This Hanukkah, Try Latkes With a Dairy Twist | Jewish Women's Archive (2024)

In the weeks before Hanukkah last year, I began to see stories circulating about “cheese latkes.” The rumor was that, before potatoes, latkes were cooked with cheese. This might seem a bit scandalous to your average modern Jew—potato latkes are, for me at least, an essential part of the holiday season. But as a lover of all things cheese-related, I decided to investigate. What I’ve found is a story about migration, biblical feminism, and colonialism, all of which have shaped how we approach the Festival of Lights today.

If you’ve celebrated Hanukkah before, you likely know that one way we observe the holiday is by eating foods fried in oil— potato latkes andsufganiyot (jelly doughnuts) are most popular—to commemorate the story of the Maccabees, and the temple oil that lasted eight days and nights when it should only have lasted one. A lesser-known Hanukkah custom is to eat dairy, to celebrate the heroism of Judith, slayer of the general Holofernes. Although Judith’s defeat of Holofernes took place centuries before the Maccabees defeated the Romans, Jews in the medieval period began to associate Judith’s bravery with the miracle of Hanukkah.

The first official source to mention Judith in association with Hanukkah is Kol Bo, a collection of legal codes that dates to the thirteenth or fourteenth century. Kol Bo states that women, alongside men, are obligated to light Hanukkah candles, because when our enemies came to destroy us, “a great miracle occurred through a woman.” The text says that “[Judith] fed [Holofernes] a dish of cheese to make him thirsty, so that he would drink a great deal and become drunk and recline and fall asleep. And it happened just that way, and once he was asleep, she took his sword and cut off his head. She brought his head to Jerusalem, and when the armies saw that their leader had been killed, they fled. For this reason, we have the custom of eating a cheese dish on [Hanukkah].”

Cheese latkes also appear in fourteenth-century records from southern France/ northern Spain. The cheese pancakes became particularly popular in Italy in the sixteenth century, after many Spanish Jews had migrated from Sicily to northern cities like Vienna and Rome.

But while there are clear associations between Hanukkah and dairy foods, it’s a bit of a stretch to claim that cheese latkes were the predecessors of potato latkes. Frying cheese latkes in oil would have been rather easy in late medieval/early modern Mediterranean cities, where oil was easy to come by. In northern and eastern European countries, however (where most Jews had migrated to during the medieval period, following a series of expulsions), getting a hold of oil was much more difficult and expensive. A more common way to cook food was with schmaltz, a fat produced from excess chicken tissue. Since schmaltz isa meat byproduct, it can't be used to cook with dairy, according to the laws of kashrut. Eastern European dishes that were eaten around Hanukkah to honor Judith may have included dairy kugel or blinis, a popular eastern European dish of pancakes stuffed with sweet cheese. When cooking with schmaltz, fried buckwheat pancakes may have been a non-dairy substitute for cheese latkes—at least until the arrival of the potato.

At the same time that Spain was expelling Jews, Spanish colonists were beginning their first endeavors into the Americas. These invasions were devastating to the local indigenous populations—and are the reason we are familiar with many popular foods today. While the Spanish invaders didn’t stay long for their first few trips into South America, they quickly discovered types of food that only grew on the American continents—namely tomatoes, corn, and potatoes.

The potato took a while to spread throughout Europe. The popularity of the root vegetable grew slowly in Spain, but ultimately found its place in Ireland in the late sixteenth century. Over the next several hundred years, the potato migrated eastwards, eventually reaching the Pale of Settlement in the eighteenth century. Potatoes quickly became popular because they were so cheap and easy to grow. The vegetable also paired well with schmaltz. By the nineteenth century, potato latkes were well established in shtetl culture.

While potato latkes have become one of the most popular foods for celebrating the Hanukkah miracle, dairy remains central within some traditions. For Ashkenazi Jews, kugel and blinis are very popular at Hanukkah time. In Italy, ricotta pancakes calledcassola are still considered a Hanukkah delicacy. And Jews of Indian descent eat gulab jamun, a sweet made from a milk-based dough that is rolled into balls, fried in oil, and soaked in a sugary syrup.

Maybe you’d like to add a dairy dish to your usual holiday meal this season and take time to honor Judith’s miracle, in addition to the Maccabees’. There are many great recipes out there to choose from, but I decided to see if I could create my own (a great excuse to indulge in many nights of cheese pancakes). Here’s what I’ve come up with:

Cheese Latkes

Makes 12-16 pancakes

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup farmer’s cheese (use ricotta for a creamier texture)
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tbsp honey
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ¼ tsp baking powder
  • ¼ cup wheat flour (all-purpose is fine, but you might need an extra tbsp)
  • Oil for frying
  • Applesauce/honey for serving

Directions:

  1. Whisk together the cheese and eggs. Add in the honey.
  2. Mix together the salt, baking powder, and flour. Fold the flour mixture into the wet ingredients
  3. Heat a generous amount of oil in a pan. Use a spoon to scoop the pancake mixture into the pan. Cook on low heat for about 4-5 minutes each side. The pancake should bubble up a little bit like a regular pancake.
  4. Serve with applesauce or honey (or a sweet fruit of your choice)

Happy Hanukkah!

