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Braided

A Journey of a Thousand Challahs

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
What if you could bake bread once a week, every week? What if the smell of fresh bread could turn your house into a home? And what if the act of making the bread―mixing and kneading, watching and waiting―could heal your heartache and your emptiness, your sense of being overwhelmed? It can. This is the surprise that physician-mother Beth Ricanati learned when she started baking challah: that simply stopping and baking bread was the best medicine she could prescribe in a fast-paced world.
2018 National Jewish Book Award Finalist
2018 Foreword INDIES Winner
2019 Readers' Favorite Awards Finalist
2019 Wilbur Award, Nonfiction Winner
2020 Eric Hoffer Award, First Horizon Award Finalist
2020 Eric Hoffer Award, 1st runner up in Nonfiction
2020 Eric Hoffer Award, Grand Prize Shortlist Finalist
2020 Next Generation Indie Book Awards Finalist
2020 Next Generation Indie Book Awards Winner

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    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2018
      Ricanati's memoir with recipes is a well-written investigation into her maturation as a doctor, her growth as a wife and mother, and the increasing wisdom she gained while pondering Jewish rites and rituals. Every Friday for 10 years, Los Angeles-based Ricanati has been baking challah, a traditional Jewish braided bread made for Friday night Sabbath dinner, with all the accompanying habits and prayers. There's no requirement to be Jewish to bake challah, and really any bread-making or other type of intricate cookery could be substituted in fulfilling Ricanati's recommendation that taking a break from life to create something nourishing is a great way to reconnect with one's self, spiritually and mentally, as it was for her. On the surface, it's all about the recipe and 14 steps to fashioning the final product. Yet along the way, there's plenty of advice about the right ingredients to use, questions regarding salt and eggs and health, useful baking tools, and the like. Plus, Ricanati's woven-in stories about her childhood, residency, and medical practice are authentic and touching meanders that lead to her sharing what she's learned and other important life lessons. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2018
      An atypical memoir about how one woman learned spiritual lessons through baking bread.Nearly every Friday for the past decade, debut author Ricanati, a Los Angeles-area doctor specializing in women's health, has baked challah bread. When she started, she was stressed and overworked, and she discovered that this baking process both rooted her in her Jewish faith and encouraged her to slow down and focus on the depth of her experience: "I could reconnect with myself and with other women," she writes. "I could find some happiness in this mixed-up, fast-paced world. I could, in other words, be present." In a sort of whistle-stop tour through her past, she convincingly argues that, for her, "Food is medicine." Whether she was writing a cookbook for the blind, creating a guide to eating disorders for a local hospital, or taking a cooking class during a lonely summer in Paris, she says that she was always acting on her belief that healthy comfort food was a way to care for herself and others. What's more, challah "is the ultimate soul food for me," she writes, as it forms an essential part of the Sabbath ritual. The 11 steps of making challah, as she lays them out here, effectively function as a metaphorical course in professional and spiritual discipline. Ricanati draws intriguing symbolic connections between the bread-baking process, her faith in God, and her busy life as a physician. In both baking and medicine, she notes, "mise en place" (putting everything in its place) is essential, as being organized defuses anxiety. The magical moment when the yeast comes to life, she says, brings to mind the first birth she observed. Waiting for the dough to rise, she writes, teaches her that God is in control; judging how much flour to add encourages flexibility; knowing when the bread is done requires patience. The book is impressively thorough, giving advice on every baking element from oil (canola) to flour (King Arthur brand, all-purpose) and she offers informative sidebars on sugar and the gluten-free craze. "I knead for my needs," the author insists--and readers are likely to join her.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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