SEVERAL years ago, at a family Seder, I tasted a
matzo I actually liked. It was misshapen and lightly burned,
distinguishing it from the machine-made matzo of my youth. And this one
possessed something that I had never experienced with matzo: It had
flavor. What can I say? Up until that moment, the best matzo of my life
was not much better than the worst matzo of my life; you could taste the
struggle in every bite. For the first time I ate matzo and thought, This is delicious.
In the spirit of the Four Questions, which the youngest child always asks at the
Passover Seder, and which begin with:
Why is this night different from all other nights? I asked myself, “Why is this matzo different from all other matzos?”
I’m a chef, so of course I was tempted to credit the baker. [...]
A visit to the bakery where the matzo was made, in Williamsburg,
Brooklyn, allowed me to see how this law plays out on the ground. There
were roughly 40 workers, with earlocks and yarmulkes, white shirts and
black pants. For each batch of matzo, from the moment the water met
flour, the workers frantically mixed, rolled and baked — all within 18 minutes — guaranteeing no fermentation.
The
precision was impressive. But the recipe was just a hurried mix of
flour and water. Not even a kiss of salt — nothing to explain that
bravura taste, apart from the grain itself.
The bakery, I learned, specialized in an elite class of matzo called
“shmurah,” meaning “guarded” or “watched,” which Orthodox communities
prescribe for the first night of Passover. For shmurah matzo, the
guarding against chametz begins not in the bakery but in the field, with
rabbis overseeing the grain from harvest through to milling. Maybe, I
thought, the matzo owed its flavor to this rabbinical scrutiny.
So
several months later, I drove to upstate New York to visit one of the
bakery’s suppliers, Klaas Martens, a grain farmer whom, coincidentally,
I’ve known for many years. It was early July, and he was waiting to
harvest kosher spelt for shmurah matzo. (Spelt isn’t typical matzo
material, but it is one of the five biblical grains permitted in
Passover tradition.) [...]
“What was remarkable to me is that being constrained by the rules of
the rabbi, it forced us to figure out how to better preserve the quality
of the grain,” Klaas said. [...]
Convinced that the matzo I’d tasted must be proof not just of a
higher understanding of agriculture but also of a higher understanding
of deliciousness, I asked the rabbi if he believed that any of the
kosher laws ended up producing better-tasting food.
“No. Absolutely not,” he said. “It’s just kosher law.” [...]
I was beginning to see how the annual shmurah
harvest improved Klaas’s farming for the rest of the year. It encouraged
him to diversify crops, for instance, ridding his fields of weeds and
improving the soil for everything else he grew. [...]
As we started down the last row of the 30-acre field, I watched the
rabbi study the spelt left to cut. At the end of this hot, grueling day,
he didn’t ease into the last few minutes of the harvest. If anything,
he looked closer, examining the spelt so carefully, so faithfully, he might have been reading ancient scrolls.
I
can’t shake that image because of something Klaas told me many years
ago: “The history of wheat in a question is ‘How do we grow this and
make it easier?’ ”
We’ve been spectacularly successful. After all,
wheat built Western civilization. We eat a lot of the stuff — in the
United States, more than 130 pounds per person each year. Worldwide, it
covers more acreage than any other crop.
The rabbi, however, was
not interested in making wheat easier. And his stone-faced inspection
reminded me of what that pursuit has left us with:
chemicals, denuded wheat, depleted soils and a host of other problems with our food system.
Everyone
has his own standards — for food and faith — but that image of the
rabbi gave me hope that the solution for a problem centuries in the
making is within reach. Call it a fifth question: Instead of making
something easier, why not make it more delicious? There’s room at the
table for that.