This Hanukkah, Try Latkes With a Dairy Twist | Jewish Women's Archive (2024)

FAQs

What is the significance of the latkes in Hanukkah? ›

These potato pancakes (called latkes) are meant to symbolize the miracle of Hanukkah, when the oil of the menorah in the ransacked Second Temple of Jerusalem was able to stay aflame for eight days even though there was only enough oil for one day. The symbolism comes in the form of the oil in which latkes are fried.

Why do Jews eat dairy on Hanukkah? ›

"By the 14th century, there's quite a strong tradition that people eat cheese on Hanukkah and it's associated with Judith giving cheese to the enemy to make him drunk," Weingarten says.

Are latkes Polish or Jewish? ›

Latkes (לאַטקע, sometimes spelled latka) are potato pancakes that Ashkenazi Jews have prepared as part of the Hanukkah festival since the mid-1800s, when a series of crop failures in Poland and Ukraine led to mass planting of potatoes, which were easy and cheap to grow.

Why do Jews eat potato latkes? ›

As the potato became popular in eastern Europe, it was quickly adopted to the point that today, latke is almost synonymous with potatoes. The latke is traditionally prepared during the Hanukkah holiday to commemorate the miracle of the oil in the Jewish Temple in Jerusalem lasting eight days.

What is the most important tradition in Hanukkah? ›

The most important of all Hanukkah traditions is the lighting of the menorah each evening.

Why can't Jews eat chicken with dairy? ›

Prohibition on mixing dairy products with meat

Others associate it with the general prohibition on certain mixtures set out in the Torah, such as that of coupling animals from different species. Yet others see it as symbolic: the refusal to mix life (milk) and death (meat).

Can Jews eat eggs with dairy? ›

Meat (the flesh of birds and mammals) cannot be eaten with dairy. Fish, eggs, fruits, vegetables and grains can be eaten with either meat or dairy. (According to some views, fish may not be eaten with meat).

What foods Cannot be eaten during Hanukkah? ›

"Among other rules, eating certain animals, primarily pigs and shellfish, is forbidden; meat must be ritually and humanely slaughtered; and dairy and meat aren't to be eaten at the same meal." Fish and plant foods are "neutral" (parve) and can be eaten with either meat or dairy.

What does latke mean in Yiddish? ›

Officially, though, a latke is simply a pancake—the word itself comes, via Yiddish, from a Russian word meaning "little pancake." Latkes can in fact be made from almost any vegetable, bean, cheese, or grain. Definitions of latke. noun. a pancake made of grated potato and egg with a little flour.

What's the difference between potato pancakes and latkes? ›

Potato pancakes have a creamy, almost mashed-potato-like center, with a thin, golden, crisp exterior. Latkes, on the other hand, should have a deeply browned crust, with wispy, lacy edges. Latkes also aren't hash browns.

Are hash browns and latkes the same? ›

No, hash browns and latkes are not the same thing. Although they contain similar ingredients like shredded potatoes and they are cooked in a frying pan, they are not the same. Hash browns are shredded potatoes and onions that are scattered in a pan and pan fried.

Are latkes unhealthy? ›

Latkes, the crispy fried potato pancakes served on Hanukkah (usually with sour cream or applesauce) are not exactly easy on the waistline. Eating them for the eight days of the holiday might not be the best idea. Instead, get creative with your and cook them in a healthier way.

Why jelly donuts on Hanukkah? ›

These deep-fried delicacies have become popular in Israel as a way to symbolize the miracle of the oil lamps that burned one day's supply of oil for eight days in the ancient Holy Temple in Jerusalem.

Do Jews eat yams? ›

Tzimmes, a side dish composed traditionally of sweetened carrots or yams, are served to symbolize prosperity, because of the double meaning of Yiddish word meren, which represents "to multiply" and "carrot". Additional symbolic foods include: Teiglach, knotted pastries boiled in a honeyed syrup (for Ashkenazi Jews).

What is the significance of jelly donuts on Hanukkah? ›

These deep-fried delicacies have become popular in Israel as a way to symbolize the miracle of the oil lamps that burned one day's supply of oil for eight days in the ancient Holy Temple in Jerusalem.

What are some interesting facts about latkes? ›

We all know latkes are delicious, but there are many other important facts you should know!
  • We Eat Them Because They're Oily. ...
  • Latke is Yiddish for “Pancake” ...
  • In Hebrew They're Called Levivot. ...
  • Maimonides' Father Talks About Fried Hanukkah Foods. ...
  • Potatoes Are Most Popular. ...
  • Cheese Dishes Are More Traditional.

What does the Hanukkah menorah symbolize? ›

The seven lamps allude to the branches of human knowledge, represented by the six lamps inclined inwards towards, and symbolically guided by, the light of God represented by the central lamp. The menorah also symbolizes the creation in seven days, with the center light representing the Sabbath.

What is the symbolism of the 8 days of Hanukkah? ›

Although the Jewish people only had enough oil to keep the flame burning for a single day, miraculously, the flames lasted for eight nights. During this time, they were able to find other oil supplies, and were inspired to dedicate an eight-day festival in celebration of this holy miracle.

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