TISH: The Roots
For seven years now, every early autumn we have been meeting with you at a shared table during the TISH Jewish food festival. This year, we have decided to temporarily change the event’s format. The humanitarian crisis in the Gaza Strip, in particular the hunger and suffering of Palestinian civilians, may seem distant and unrelated to the culinary history of Polish Jews. For us, however, it is not a time for celebration, but rather a time for reflection—on whether the eponymous tish, the table, still has the power to bring people together: nations at war, polarized societies, families or social groups divided by differing worldviews. Are we able, even for a moment, to disconnect from social media and talk at a shared table about what unites us?
This year, we invite you to intimate gatherings, workshops and walks—they will provide an opportunity for conversation, mindfulness and discovering what we do have in common. The kitchen, the shared table and the memory of flavors hold the power of reconciliation, despite differences of origin, beliefs or traditions. During this year’s edition, we want to show that recipes, tastes and rituals passed down from generation to generation build bridges between the past and the present, reminding us of our shared roots. Jewish culinary tradition originated in the Levant; it shares recipes, flavors, and ingredients with other cuisines of this region. It evolved in the diasporas—in Eastern Europe it also influenced Polish cuisine, while itself being transformed by local conditions, products and by the people encountered here.
Check program
24 September (Wednesday)
- 11AM – 12.30PM
Breakfast at the Market – a guided tour with food tasting
Venue: The Kręglickis Market, 12 Zakroczymska St
Event translated into Polish Sign Language (PSL)
- 6PM – 8PM
Kosher—what does it mean? – a workshop and meeting with the Hillel Foundation
Venue: Fania’s Culinary Lab
25 September (Thursday)
- 11AM – 2PM
Memories Kept in Recipes, or Roots in the Kitchen – a culinary workshop for seniors
Venue: Fania’s Culinary Lab
- 5PM – 6.30PM
The 1955 Festival. Recalling the Taste, Community, Change – a guided tour of the exhibition The Summer that Changed It All. The Festival of 1955
Venue: Museum of Warsaw, 34 Old Town Market Square
- 6PM – 8PM
About an Artifact: Plants in Jewish Culture – a meeting devoted to Fania Levando’s culinary book
Venue: Legacy Gallery
Event translated into Polish Sign Language (PSL)
26 September (Friday)
- 6PM – 9PM
Vi a kepl kroyt (Like a cabbage) - a culinary workshop for the Jewish New Year
Venue: Center for Yiddish Culture, 15 W. Andersa St
- 7PM – 9PM
Charity Shabbat dinner
Venue: POLIN Museum main hall
27 September (Saturday)
- 10AM – 12 noon
In the search of the tastes of right-bank Warsaw — an urban walk
Venue: start – Praga Museum of Warsaw, 50/52 Targowa St; finish – Praga Culture Center – Konopacki Palace, 11/13 Strzelecka St
- 11AM – 1.30PM and 2PM – 6PM
Family workshops
Venue: King Matt Family Education Area
- 2PM – 3.30PM
Wanted and Unwanted Food. Za’atar Manakish – a culinary workshop and a talk on the subject of legacy
Venue: State Ethnographic Museum
- 3PM - 4.30PM
For Good Health and Good Taste. Recipes from Guidebook to the Tree of Life – a workshop
Venue: Antonina Leśniewska Pharmacy Museum, 31/33 Piwna St, 00-265 Warsaw
- 7PM – 9PM
From Our Kitchen – a meeting with Laurel Kratochvila with food tasting
Venue: Fania’s Culinary Lab
28 September (Sunday)
- 10AM – 3PM
Boker tov – kosher breakfasts
Venue: JCC Warsaw, 9A Chmielna St
- 11AM - 1.30PM and 2PM – 6PM
Family workshops
Venue: King Matt Family Education Area
- 11AM – 3PM
Natur-ekskursye - a tour for families in search for roots
Meeting point: Warszawa Śródmieście railway station
- 2PM – 3.30PM
Kreplakh or pierogi? What do Polish Jews Eat Today? – a meeting with Chief Rabbi of Poland Michael Schudrich, Kaja Siczek and Miriam Synger
Venue: JCC Warsaw, 9A Chmielna St
- 2PM – 4PM
Here You Can Buy Anything You Want and Eat Anything You Want – an urban walk
Venue: POLIN Museum main hall
Event translated into Polish Sign Language (PSL).
- 2PM – 4PM
Tastes of Jewish Towns – a tour of the Core Exhibition in Ukrainian
Venue: POLIN Museum main hall
- 3PM – 8PM
About Who We Are – a culinary workshop
Venue: Fania’s Culinary Lab
Food is a carrier of history, identity and memory. We will listen to the stories hidden in family traditions and recipes that travel with people, bringing with them the taste and scent of home. We will begin with breakfast at the market, where we will sample Jewish flavors in their local and ecological form and hear about family recipes that have been prepared for generations. On the following days, during culinary workshops, seniors, teenagers, and even the youngest participants will have a chance to test their skills in the kitchen.
We will also invite you to explore our museum collection, which includes extraordinary objects related to culinary culture—including a very special cookbook.
There will also be meetings with special guests—e.g., Laurel Kratochvila, creator of the iconic ‘Fine Bagels’ and ‘Le Balto,’ author of the cookbooks "New European Baking" and "Dobre, dobre," which presents Polish cuisine as seen through her eyes, will travel from Berlin to join us. Laurel will speak about her roots, which stretch from Poland all the way to Boston. During the meeting, she will treat participants to the dishes prepared according to her own recipes.
Good things are done together, which is why, as each year, we have invited our partner institutions to collaborate. JCC Warsaw and the Yiddish Culture Center will open their doors to us, and Hillel Poland will introduce us to the secrets of kashrut. Warsaw’s museums will also prepare accompanying events: the Ethnographic Museum, the Pharmacy Museum, the Museum of Warsaw, and the Praga Museum of Warsaw.
We invite you to join us at a shared table.
Phot. Z. Borysiewicz / Museum of the History of Polish Jews
