Top 25 Gil Marks Quotes

In this post, you will find great Gil Marks Quotes. You can learn and implement many lessons from these quotes.

If I'm doing an olive oil tasting, I would do a very le

If I’m doing an olive oil tasting, I would do a very lean bread: an Italian style or pita bread. You want the flavor of the oil to shine; you don’t want the bread or anything else to mask it.
Gil Marks
To me, that aspect of life that most touches the everyday and celebrations is food.
Gil Marks
We can all be defined by food.
Gil Marks
Every holiday has unique fare and symbolic foods, but none as much as Rosh Hashana.
Gil Marks
I tend to avoid cakes made with matzo meal instead of flour. Also, most prepared dessert products and mixes. Sometimes the packaging they come in tastes better than the product.
Gil Marks
The knish is a classic example of peasant food evolving into comfort food and even sophisticated fare.
Gil Marks
Throughout history, Hanukkah was a relatively minor festival, but it’s become very popular in America due to its proximity to Christmas.
Gil Marks
I don’t understand a mentality that will accept eating something that doesn’t taste good just because it’s low-fat or is made with matzo or whatever.
Gil Marks
Judaism is not just a religion but a people, and the food and customs of one part of the people is connected to the other part of the people. They are part of a larger story.
Gil Marks
The more things you make from scratch, the less expensive and usually healthier and tastier.
Gil Marks
The key to Judaism’s survival is the emotional attachment to the religion.
Gil Marks
Each Passover, I prepare all sorts of fancy desserts for my family and friends, often experimenting with adaptations of sophisticated modern fare.
Gil Marks
Most of the traditional foods we eat on Jewish holidays start out with a seasonal reason as to why we eat them, and later a religious significance is tacked on.
Gil Marks
A Jewish food is one that is almost sanctified, either by its repeated use or use within the holidays or rituals. So food that may have not been Jewish at one point can become Jewish within the cultural context.
Gil Marks
People remember the different variations of stuffed cabbage based on their mothers and grandmothers. It’s not just about food. Eating something as traditional as this is a cultural experience, one that is spiritual and nostalgic. It manages to transcend time; it’s food for the soul.
Gil Marks
Passover is the most widely observed of all the Jewish holidays, and the Passover Seder… is the most practiced of all the Jewish rituals.
Gil Marks
One of the keys to Jewish culinary history is that the Jewish role was not so much innovation but transition and transformation.
Gil Marks
I never serve a dessert on Passover that I would not serve the rest of the year.
Gil Marks
Preparing foods from other Jewish communities is broadening. It’s interesting to sample the foods of other Jewish communities and see what they developed.
Gil Marks
I have been collecting recipes and information for over 20 years, but three years ago, my editor said to me, ‘You’re a walking encyclopedia of food, so why don’t you do an encyclopedia?’
Gil Marks
In Judaism, almost every ritual entails either food or the absence of food. Yom Kippur, for instance, is the absence of food. Part of it is Talmudic, part of it is custom. So much of Judaism was bound up in dietary laws. So everything you ate – the very act itself – was part of religion.
Gil Marks
The processing and preparation of food can transform a kosher item into a non-kosher item.
Gil Marks
Food is sort of like the Jewish sense of humor, a defense mechanism. It is one of the things that helped the Jews survive through 2,000 years of an often very harsh Diaspora.
Gil Marks
Sephardic Jews were always known as good cooks.
Gil Marks