Become a Member
Food

My sweet gourd

Freshly harvested fruits and vegetables make Succot a joyous festival

October 10, 2008 09:58

By

Ruth Joseph

3 min read

Freshly harvested fruits and vegetables make Succot a joyous festival


Succah is a joyous occasion, described in Jewish literature as z'man simchateinu - the Season of Our Rejoicing. But it is also the Harvest festival. What better time to visit a local farmers' market and be inspired by locally grown cauliflower (wonderful steamed and layered with kosher mozzarella); fresh beetroot for a haimishe borscht; parsnips ready for roasting with a little grated fresh ginger and honey; alongside swedes, celeriac and an array of potatoes.

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173pqogyx8g0c9o7skl/Pumpkins_0.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3Dc86bfa8?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6Then there are apples, pears and plums - all British - delicious to eat, raw or cooked. Whether you build a succah or not, you can create luscious dishes to enjoy at your Yomtov table.

Round pumpkins are an important motif in Judaism - their shape symbolises a good life , their golden colour reminiscent of coins. They are also the base of a colourful soup served in a shell that doubles up as a dramatic container.

For 6-8 portions and second helpings, select a very large pumpkin that is heavy for its size. Cut a lid off the top and save. Scoop out the flesh; check that a large Pyrex bowl will fit in the cavity. Sweat two large peeled and roughly chopped onions with a dessertspoon of olive oil. When the onions are soft, add 500g, 1lb 2oz of peeled chopped carrots and 500g, 1lb 2oz cleaned potatoes cut into rough chunks, and cook until tender, approx 25 minutes adding the pumpkin flesh for the last 10 minutes, with 2.4 litres, 4 pints stock - vegetable or chicken.

To get more from Life, click here to sign up for our free Life newsletter.