Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 Sharon, Matzoh is fat free and salt free, so it is not horrible, just watch your other carbs. Anything PREPARED with matzoh or matzoh meal however will have added fat and salt, like matzoh ball soup (I make the best they say!), and farfel (YUMMMM, my favorite), and matzoh stuffing (I usually just stuff the bird with farfel!) if you have turkey, etc... Instead, a great appetizer is gefilte fish, high protien, low carb, low sugar, low cholesterol. I could live off it. Chopped liver is great if you don't have to worry about cholesterol. Pure protien! But don't put it on matzah crackers or those Tam Tams! Did you know Tam Tams, although they look like Matzoh crackers, have fat and stuff that Matzoh crackers don't have? And don't forget about charosis (spelling?), you know, the stuff you put on the matzoh during the ceremony to resemble the mortor? Well that is low carb too, walnuts and apples, (use a little Musslemans Lite applesause to keep the sugar down) just watch how much wine you add, I use only enough for flavor. If you taste the alchohol then you used too much. Actually serve a hard boiled egg to everyone, instead of slicing up an egg or two for that ceremonial dipping in the salt water. Actually eat the parsley sprig instead of just sucking the salt water off it. ) Or better still serve celery sticks that have a little leaf left on it and eat the stalk all the way up to the leaf! By the time dinnertime comes, you will be semi-full and able to leave those matzoh prepared dishes alone, hopefully. (Geez, I gotta at least have a tablespoon of the farfel though!!) I think we will make Turkey again this year since it is the healthiest meat. You can lay some vegtables in the cavity to roast instead of stuffing the bird. (And miss another opportunity for farfel?!) Carrots and celery are great for that and get good flavors from the drippings. Make mashed sweet potatoes instead of mashed white potatoes. And during the week, just substitue bread for matzoh only on sandwiches, but don't eat many sandwiches. I eat alot of gefilte fish for lunch any way, and tuna salad, egg salad, although now I have to watch my cholesterol so I guess egg salad is out. I am going to miss that. Don't bother with the matzoh brei (whew gonna miss that too. Even made with egg beaters, it's a lot of carbs) or any other dish with matzoh in it. Unless you need to pack a sandwich, pretend the matzoh doesn't exisit. (And I do love it plain with butter, darn). Yes, it is going to be hard. But we can make it if we help each other. I would love to hear some more ideas from other jewish diabetics. Keep in touch. Good luck! Sharon Bolton wrote: > Ok, we obviously have some nutritionally informed Jews here. Help! What > in heck do we do during Pesach (Passover) now? I'm just thinking > about the > seder and wondering what I will be able to eat, other than the food > items I > personally bring to it. (For those not in-the-know, during Pesach > observant Jews don't eat any food that is made from 5 basic grains, and > some Jews even leave out rice and beans, anything that might possibly > have > been ground into flour and used as such in Europe. We substitute matzo > meal instead -- white flour, of course.) > > Sharon > > > > > Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/ > > To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to: > diabetes-unsubscribe > Hope you come back soon! > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 Or, even better, mashed turnips. BTW, if you are going to be serving the mashed potatoes (or whatever) with meat, what do you use in place of the sour cream? (It is my understanding that mixing milk and meat is a big no-no for observant Jews.) Re: Diabetes, Jewish food & Pesach Make mashed sweet potatoes instead of mashed white potatoes. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 Would nut flours (almond, chestnut, hazelnut, etc.) be considered kosher-for-Passover? Diabetes, Jewish food & Pesach Ok, we obviously have some nutritionally informed Jews here. Help! What in heck do we do during Pesach (Passover) now? I'm just thinking about the seder and wondering what I will be able to eat, other than the food items I personally bring to it. (For those not in-the-know, during Pesach observant Jews don't eat any food that is made from 5 basic grains, and some Jews even leave out rice and beans, anything that might possibly have been ground into flour and used as such in Europe. We substitute matzo meal instead -- white flour, of course.) Sharon Diabetes homepage: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/diabetes/ To unsubscribe to this group, send an email to: diabetes-unsubscribe Hope you come back soon! