Kugel

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Kugel (Template:Langx Template:Lang, pronounced Template:IPA or Template:IPA) is a baked casserole, most commonly made from egg noodles (lokshen) or shredded potato. It is a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish dish, often served on Sabbath and Jewish holidays.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> American Jews also serve it for Thanksgiving dinner.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In Hungary it is known as "vargabéles" and served as a sweet dish.

Etymology

The name of the dish comes from the Middle High German Template:Lang meaning 'sphere, globe, ball'; thus the Yiddish name likely originated as a reference to the round, puffed-up shape of the original dishes (compare to German Template:Lang—a type of ring-shaped cake). However, nowadays kugel is often baked in square pans.

In Yiddish (and sometimes in English), noodle and potato kugel are called Template:Lang Template:Lang and Template:Lang Template:Lang, respectively. The name of the dish may also be spelled Template:Lang, reflecting the Galitzianer (Southeastern European) Yiddish pronunciation. <ref name="Spiel">Template:Cite book</ref>

History

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Yerushalmi or Jerusalem kugel

The first kugels were made from bread and flour and were savory rather than sweet. About 800 years ago, Jewish cooks in Germany replaced bread mixtures with lokshen noodles or farfel.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Eventually eggs were incorporated. The addition of cottage cheese and milk created a custard-like consistency common in today's dessert dishes. In Poland, Jewish homemakers added raisins, cinnamon and sweet curd cheese to noodle kugel recipes. In the late 19th century, Jerusalemites combined caramelized sugar and black pepper in a noodle kugel known as the Jerusalem kugel (Template:Langx), which is a commonly served at Shabbat kiddushes and is a popular side dish served with cholent during Shabbat lunch.

In Romania, this dish is called Template:Lang ("macaroni pudding") or Template:Lang. It is made with or without cheese, but almost always includes raisins.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In Transylvania, especially in the Hungarian-speaking regions, a very similar dish is called Template:Lang.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Savory kugel may be based on potatoes, matzah, cabbage, carrots, zucchini, spinach, or cheese.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Romani people call it pirogo. The Romani version is made with raisins, cream cheese, and butter.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Varieties

Jerusalem kugel

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File:PikiWiki Israel 44658 Cities in Israel.JPG
Yerushalmi Kugel packaged for sale at a market in Israel

Template:Transliteration, (Template:Lang 'Jerusalem kugel'), also known as Galilean kugel, is an Israeli Jewish kugel dish originating from the local Jewish community of Jerusalem in the 1700s.

Noodle kugel

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Noodle kugel (Template:Transliteration) is an Ashkenazi Jewish casserole, side dish and popular variety of kugel made with lokshen noodles and either a variety of dairy or pareve ingredients.

Potato kugel

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Potato kugel is a potato-based kugel of Ashkenazi Jewish origin, made with grated or pureed potatoes, onions, eggs, flour or matzo meal, oil, salt and pepper.

Vargabéles

A Hungarian sweet dish made with angel hair pasta, curd, eggs, raisin, and phyllo pastry.

Jewish festivals

Kugels are a mainstay of festive meals in Ashkenazi Jewish homes, particularly on the Jewish Sabbath and other Jewish holidays or at a tish. Some Hasidic Jews believe that eating kugel on the Jewish Sabbath brings special spiritual blessings, particularly if that kugel was served on the table of a Hasidic Rebbe.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

South African slang usage

Among South African Jews, the word kugel was used by the elder generation as a term for a young Jewish woman who forsook traditional Jewish dress values for those of the ostentatiously wealthy and became overly materialistic and overgroomed, mirroring how the kugel is a plain pudding garnished as a delicacy. The women thus described made light of the term, and it has since become an amusing rather than derogatory slang in South African English for a materialistic young woman.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Similar dishes

See also

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References

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