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Kosher Fest 2013

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From bite sized stuffed cupcakes to Himalayan pink salt crystals, from Moldavian wines to salmon jerky, Kosher Fest 2013 had it all.

A record number of people turned out yesterday for the opening day of the 25th annual trade show for kosher food, ingredients, equipment and food service at the Meadowlands Exposition Center in Secaucus, which featured 200,000 products with ingredients from 99 countries.

“People came from 21 countries and 31 states in the United States,” Menachem Lubinsky of Lubicom, a co-producer of the show, told VIN News.  “There was a big emphasis on gluten free and a lot of innovative products, but the biggest news is that Kosher Fest is now 25 years old.  Jumping back to that first year, we had 69 booths and less than 600 visitors.  Today, we have almost 400 booths and we are estimating that this year we will have a total of about 9000 visitors.”

Certifying a product as kosher can be a smart marketing move, attracting more than just the kosher consumer.

“It is kind of like the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval,” explained Evan Berman of Frava, a caffeinated fruit juice that comes in four flavors and is marketed at 18 to 29 year olds who are looking for a caffeine boost.

While kosher staples like horseradish and herring shared space with macaroons and bagels, there was no doubt at Kosher Fest that the kosher consumer’s palate is evolving over time.

“We try to be innovative for the kosher industry,” said Mikee Kaufman of Mikee Foods.  “We don’t want to walk into stores anymore and see a big hispanic department, a big asian department and a shrinking kosher aisle.  Younger people today don’t just live in their apartments.  They live in the whole world and they want to see things from Spain and things from Mexico not just gefilte fish and matza and borscht.”

Mikee Foods took home the Best New Pasta, Rice, Beans or Soup award this year for its Mikee Mac, a boxed non-dairy macaroni and cheese product and Kaufman displayed an entire array of foods under a banner that read “You won’t believe it’s parve.”  Among the 130 products in the Mikee foods line are alfredo sauce, nacho cheese dip and ranch dressing, all of which are marketed under the Kosher Farms label and are pareve.

Corim Industries of Brick, New Jersey took home the coveted Best Overall New Product with their single serve beverage cups, which include a line of pareve hot chocolate, chai tea, flavored cappuccino and hot apple cider.

“They are designed to fit into your Keurig but are pareve so that you don’t have to worry about putting dairy items into a pareve machine,” explained Natan Teren, president of Corim Industries, which also has a full line of cholov yisroel products.

Schmerling Chocolate won the Best New Candy award for their Sugarless Rosemarie Pareve and Milk Chocolates.

“If you do a blind taste test against the original Rosemarie you will have a hard time telling them apart,” said Mendy Schmerling, who explained that using maltitol instead of sugar yields an all natural, chemical free product with superior taste.

Other best in show winners included Goldbaum’s Gluten Free Flatbreads, made from chic pea flour, Australian made Sippets Soup Croutons, Oxygen Pomegranate and Teriyaki Sauce, a wine bottle shaped hagada and KJ Poultry’s Breaded Chicken Fries.

Prominently featured at the show was an oversized chicken nugget, created by Empire Kosher Poultry in honor of their 75th anniversary.  Empire is in the process of submitting the paperwork to the Guinness Book of World Records so that the 39 inch long chicken nugget can be certified as the world’s largest chicken nugget.

“The previous record is 32 pounds and this one is 51 pounds,” said Jillian Bozeman of Empire.

The chicken nugget, affectionately nicknamed “Lola” by one Empire employee contains 66 percent chicken and has two and a half pounds of breading.

“She is frozen solid,” said Bozeman.  “We are putting her back into the freezer tonight and will bring her back out tomorrow.  Thursday she is going back to Empire we are going to cook her and eat her.”

Both Mehadrin and Norman’s had full lines of cholov yisroel Greek yogurt, with Norman’s debuting a 100 calorie light Greek yogurt and Yogurt Poppers, which pair yogurt with crunchy toppings including Fruity Crunch, Choco Granola and Cookie Crumbs.

“With yogurt like this there is no excuse not to eat cholov yisroel,” remarked one observer.

Exhibitors fielded a wide range of gluten free items in response to current trends and while there was no shortage of sweets and candies at Kosher Fest, Setton Farms offered an array of healthy crunchy treats, including dried beet chips, vegetable chips, okra and string beans.

“We are definitely noticing the trends, the obvious ones being gluten free, health and fresh new tastes,” observed Estee Kafra, of the KosherScoop.com, whose new cookbook, Cooking Inspired, will be hitting store shelves next week.  “We also see an improvement in the quality and variety of products at Kosher Fest from year to year as consumers become more knowledgeable and have higher demands for quality products.”

