I finally wrangled an invitation to a Seder. For years I’ve
only heard about the ceremony and the food, and finally this year I got to
experience both. I also had the opportunity to help cook this one, so I was
really excited.
Our hostess, Haven Bourque, decided on a Persian menu. There were several reasons for this: One was a recent musical outing, that inspired us to want to eat Persian food, one was an article in the New York Times, and one was a vegetarian on the guest list, and our own veggie leanings.
Here’s the menu:
First Course:
Seder plate—in the Persian tradition green onions are on the table for the guests to beat one another with. Yep, that’s right. It symbolizes the sting of the whips of the Egyptian slaveholders. Rather fun and they do sting!
The charoset was wonderful. Lots of delicious dried fruits, cardamom, and pistachios.
Second Course:
Beet soup—very simple vegetarian version made with beets and leeks and balanced with champagne vinegar and then garnished with lebne and cilantro.
Third Course:
Smoked salmon
Asparagus roasted in a blazing hot oven with olive oil and salt
Deviled Eggs
Mainish Course:
Two types of grape leaves—one with lamb and rice and one with rice and dried fruit from the recipe in the New York Times above
Roasted/braised baby artichokes: Quartered and roasted with salt, olive oil, thyme sprigs, and sliced lemons until brown and then oven-braised in white wine.
Dessert:
Flourless chocolate cake and macaroons from La Farine and illegal for Passover baklava from Zand’s. Best baklava I’ve ever had. I finally understand why people eat baklava.
The ceremony was great. It was a secular humanist Passover and we sung songs of social justice while drinking plenty of wine.
Hope I get invited back next year!
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