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Celebrate Rosh Hashanah with a new take on comfort foods

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Since 1907, the Kutsher family has run one of the top resorts in New York’s Catskill mountains. By the 1960’s, Kutsher Country Club was known for family-style hospitality that made guests feel they had a home away from home, as well as for offering the “Jewish” experience to a multi-cultural clientele.

And they were known for their classic Jewish comfort food, such as matzo ball soup, gefilte fish, blintzes and freshly baked challah, which at times they served to as many as 1,700 guests a day.

Zach Kutsher, a fourth generation member of the family, remembers his Rosh Hashanahs being spent with hundreds of “family” members each year. And he’s still doing his best to share Kutsher’s food traditions. After a successful career as a corporate lawyer in New York, Kutsher was drawn back to the family calling. So he went back to school to earn an MBA at the Institute of Culinary Education.

For his first effort in the restaurant business, Kutsher opened Kutsher’s Tribeca in New York City. Teaming up with chef Mark Spangenthal, Kutsher created a menu that offers contemporary riffs on the dishes that have drawn guests back to Kutsher’s Country Club year after year.

This year, Spangenthal, who also draws inspiration from his own grandmother’s cooking, created a special Rosh Hashanah menu that pays homage to many of the Jewish comfort classics, as well as the symbolism of the New Year. Diners can begin their meal with thinly sliced honey crisp apple carpaccio, chopped duck and chicken liver, or a wild halibut gefilte fish.

Main courses include grilled Romanian-style skirt steak, roast chicken with foie gras and wild mushrooms, and a classic brisket served with a side of kasha varnishkes (a traditional buckwheat and pasta dish) made with porcini mushrooms and veal bacon, which Spangenthal cures and smokes himself.

And lest you worry that Spangenthal has forgotten the rendered chicken schmaltz, you’ll find plenty of it in his cooking, along more healthful olive oil and duck versions of the fat, which he uses make dishes such as duck schmaltz fries with powdered harissa and Parmesan cheese.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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