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 I, too have the same issues with foods during passover. Coming from an Orthodox background (now I'm conservative), when I was a kid, we used to live off Matzoh, and all the delicious dishes that can be prepared with it. Now that I have my own family, we usually eat protien, veggies and fruit for dinner. This passover will be no different, except I'm adding a couple of extra things: I'm making, chicken soup (without Matzoh balls), gefilte fish with awesome horseradish, turkey, asparagus, another veggie perhaps califlower, mashed sweet potatoes, and strawberries for desert. My hubby, son and guests can open a box of parve (neither meat nor dairy) candy. I mash my sweet potatoes and add some homemade apple butter, which consists of apples and cinnamon for extra flavor without adding fat. What I have found is that usually by dinnertime, it's late, and I don't eat late at night, so my portion size is way down. I'm also serving, so I'm usually bouncing around during the meal. Recently, I've been struggling to keep my numbers down, and haven't been successul. I've been stressed to the max, as I'm losing my job in 3 months, and I have to find another. Hopefully something will give. I've been seeing my Dr. regularly, and we just got a dog that I've been taking for walks. Be well. b Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 At 10:14 AM 3/19/2004 -0500, you wrote: >Or, even better, mashed turnips. > >BTW, if you are going to be serving the mashed potatoes (or whatever) >with meat, what do you use in place of the sour cream? (It is my >understanding that mixing milk and meat is a big no-no for observant >Jews.) Jewish mashed potatos are aweful, LOL! I was raised on mashed potatos made with whole milk and butter. Jews tend to use broth and (shudder) non-dairy margarine. Yuck! I won't miss them, at least that's one positive. 8-) Sharon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 At 10:15 AM 3/19/2004 -0500, you wrote: >Would nut flours (almond, chestnut, hazelnut, etc.) be considered >kosher-for-Passover? Depends on where your part of the tribe is from. The Sephardic Jews, generally from the temperate mediterranian areas, are more liberal in what can be eaten. The reason is that living in temperate areas, they had wider options for foods. Ashkenazic Jews, from Eastern Europe, had a more limited diet. As a result, they often had to do things like grind beans or rice to make flour. So Jews with a European ancestry tend to be extremely restricted during Passover and not eat anything which could conceiveably have been made into flour by their poor ancestors. So one rabbi might say " kosher " , another would say " not " . Sharon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2004 Report Share Posted March 19, 2004 Do you peel the apples before you cut them up? If you leave the peel in, that will increase the fiber and lower the net carbs. Re: Diabetes, Jewish food & Pesach Miles wrote: Sharon, And don't forget about charosis (spelling?), you know, the stuff you put on the matzoh during the ceremony to resemble the mortor? Well that is low carb too, walnuts and apples, (use a little Musslemans Lite applesause to keep the sugar down) just watch how much wine you add, I use only enough for flavor. If you taste the alchohol then you used too much. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 At 04:37 PM 3/22/2004 -0800, you wrote: >This is a hard on... Now what WERE you thinking? ROTFLOL! Sharon Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 I second that! LOL It is just jewish french toast. We gotta stop talking about all these goodies, my mouth is watering. Uh Oh time for a Sugar Free Jello. Again! ) Sharon Bolton wrote: > At 04:37 PM 3/22/2004 -0800, you wrote: > >This is a hard on... > > Now what WERE you thinking? ROTFLOL! > > Sharon > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2004 Report Share Posted March 24, 2004 For those who'll be eating matzah for passover: My dietitian told me a standard matzah is about 30 grams of carbs, or 2 carb exchanges. So half a matzah is 1 carb exchange. Not sure about shmura matzah though (the really large, round, handmade matzas). blithe Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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