A simple guide to making delicious latkes this Hanukkah
Why isn’t the rest of America as crazy about latkes as we are about bagels?
After all, Hanukkah, which started at sundown Tuesday and continues until next Wednesday, is the holiday when you have permission to eat fried food. You’d think this would be the biggest event in the country by now.
Despite their exotic-sounding name – and we’ll get to that later – latkes are just grated potatoes or vegetables, fried and topped with tasty things like sour cream, applesauce, maybe even smoked salmon. What’s not to love?
My own life has included plenty of kosher love. I’m not Jewish, but my family moved from Eastern North Carolina to South Florida in 1969. I was 10, and I was suddenly surrounded by a culture more exotic than anything I had known back in Wilson.
When my seventh-grade chorus teacher, Mrs. Rausch, lifted her arms to lead us in “Hava Nagila,” you couldn’t miss the numbers tattooed on her arm. When I encountered the words “lox” and “bagel” at a deli in Miami Beach, I discovered one of the loves of my culinary life.
Despite that, the making of a proper latke had escaped me. How do you keep the potatoes from turning dark before you can fry them? Does it have to be potato? And what’s with the applesauce?
I needed an ubermensch. So I called Amy Rogers, the contributing editor of WFAE’s food blog, WFAEats.org, and the author of “Hungry For Home,” a collection of recipes and essays on the meaning of food.
Last week, she trekked to my house bearing a small menorah, her favorite Fiestaware Hanukkah plate and a lot of thought about latkes.
“I can’t stress enough that this is not an elegant dish,” she insisted. “It’s wandering food from a wandering people.”
Keep it simple
“How do you learn to cook Jewish?” Rogers shrugged. “You learn to cook what your people cook and you don’t think it’s anything unusual.”
For Rogers, that was a childhood in New York, Detroit and Miami, taught by her elegant mother, a former model, and two grandmothers who each had “one foot in the Old Country and one in the new.”
While she had relatives who kept kosher, her own family followed Reform Judaism, “which means you get to observe all the holidays. You follow the spirit of the law, not the letter of the law.”
Kosher rules prohibit mixing meat and dairy, she said, and that’s what’s great about latkes.
“Eggs are parve – neither meat nor dairy,” she said. So the eggs you use to bind the potatoes don’t keep you from having a lot of leeway in what you eat on or with your latkes. Sour cream and applesauce, both easy to get in Eastern Europe, are traditional, although you can get fancy with smoked salmon or Rogers’ personal favorite, a bit of fresh cranberry sauce.
Rogers stripped off her rings and bracelets, rolled up her sleeves and got to work, shredding peeled white potatoes on the big holes of a box grater and tossing them onto a cotton dish towel. Each taking a side, we rolled up the towel and twisted it as tight as we could, squeezing out an astonishing amount of starchy liquid.
“I’ve probably made them a hundred times in my life,” Rogers said, tossing in egg, milk and a little matzo meal. “The goal is to make them more delicious than beautiful. Use what you have, don’t measure.”
Latke-making is all about tradition, she said. They were made by Eastern Europeans who didn’t have much. So yes, she could use a food processor to shred the potatoes. But it’s about the tradition, and tradition says to grate the potatoes.
She also doesn’t like to use a spoon to drop the batter in the oil. She used her hands to gather about 1/4 to 1/3 cup of the grated potato batter, pat it into a little cake about as wide as her palm, and ease each patty into hot oil in my cast-iron skillet.
Making latkes naturally turns into a party. Since the potatoes turn brown quickly, you have to work fast. And while you can keep latkes hot in the oven, they’re best right out of the oil, when they’re hot and crisp. So people gather around.
In her opinion, Rogers said, “Latkes aren’t do-ahead any more than biscuits are do-ahead.”
History of Hanukkah
There’s nothing wrong with getting fancy or staying plain with latkes. The tradition is the oil, not what you put in it.
The story is simple: In 168 B.C., a Syrian/Greek king named Antiochus captured Jerusalem and plundered the temple. A group of resisters calling themselves the Maccabees vowed to resist, and after three years, they retook the city.
But when they reconsecrated the temple, there was only enough oil to burn the sacred lamp for a day, not the eight days it took to press fresh oil. The lamp burned for eight days anyway. A miracle was declared, and Hanukkah was born.
Different foods became traditional anywhere Jews lived, from puffy doughnuts to chicken. In Eastern Europe, home of the Ashkenazi Jews, potatoes were what they had in winter, so they made potato cakes.
The word latke is Yiddish, but where it came from is debated. Many sources suggest it came from a Ukrainian word, oladka, which came from a Greek word, eladion, “little oily thing.” That came from elai, or olive, because oil came from olives.
Most immigrant Jews were poor, Rogers says, so they improvised.
“You might have one radish for color, so you added that. Or if you wanted to grate some beets, you could do that. You used what you had.”
All about the ritual
After making potato latkes and “leftover” latkes from mashed potatoes, we agreed that our favorites were sweet potato latkes. Flavored with chopped bits of candied ginger, cumin, nutmeg and cinnamon and topped with a bit of fresh cranberry relish, they were crisp and vivid with flavor.
Tossing hot latkes from hand to hand, we contemplated the delight we both take in any food tradition.
“Like anything else in Jewish cooking, it’s all about the rituals,” said Rogers.
“Nobody recorded the culinary history of people who were oppressed, people who were on the run, people who were reviled, feared or targeted for extermination, not to put too fine a point on it.
“Those are the kinds of stories that I think are the most important ones to tell.”
This story was originally published December 16, 2014 at 1:30 PM with the headline "A simple guide to making delicious latkes this Hanukkah."