The 10 Most Popular Jewish Recipes of 2022 | The Nosher (2024)

2022 brought so many delicious, comforting recipes to The Nosher, from Bukharian plov to Sephardic spinach-and-cheese matzah pie to the perfect tuna salad. These dishes represent multiple Jewish traditions, but they share a common thread: They are simple, satisfying recipes that feed the soul and tell stories of the Jewish people.

Here are the top 10 recipes that you all — our Nosher audience — loved making this year, over and over again.

1. One-Bowl Passover Blueberry Snacking Cake

The 10 Most Popular Jewish Recipes of 2022 | The Nosher (1)

In 2022, “snacking cakes” were all the rage. What is a snacking cake, you ask? They are cakes not intended for a specific occasion, like a birthday, but merely for, well, snacking. Should we rename this a “noshing cake?” Either way, y’all really loved this Passover-friendly, gluten-free blueberry snacking cake from Sonya Sanford. Bonus point: It’s a one-bowl recipe, which means there is less clean up between you and that noshing cake.

2. Sephardic Matzah Spinach Pie

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Matzah pies, called minas, are a classic Sephardic Passover dish, traditionally served for brunch or lunch with slow-cooked, hard-boiled eggs calledhuevos haminados. This hearty, flavorful mina from Susan Barocas was one of your favorite recipes this year, and it’s no surprise why: layers of matzah, spinach, artichokes, fresh herbs and a ton of cheese make this dish seriously satisfying (and not overly complicated to make).

3. The Best Classic Jewish Tuna Salad

The 10 Most Popular Jewish Recipes of 2022 | The Nosher (3)

It’s undeniable: American Jews love tuna salad. But is tuna salad actually a Jewish food? Enjoy Sonya Sanford’s brief history on the dish, and her perfect-every-time recipe made with celery, relish, fresh dill and lemon juice.

4. One-Pot Bukharian Chicken and Rice

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Who doesn’t love a good one-pot wonder, especially when it’s aclassic Bukharian plov(meat and rice pilaf)? If you haven’t added this simple yet comforting dish to your dinner rotation, now is the time. It was one of your favorite recipes in 2021, and it was a big hit again this year, too!

5. Old-Fashioned KashaVarnishkes

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In “Honey Cake & Latkes: Recipes from the Old World by the Auschwitz-Birkenau Survivors,” Tova Friedman writes: “My late husband’s favorite food was tzimmes, but he also shared his family’s recipe for kasha varnishkes. So from the time I had my own family and had children, we always used to prepare tzimmes and varnishkes. This is the “old-fashioned” way to make it: with lots of mushrooms.”

Friedman’s recipe has a few new-world touches that makes it feel both nostalgic and a bit modern all at the same time. I highly recommend the whole cookbook ⁠— it’s so beautiful and special.

6. The Best Hamantaschen Recipe Ever

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Hamantaschen get a bad rap for being dry, hard to shape, and not always the most enticing Jewish cookie. But I must say: this hamantaschen recipe is moist, flavorful and the perfect starting point for any hamantaschen flavor you can dream up. Just don’t forget our genius tip to ensure perfectly shaped hamantaschen every single time.

7. Moroccan Potato Pie for Passover

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Maakouda is a Moroccan baked potato dish, served either as a pie or fritter. Just like Ashkenazi potato kugel, maakouda became a staple of Passover for so many Jewish communities around the Diaspora. It feeds a crowd and isn’t complicated to make, so bookmark this recipe for Passover 2023, if it isn’t on your rotation already.

8. Cabbage Schnitzel

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Vegetarian and vegan versions of Jewish classics are gaining momentum, and cabbage schnitzel is a perfect example of this delicious trend. There are actually several traditional ways to make cabbage schnitzel, but this recipe from Sonya Sanford results in a schnitzel patty resembling the shape and thickness of the chicken version, with a golden-brown outer layer and crispy edges.

9. Sweet Potato Pecan Kugel

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From Leah Koenig’s encyclopedic and beautiful “The Jewish Cookbook,” this kugel is not only sweet and scrumptious, but is representative of how Jewish communities in the American South incorporated local ingredients and flavors into traditional Ashkenazi dishes.

