredding the potatoes on the large holes of a box grater, but you can also use the large shredding disk of a food processor; cut the potatoes into 2-inch lengths first so you are left with short shreds. Serve with applesauce and sour cream.
INGREDIENTS
• 2pounds russet potatoes, unpeeled, scrubbed, and shredded
• 1/2cup grated onion
• Salt and pepper
• 2large eggs, lightly beaten
• 2teaspoons minced fresh parsley
• Vegetable oil
INSTRUCTIONS
1. Adjust oven rack to middle position, place rimmed baking sheet on rack, and heat oven to 200 degrees. Toss potatoes, onion, and 1 teaspoon salt in bowl. Place half of potato mixture in center of dish towel. Gather ends together and twist tightly to drain as much liquid as possible, reserving liquid in liquid measuring cup. Transfer drained potato mixture to second bowl and repeat process with remaining potato mixture. Set potato liquid aside and let stand so starch settles to bottom, at least 5 minutes.
2. Cover potato mixture and microwave until just warmed through but not hot, 1 to 2 minutes, stirring mixture with fork every 30 seconds. Spread potato mixture evenly over second rimmed baking sheet and let cool for 10 minutes. Don’t wash out bowl.
3. Pour off water from reserved potato liquid, leaving potato starch in measuring cup. Add eggs and stir until smooth. Return cooled potato mixture to bowl. Add parsley, 1/4 teaspoon pepper, and potato starch mixture and toss until evenly combined.
4. Set wire rack in clean rimmed baking sheet and line with triple layer of paper towels. Heat 1/4-inch depth of oil in 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat until shimmering but not smoking (350 degrees). Place 1/4-cup mound of potato mixture in oil and press with nonstick spatula into 1/3-inch-thick disk. Repeat until 5 latkes are in pan. Cook, adjusting heat so fat bubbles around latke edges, until golden brown on bottom, about 3 minutes. Turn and continue cooking until golden brown on second side, about 3 minutes longer. Drain on paper towels and transfer to baking sheet in oven. Repeat with remaining potato mixture, adding oil to maintain 1/4-inch depth and returning oil to 350 degrees between batches. Season with salt and pepper to taste, and serve immediately.
5. TO MAKE AHEAD: Cooled latkes can be covered loosely with plastic wrap and held at room temperature for up to 4 hours. Alternatively, they can be frozen on baking sheet until firm, transferred to zipper-lock bag, and frozen for up to 1 month. Reheat latkes in 375-degree oven until crisp and hot, 3 minutes per side for room-temperature latkes and 6 minutes per side for frozen latkes.
MAJCO Communities to Light Menorot Together at Capitol, 12 Noon, Monday, Dec 10, 2012
From: Joshua Burnim
Date: December 3, 2012, 4:41:53 PM MST
Dear Montana Jews:
For the fourth year in a row, the Montana Association of Jewish Communities (MAJCO) is sponsoring a Chanukah Menorot Lighting event with Lt. Governor Bohlinger. We hope to again have all nine communities of MAJCO light a Menorah (one each). This will be our last year lighting the candles with Lt. Governor Bohlinger as a new administration takes over in January. Let’s use this opportunity to come together as Montana Jews and celebrate the light that we all share.
MARK YOUR CALENDARS: Monday, December 10
12:00 p.m. Lighting Ceremony with Lt. Governor Bohlinger; Please arrive at 11:30 a.m. to set up.
The State Capitol in Helena; the Rotunda Room which is below the Large Dome of the Capitol
Photo of State Capitol: http://www.panoramio.com/photo/205168
Parking: Park in the lot that is on the north side of the capitol or park on the streets all around the capitol. There should be plenty of parking, but please allow time to find a space and walk to the Rotunda. 1301 East 6th Avenue, Helena, MT
The nine communities of MAJCO, listed from East to West based on town/city of location, are:
- Congregation Beth Aaron, Billings
- Chabad Lubavitch of Montana
- Congregation Beth Shalom, Bozeman
- Congregation Aitz Chaim, Great Falls
- The Jewish Community of Helena
- Congregation B’nei Israel, Butte
- Congregation Har Shalom, Missoula
- Congregation Bet Harim, Kalispell
- Synagogue of the Northern Rockies, Whitefish
At 11:30 a.m., we will meet to setup tables, tablecloths, Menorot, signs, and any info you bring about your community. Each community should bring their own Menorah and candles. MAJCO will provide extra candles and Menorot if needed, small signs for each community, and a program that includes contact information for each community. Communities are welcome to bring Chanukah foods to share.
MAJCO President, Josh Burnim, will welcome the crowd and introduce the Lt. Governor and the Rabbis. Rabbis Barbara Block, Chaim Bruk and Ed Stafman will speak on Chanukah. (Rabbi Allen Secher is not able to attend.) Lt. Governor Bohlinger will address the crowd. Then, we will all light our Menorot together and sing the blessings and Maoz Tzur. After the ceremony, we will share Sufganiyot and other Chanukah treats. The ceremony should only take 30 minutes, but we encourage all to spend some time before and afterwards with each other.