It is that ability to adapt that keeps some companies flourishing year after year.

“Every day is a new adventure,” said Esther Friedman of Reisman’s which has been producing bakery items for 52 years. “It isn’t just keeping up with the times, it is staying ahead of the times that is what really has to be done, although there are classic items that are tried and true and people never get tired of those.”

Jack’s Gourmet Sausages, which has already taken home best in show honors for two consecutive years, was celebrating its third anniversary at Kosher Fest, with cookbook author Susie Fishbein doing hourly cooking demonstrations.

“All our products are made exclusively of 100 percent meat and fresh spices,” said co-owner Jack Silberstein.  “People have really been responding to our product line which includes authentic Italian sausages, frozen sausage patties, old world cold cuts including corned beef pastrami and Italian salami.  Our Facon has become our best selling product ever.”

In a unique partnership between the Amish and Brooklyn’s chasidic community, Rachel Wisenfeld of Wise Organic Pastures had a booth stocked with her free range, organically fed, hormone free organic chicken, hailing from Pennsylvania Dutch Country.

“We were the first ones to ever produce an organic, free range chicken,” said Mrs. Wisenfeld who founded the company in 1992 in order to provide her own family with humanely raised, high quality poultry.

“Once you taste my chickens you will never go back,” declared Mrs. Wisenfeld.

There were wines and spirits aplenty at Kosher Fest with Israeli winemaker Hevron Heights Wineries offering a water cooler that dispensed wine.  Koval distillery of Chicago had an impressive collection of spirits including an organic millet whiskey.  A line of flavored vodkas from South Carolina based Local Choice included not only intriguing flavors such as pepper tequila, strawberry kiwi and espresso but a unique opportunity to combine drinking with tzedaka.

“We are called Local Choice because we donate two dollars per bottle sold to the local community where it is purchased,” said John Lahey, Local Choice’s director of outreach and philanthropy.

Alexander Rappaport of Masbia reached out to 36 companies who have partnered with the local soup kitchen, naming them to his “Honor Roll for Brands with Soul.”

“We are looking to create a brand of our own, companies who have joined with Masbia and we are giving them placards to display that say, ‘This company cares about the needy.’”

Rappaport noted that donating items to charities such as Masbia can offer a tremendous payback.

“Companies who donate to charity get good press,” said Rappaport.  “We are asking for charity but we are giving it a bit of a corporate twist, by getting their brands in the news.”

Also expressing gratitude to exhibitors was KosherTroops.com, which sends packages to Jewish troops stationed abroad.

“We wanted to thank many of our generous donors who were all here together at Kosher Fest so we brought representatives from the army and the air force in order to show our appreciation for all that so many of these companies do to help support our troops,” said Sara Fuerst of KosherTroops.com.

Many other businesses that are tangentially involved in the kosher food market were present at the show, which also provided a great opportunity for networking.

Kosher Fest will be continuing today at the Meadowlands Exposition Center from 10 AM to 4 PM.  All food that is left at the end of the show will be distributed to City Harvest and Met Council on Jewish Poverty’s community food programs.

 

 

 

Curtousy of Vinnews.com

All videos and Photos Credit to Stefano Giovannini/VINnews.com

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Mazel Tov!! Yakov and Sarah Brenenson on the birth of a baby girl!

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We regret to inform you of the passing of Rachel Meisels beloved wife of Zev Meisels,
beloved mother of David, Yossi, Motti, and Leah, beloved bubbie to many grandchildren

SHIVA in ISRAEL:
Zev, David, Yossi, and Motti are sitting shiva in Israel.
123/3 Rechov Uziel, Bayit Vegan. They can be reached at 818.287.6820.

SHIVA in NEW YORK:
Leah is sitting shiva in New York at 971 A East 26th Street.
Shiva hours for Leah are from 10-1 and 2-5.
She can be reached at 732.779.6726.

Community Links #241

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Click “full story” to view the digital edition.

 

Obama Admin. Knew Millions Could Not Keep Their Health Insurance

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President Obama repeatedly assured Americans that after the Affordable Care Act became law, people who liked their health insurance would be able to keep it. But millions of Americans are getting or are about to get cancellation letters for their health insurance under Obamacare, say experts, and the Obama administration has known that for at least three years.

