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Food

Putting our own twist on the pretzel

They may have been first baked by a monk, but pretzels are loved by Jews too

December 29, 2010 14:30
Pretzel sellers in New York made the chewy baked snack almost as popular as the bagel with Jews

By

Ruth Joseph

3 min read

When I was a child, my father's mother - a Holocaust survivor - used to tell me stories about the delicious pretzels she ate when she was a child growing up in a small village on Germany's eastern border. She used to watch the local baker prepare the tender, chewy bites and would describe how he gently dipped the dough in a bath of lye - a form of caustic soda - and afterwards baked it with a sprinkling of crushed rock salt and sesame seeds.

Then I began to read about pretzels and discovered that what I thought was an intrinsically Jewish bread, began as a gift to diligent Catholic children who learned their prayers. I was fascinated.

The story begins with an Italian monk sometime between the 5th and 7th centuries who was playing with left-over bread dough and twisted pencil-size rolls into an elaborate shape meant to represent arms folded in prayer.

His fellow monks were so delighted that they began to use the breads as pretiola, literally "little rewards". Soon they were being used as an integral part of church life. A page from the prayer book of the 16th-century French duchess, Catherine of Cleves, illustrates St Bartholomew circled by pretzels which by now had been adopted as a symbol for good luck, prosperity, and perfect spiritual life.

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