Abraham Joshua Heschel’s menu
Shabbat lunch dish kept warm (Ashkenazi chamin)

Tcholent, the Overnight Stew

PreservingDocumented🧂 🍄moyen12 h (slow cooking, unattended)

A brown, tender stew of beans, barley, and braising meat, cooked very slowly overnight. Eggs cooked in their shells brown in the heart of the pot.

Shabbat lunch dish kept warm (Ashkenazi chamin)

A brown, tender stew of beans, barley, and braising meat, cooked very slowly overnight. Eggs cooked in their shells brown in the heart of the pot.

On Friday, as the sun was setting, we would carry the pot to the baker's — our own, sealed with dough, among a hundred others that all looked alike. And on Saturday at noon, we would bring it back steaming: the meat falls apart by itself, the beans have drunk all the juices, and the eggs have turned brown as amber. Understand: this dish cooks while we pray, it works while we rest. There is no finer lesson of Shabbat in a pot.
Abraham Joshua Heschel
Ingredients
  • Beef brisketa nice piece (tender meat)
  • Marrow bonesone or two (richness of the broth)
  • Dried beansa good handful per person (starch)
  • Pearl barleya bowl (thickener and body)
  • Onionsseveral (aromatic base)
  • Goose fat (schmaltz)a spoonful (roundness)
  • Potatoesa few (soft starch)
  • Whole eggsone per person (cooked in shell at the heart of the dish)
  • Paprika and garlicto taste (color and aroma)
How it was made : The word "tcholent" may come from the Old French "chald" (hot) or "chaud-lent" (slow-hot). Since one could neither light nor revive a fire on Saturday, the dish rested in the declining heat of the communal baker's oven: each family recognized its pot by a mark.
Sources : Claudia Roden, The Book of Jewish Food (1996) · John Cooper, Eat and Be Satisfied: A Social History of Jewish Food (1993)