Four sources deeply involved in the Affordable Care Act tell NBC NEWS that 50 to 75 percent of the 14 million consumers who buy their insurance individually can expect to receive a “cancellation” letter or the equivalent over the next year because their existing policies don’t meet the standards mandated by the new health care law. One expert predicts that number could reach as high as 80 percent. And all say that many of those forced to buy pricier new policies will experience “sticker shock.”
Advertise | AdChoices

None of this should come as a shock to the Obama administration. The law states that policies in effect as of March 23, 2010 will be “grandfathered,” meaning consumers can keep those policies even though they don’t meet requirements of the new health care law. But the Department of Health and Human Services then wrote regulations that narrowed that provision, by saying that if any part of a policy was significantly changed since that date — the deductible, co-pay, or benefits, for example — the policy would not be grandfathered.

Buried in Obamacare regulations from July 2010 is an estimate that because of normal turnover in the individual insurance market, “40 to 67 percent” of customers will not be able to keep their policy. And because many policies will have been changed since the key date, “the percentage of individual market policies losing grandfather status in a given year exceeds the 40 to 67 percent range.”

That means the administration knew that more than 40 to 67 percent of those in the individual market would not be able to keep their plans, even if they liked them.
Yet President Obama, who had promised in 2009, “if you like your health plan, you will be able to keep your health plan,” was still saying in 2012, “If [you] already have health insurance, you will keep your health insurance.”

Read more at NBC NEWS.

{Matzav.com Newscenter}

In need of a miracle

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Amram is a 65 year old man from Toronto,Ontario with an A blood type who is in serious need for a kidney donation.

It all started with a trip to the hospital to visit his elderly mother.
Amram was hit with a rare infection that killed one of his kidneys and left the other working at only 12%.
After looking for a doner with no luck his wife Rachel decided to go ahead with the testings to be the doner. After months of testings (they were a perfect match) they set a date for the transplant both so excited to start a new life.
On the day of the transplant his wife went into surgery first, but things got messy. The doctor messed up by tugging to hard on her spleen and tearing it, putting her in a life and death situation and leaving the doctor no choice but to remove her spleen.
The transplant never happened.
The doctors promised to prioritize him on the kidney “list” but are now going back on their word and refusing to do so.
Amram is due to start dialysis ASAP but is really fighting for his life due to also having a heart murmur.
Our only hope is to find a kidney for him ourselves.
He’s a father and a grandfather we really need him to still be part of our lives.
Can someone please help?
Please contact Lisa for more information.

 

Israel – Tzohar Bill Easing Marriage Process Passed Into Law Despite Chief Rabbis’ Opposition

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Israel – The so-called “Tzohar law” to abolish regional marriage registration districts was passed into law Monday evening ending a long running feud between the Tzohar national religious rabbinical association and the religious establishment.

The new legislation, which passed its second and third readings in the Knesset plenum Monday night, will allow couples to open a marriage registration file with the local rabbinate of any district or city they wish regardless of where they themselves reside. Until now, registration had to be conducted in the municipal jurisdiction of one the spouses of an engaged couple, limiting their options in choosing a professionally run rabbinate and even the rabbi they would like to marry them.

A feisty debate preceded the passage of the bill, with MK Moshe Gafni of United Torah Judaism accusing Deputy Minister of Religious Services MK Eli Ben Dahan of not caring about the Torah, and alleging that the bill would make the marriage registration process unreliable.

“You have disengaged from the Torah of Israel and you will be responsible when there is a disengagement from Judea and Samaria,” shouted Gafni from the Knesset podium.

Ben Dahan answered angrily saying that religious commitment was not only the preserve of Gafni and his colleagues in the haredi parties, and that a computerized data base containing marital status records that is now operative would ensure the reliability of the new system.

“You aren’t the ones to teach us religious dedication, and I say this with full humility,” said the Deputy Minister fiercely.

Tzohar described the passage of the law as the “completion of a revolution in the process of marriage registration,” which would put out of work marriage registrars who don’t act in an appropriate manner.

The organization has argued that the regional marriage registration districts perpetuate an inefficient, hostile, and obstructionist system, and alienates secular Israelis from religion and the religious establishment.

The law was also promoted by Tzohar because it alleged that the 600 rabbis belonging to its rabbinical association were prevented by the Chief Rabbinate and the Religious Services Ministry, formerly run by Shas, from gaining licenses to perform marriages.

The organization claimed that this stance was motivated by a desire within the religious establishment to protect weddings as a source of income for chief rabbinate approved rabbis who, Tzohar alleges, frequently and illegally charge couples for performing weddings.

The chief rabbinate has strongly denied this charge, but has continued to oppose the bill. In August, shortly after the election of new chief rabbis David Lau and Yitzhak Yosef, the Council of the Chief Rabbinate again publicly voiced opposition to the bill.

The basis for the rabbinate’s opposition, as well as that of the Haredi parties Shas and United Torah Judaism, is the claim that the legislation will make the marriage registration process less reliable and lead to the inadvertent marriage of people who cannot marry according to Jewish law. Chief Rabbi Lau and the council have argued that municipal rabbis are better able to investigate the marital-status history of someone seeking to open a marriage file when the registration process is carried out in the district in which at least one of the spouses resides.