At 1:00 p.m., MAJCO Officers and Delegates will meet upstairs for a business meeting. All are welcome to attend.
I hope many of you, and at least one representative from each MAJCO community, will make the trip to Helena to share in this statewide Jewish event, building ties with Jews from across the state. Please share this email with other members of your Congregations and Communities.
Shalom,
Josh Burnim
MAJCO President
MARK YOUR CALENDARS!
EDITOR’S NOTE: Please note the change in date, time, and venue for the annual community Chanukah party.
Please mark your calendars for these upcoming events.
- CHANUKAH: The first bulb of the Diane Kaplan Memorial Chanukiah will be lit on Saturday, 12/08/2012, at 5:30 P.M. at The Civic Center, as will each remaining bulb on all successive nights.
The annual community Chanukah party will be held at the YWCA, 220 2nd Avenue North, on Sunday afternoon, 12/09/2012, at 2:30 P.M. We will adjourn at 5:00 P.M. or so and shift the party to the Civic Center to light the Channukiah. Please bring something yummy and milchig (dairy) to share, and a healthy hankering for latkes.
- PURIM: Sunday, February 24, 2013. Plans, if any, yet to be announced.
- PASSOVER SEDER: Tuesday, March 26, second night of Passover, at Clark and Lewie’s.
- STUDENT RABBI Miriam Farber returns to Great falls April 19-21; May 10-12.
GEORGE WASHINGTON’S HANUKKAH
EDITOR’S NOTE: I received the following story from a congregant quite awhile back, and it intrigued me. So I Googled George Washington’s Chanukah and came up with quite a bit of information from Wikipedia — not just about this story, which has become part of American lore, but about how the Presidency and the White House have increasingly recognized Chanukah over the years. Although I know not everything you read in Wikipedia is true, the article I read seemed well sourced and at any rate was interesting to me. I encourage you to search it out yourself in the hopes that you might also find it interesting.
Meanwhile, here is the story that originally sparked my curiosity.
Posted on a blog by Rabbi Susan Grossman Monday December 10, 2007
For centuries, the lights of the Hanukkah menorah have inspired hope and courage. They may have also been responsible for inspiring then-General George Washington to forge on when everything looked bleak when his cold and hungry Continental Army camped at Valley Forge in the winter of 1777/8.
The story is told that Washington was walking among his troops when he saw one soldier sitting apart from the others, huddled over what looked like two tiny flames. Washington approached the soldier and asked him what he was doing. The soldier explained that he was a Jew and he had lit the candles to celebrate Hanukkah, the festival commemorating the miraculous victory of his people so many centuries ago over the tyranny of a much better equipped and more powerful enemy who had sought to deny them their freedom. The soldier then expressed his confidence that just as, with the help of God, the Jews of ancient times were ultimately victorious, so too would they be victorious in their just cause for freedom. Washington thanked the soldier and walked back to where the rest of the troops were camped, warmed by the inspiration of those little flames and the knowledge that miracles are possible.
Different names have been suggested for the mysterious soldier, Jeremiah Greenman, Capt Isaac Levy, or Private Asher Pollock of the Second Rhode Island Battalion, all of whom were at Valley Forge. Stephen Krensky, in his lovely children’s book, “Hanukkah at Valley Forge,” traces the story back to a 1778 meeting Washington had at the home of Michael Hart, a Jewish merchant in Easton, Pa., which Hart’s daughter recorded in her diary, when Washington described his meeting with the Jewish soldier.
For me, what is most interesting is that while Hanukkah falls at different times during the year, in 1777, the first night of Hanukkah fell on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve.
Washington’s Continental Army arrived at Valley Forge just five days earlier, on Dec. 19. His choice of a site was sharply criticized. The troops were struggling to build enough huts before the men, barefoot and starving, died of exposure. Mutiny was in the air. One can only imagine what was going through General Washington’s mind as he walked among the troops that night of Christmas Eve.
While some might question the veracity of the story, because the details of the Jewish soldier’s identity may be lost in time, here are its “truths: ” Like generations of Jews before him, that soldier served as a “light unto the nations” (Isaiah 42:6), bringing inspiration and courage to a nation in its birth pangs. And he did so in a perfectly American way, a way in which a miracle did result, the miracle by which the light from one religion helps give comfort and courage to another.
It is just such religious tolerance and cooperation that the world needs so desperately today.
JFK
A Rabbi recounted this story:
With all the instant messaging and texting lingo going around – with abbreviations like “LOL” and “OMG” and “BTW”, – I asked a young lady named Kaila if she would be going to shul this Shabbat, and she replied to me “JFK.”
“JFK? What does that mean?”, I asked.
Kaila answered politely, “Just for Kiddush.
_____
Whether you come “JFK” or for some other reason, please come tonight for Shabbat services at 7:30 P.M. at The Bethel. Don’t forget the Torah study at 10:00 A.M. tomorrow morning and the milchig (dairy) potluck/adult discussion at 5:30 P.M. tomorrow evening.
Shabbat Shalom,
Joy Breslauer, editor@aitzchaim.com

