Matilda Makes Matzah Balls

Author:   Rhonda Cohen ,  Francesca Galmozzi
Publisher:   Behrman House Inc.,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781681156163


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Recommended Age:   From 4 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Matilda Makes Matzah Balls


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Overview

"" (A) child's enthusiasm and her grandmother's unconditional love and acceptance shine through in this tale of culinary traditions.Whether or not readers are familiar with matzah ball soup, they will connect with this family's loving preparation of traditional foods. Tender, warmhearted, and delightful."" --Kirkus Reviews ""(A) tribute to the joys of intergenerational, open-minded home cooking."" --Publishers Weekly This year for Passover, Matilda's grandmother invites her to help make the matzah ball soup! Matilda has always loved watching Bubbe make the soup. Now she wants to try out some of her own ideas. Adding lemon and dill to the matzah balls seems like a great idea. But making one GIANT matzah ball is a giant mistake. Yet Bubbe is encouraging. ""The best part of experimenting is you can always try again,"" she tells Matilda. And so the grandmother/granddaughter cooking team continues the kitchen experiments, with some unusual (and unusually delicious!) results. Includes a recipe for Matilda and Bubbe's Matzah Ball Soup.

Full Product Details

Author:   Rhonda Cohen ,  Francesca Galmozzi
Publisher:   Behrman House Inc.,U.S.
Imprint:   Behrman House Inc.,U.S.
ISBN:  

9781681156163


ISBN 10:   1681156164
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   23 March 2023
Recommended Age:   From 4 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Reviews

A Jewish child and her grandmother make chicken soup with matzah balls, a dish that's essential to Jewish cuisine, especially for holiday meals. This Passover, Matilda will help Bubbe make the traditional soup for the first time. Bubbe supplies an apron, and they hum as they mix the ingredients. Matilda has lots of great ideas to jazz up the recipe, and Bubbe is agreeable and encouraging. Sure, Matilda can add lemon and extra dill to the matzah ball mix. Then they put the mixture in the refrigerator to chill. Matilda has another very big idea. What if they make one giant matzah ball instead of the normal small, round, moon-shaped balls? Bubbe is a bit skeptical, wondering if it will float, but as always, she's ready to give Matilda free rein. Of course, the heavyweight matzah ball immediately sinks to the bottom of the pot. Bubbe soothes Matilda's disappointment, reminding her that she can try again. The child's enthusiasm and her grandmother's unconditional love and acceptance shine through in this tale of culinary traditions. Gray-haired Bubbe and brown-haired, pigtailed Matilda (both are light-skinned) are wonderfully exuberant in Galmozzi's bright, action-packed, detailed cartoons. Watch for the all-important box of matzah meal that appears prominently throughout the proceedings. Whether or not readers are familiar with matzah ball soup, they will connect with this family's loving preparation of traditional foods. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Tender, warmhearted, and delightful. (recipe for matzah ball soup) (Picture book. 4-7) --Kirkus Reviews


A Jewish child and her grandmother make chicken soup with matzah balls, a dish that’s essential to Jewish cuisine, especially for holiday meals. This Passover, Matilda will help Bubbe make the traditional soup for the first time. Bubbe supplies an apron, and they hum as they mix the ingredients. Matilda has lots of great ideas to jazz up the recipe, and Bubbe is agreeable and encouraging. Sure, Matilda can add lemon and extra dill to the matzah ball mix. Then they put the mixture in the refrigerator to chill. Matilda has another very big idea. What if they make one giant matzah ball instead of the normal small, round, moon-shaped balls? Bubbe is a bit skeptical, wondering if it will float, but as always, she’s ready to give Matilda free rein. Of course, the heavyweight matzah ball immediately sinks to the bottom of the pot. Bubbe soothes Matilda’s disappointment, reminding her that she can try again. The child’s enthusiasm and her grandmother’s unconditional love and acceptance shine through in this tale of culinary traditions. Gray-haired Bubbe and brown-haired, pigtailed Matilda (both are light-skinned) are wonderfully exuberant in Galmozzi’s bright, action-packed, detailed cartoons. Watch for the all-important box of matzah meal that appears prominently throughout the proceedings. Whether or not readers are familiar with matzah ball soup, they will connect with this family’s loving preparation of traditional foods. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Tender, warmhearted, and delightful.(recipe for matzah ball soup) (Picture book. 4-7) --Kirkus Reviews Bubbe has asked her granddaughter Matilda, both portrayed with light skin, to help make the prized ""fluffy, floating, round-as-the-moon matzah balls"" for the Passover seder—""the start of a new Passover family tradition,"" Cohen writes. With buoyant cartoons by Galmozzi that alternate between scenes of the two cooking and close-up framings of their culinary handiwork, Matilda enthusiastically proffers her ideas for improving the recipe—making one giant matzo ball and lots of little ones in the shapes of stars, and creating pink soup by adding beet juice. To Bubbe’s great credit, she’s never doctrinaire or naysaying, though she occasionally looks bemused. ""It’s all right, bubbalah,"" she tells Matilda when the giant matzo ball sinks. ""The nice thing about experimenting is you can always try again."" A slight, sweet tribute to the joys of intergenerational, open-minded home cooking. Ages 4–7. (Mar.) --Publishers Weekly


Author Information

Rhonda Cohen makes her picture book debut with Matilda Makes Matzah Balls.  She was previously a magazine editor in New York City and a Licensed Clinical Social Worker, specializing in Family and Children. Now a stay-at-home mom and homeschool teacher, Rhonda lives with her husband, three girls, and one dog in the San Francisco Bay Area. Born in Milan, Francesca Galmozzi is a freelance creative specializing in advertising and publishing. She collaborates with leading Italian and foreign publishers of children's books. She was a board member of the Italian Illustrators Association for several years and is now a member of the association.  She has been a professor of illustration at the European Institute of Design (IED). She lives in Italy.

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