Proponents of the bill have countered that a computer data base containing comprehensive information on citizens’ marital status that has recently been established by the religious services ministry circumvents such a problem.

In addition, four senior rabbis from the conservative wing of the national religious movement called on the four Tekuma MKs who are part of the Bayit Yehudi faction to oppose the bill.

However, the so-called Tekuma rabbis were principally complaining about the fact that they had not been consulted on the law by the party.

In the final vote, eleven of Bayit Yehudi’s 12 MKs voted in favour of the bill. MK Orit Struck of the faction’s Tekuma party was absent.

The bill passed by 57 votes to 14 with one abstention.

Tensions between Tzohar and the chief rabbinate and Ministry of Religious Services came to a head in August 2011, when then-religious services minister and Shas MK Ya’acov Margi imposed a strict limit on the number of registrations that could be conducted in the Tzohar- friendly marriage registration districts, thereby de-facto severely limiting the number of people who could take advantage of Tzohar’s wedding service.

Tzohar shut down it’s wedding service temporarily in protest, promoting outrage at the rabbinate and ministry from broad swathes of the political spectrum. Margi eventually backed down and an administrative solution was worked out which has been if place ever since. But Tzohar decided to seek legislative security for its flagship program to guarantee its ability to continue operating in the future.

Tzohar initially set up its free wedding service as a way of easing the bureaucratic process for couples, especially from they non-religious sector who are unfamiliar with the complex and often times unwelcoming religious bureaucracy.

It has performed 80,000 weddings since it’s program was established in 1995, including 4,000 in 2012.

Tzohar chairman Rabbi David Stav enthusiastically welcomed the passage of the bill saying it would bring about competition between marriage registrars and local rabbinates for the NIS 800 registration fee, “which will change the way in which engaged couples are treated and lead to less people marrying abroad.”
Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post

Benny Friedman and Gad Elbaz Concert in South Africa

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Last week Benny Friedman and Gad Elbaz with spcial guest Yudi Cohen put on two sold out performances for the Jewish community of South Africa, presented by the Sydenham Shul & CSO.  The show was at the famous The Teatro at Montecasion in Johannesburg South Africa

Israel – 2,000 People Protest Release Of Palestinian Prisoners Outside Prison

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Israel – Almagor Terror Victims Association chairman Meir Indor told the Knesset Interior Committee that several terror victims’ families had not been informed about which prisoners had been slated for release before their names reached the press.

“The equation ‘freeing prisoners equals talks’ or ‘freezing settlement construction equals talks’ is wrong, and the government has to stop this,” Knesset Interior Committee chairwoman Miri Regev (Likud Beytenu) said.

Regev called the committee meeting to discuss how the soon-to-be-released prisoners were chosen.

An Interior Ministry representative at the meeting said he did not know how the terrorists were selected or who made the list.

Indor complained that only seven of the 16 families of victims of the terrorists being released had been notified before the list of prisoners was sent to the press.

“This is an injustice on top of the even bigger injustice of releasing prisoners,” he said.

Justice Ministry attorney Yifat Raveh said that the ministry began contacting families two hours before the list became official, but did not successfully reach everyone.

Regev told the Justice Ministry representative that the process of notifying families should have begun earlier, not the same night the names were being released to the press, since a tentative list had been made a week earlier.

MK David Tsur (Hatnua) continued his party’s line of blaming the Bayit Yehudi Party for prisoner releases, saying that the government had a choice of gestures it could have made at the beginning of talks – negotiating on the basis of 1949 armistice lines, freezing settlement construction or freeing terrorists – and that the worst was chosen because of pressure from the right-wing party.

“Bayit Yehudi ministers are responsible for the prisoner release because they prevented any other option in order to avoid a political backlash,” MK Tamar Zandberg (Meretz) said.

Indor asked Tsur if he thought that Palestinian prisoners would have been released once an agreement was reached, even if one of the other options had been chosen, and Tsur said, yes.

“So this is just a scheduling matter?” Indor asked incredulously. “Human lives are not a down payment.”

“In any other place in the world, if someone murdered a Jew and the government wanted to release him, we would shout that it’s an injustice,” MK Shuli Moalem-Refaeli (Bayit Yehudi) added.

Regev said that “no normal country in the world frees murderers,” and Zandberg accused her and other “second-tier Likud MKs” of letting out their frustrations at the government even though it is led by their party.
Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post

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 Mazal Tov!! Lazar and  Chani Krintzman on the birth of a son

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