10. French Onion Brisket

The 10 Most Popular Jewish Recipes of 2022 | The Nosher (10)

From instagram sensation Jake Cohen’s debut cookbook “Jew-ish,” thisFrench onion brisketrecipe draws inspiration from classic French onion soup. It’s both familiar, and a little bit different. Make this for Shabbat dinner, your next holiday gathering or anytime you need a bite of brisket.

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The 10 Most Popular Jewish Recipes of 2022 | The Nosher (2024)

FAQs

What are the top 8 Jewish foods? ›

The Top Ten Jewish Foods You Need To Learn to Cook
  1. Get Flaky with Borekas. ...
  2. Latkes, a Hannukah Favorite.
  3. The Sweet and Sugary Sufganiyot.
  4. Spice it Up With Bazargan. ...
  5. Challah Your Way. ...
  6. The Classic Kugel Casserole. ...
  7. Rugelach, the Perfect After Dinner Treat.
  8. You'll Dig Tahdig.
Feb 21, 2019

What is the Jewish favorite food? ›

The typical components of the traditional Jewish meal include gefilte fish, chicken soup with matzo balls (also called Kneidlach), brisket, roasted chicken, a potato dish such as kugel or latkes and tzimmes.

What do Jews eat for breakfast? ›

The Israeli breakfast is a dairy meal, and a variety of cheeses are offered. Fish is pareve and so is permitted with a dairy meal, and herring is frequently served. Other smoked or pickled fish dishes are also common, including sprats, sardines and salmon.

What is the national dish of the Jews? ›

Israel does not have a universally recognized national dish; in previous years this was considered to be falafel, deep-fried balls of seasoned, ground chickpeas.

Can Jews eat shrimp? ›

Animals that live in water can only be eaten if they have fins and scales. This means that shrimps, prawns and squid are not fish in the true sense, and so they are just as non-kosher as the eel which has lost its fins through evolution.

What do Jews eat for snacks? ›

A Few Kosher Snacks to Keep in Mind
  • That's it's Natural Real Fruit Bar. This fruit bar comes in six different and delicious fruit flavor pairings, like Blueberry + Apple, among others. ...
  • Popcorn. ...
  • Fruit and Nut Butter. ...
  • Veggie Sticks and a Kosher Dip.

What do Jews put on their bagels? ›

Bagels and lox is one of the best Jewish deli favorites and usually consists of an open-faced or ring-shaped bread piece known as a bagel that is topped with thinly sliced red onions, cream cheese, briny capers, and lox. A lox bagel is typically eaten for breakfast and includes both a bagel and lox.

Do Jews believe in Jesus? ›

Judaism does not accept Jesus as a divine being, an intermediary between humans and God, a messiah, or holy. Belief in the Trinity is also held to be incompatible with Judaism, as are a number of other tenets of Christianity.

What do Ashkenazi Jews eat? ›

Its main ingredients are: grains (rye, barley, buckwheat, wheat), fish—especially herring and freshwater fish, beef and poultry as well as locally available vegetables (onion, carrot, cabbage, cucumber, beetroot, potato), and fruits (apples, pears, plums and berries). The main fats were goose or chicken fat.

What are the three meals for Jews? ›

The Hebrew word for meal is seudah, with the plural version being seudos or seudot, thus the Friday night and Saturday day meals are often called seudot or seudos. The third meal, held on Saturday afternoon is called either shalosh seudos, seudah shlish*t, or shaleshudus.

What do Jews say before they eat? ›

Blessing prior to food

Barukh ata Adonai Eloheinu, melekh ha'olam, hamotzi lehem min ha'aretz. Blessed are You, LORD our God, King of the universe, Who brings forth bread from the earth. Non-bread (e.g. cake) products of wheat, barley, rye, oats, spelt (and rice, according to many opinions).

What is the number one food in Israel? ›

Falafel is probably the most recognizably Israeli food there is. In almost every town in Israel you can find a choice of shops attracting the hungry with the delicious smell of frying falafels.

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