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Food

Food is our connection to our Mexican Jewish past

A colourful cookbook fusing Eastern European and South American traditions was inspired by hand-written recipes from generations past

July 6, 2025 09:29
Ilan Stavans and Margaret Boyle 2023. Photo by I. Rabichinskey.jpg
Mexican mavens: Ilan Stavans and Margaret Boyle were inspired by their shared culinary heritage
2 min read

At the age of 80, Ofelia Slomianski, while she still had her memory — completed a written recipe book (in Yiddish and in Mexican) of hers and her mother’s recipes. Bobe Miriam (as her family called her) then passed her culinary collection to her daughter who added her own comments and stories.

It fell into the hands of grandson, Ilan Stavans: “And because she was losing her memory — she was suffering from Alzheimer's — it was very meaningful to me to be receiving such a document and I cherished it.”

Similarly, Margaret Boyle, who also had Mexican heritage, had received a similar recipe-filled notebook passed down the generations from her great-grandmother Malka Poplawski (aka Baba Malka). While Baba Malka was still cooking her family took turns observing and documenting her work in her Mexico City kitchen. It was “a link to the Old World” says Boyle.

Stavans and Boyle are both US based academics — he a Professor of the Humanities, Latin American and Latino culture at Amherst College (Massachusetts) and she, director of Latin American, Caribbean and Latino studies at Bowdoin College (Maine).