Sauce au Raifort
According to the Talmud and the French sage Rashi, beets, fish, and cloves of garlic are essential foods to honor the Sabbath. French Jews also use horseradish, sliced as a root or ground into a sauce, and served at Passover to symbolize the bitterness of slavery. It was probably in Alsace or southern Germany that the horseradish root replaced the bitter greens of more southerly climes as the bitter herbs at Passover dinner. For hundreds of years, local farmers would dig up horseradish roots and peel and grate them outdoors, by their kitchens, making sure to protect their eyes from the sting. Then they would mix the root with a little sugar and vinegar and sometimes grated beets, keeping it for their own personal use or selling it at local farmers’ markets. In 1956, Raifalsa, an Alsace-based company, began grating horseradish grown by the area’s farmers in the corner of a farm in Mietesheim, near the Vosges Mountains. A few years ago, Raifalsa, still the only manufacturer of prepared horseradish in France, agreed to produce a batch of kosher horseradish. They had the rabbi of Strasbourg come to the factory to supervise the operation, which resulted in the production of six thousand 7-ounce pots, all stamped with a certification from the Grand Rabbinat de Strasbourg. Before grating the horseradish, just remember to open a window and put on a pair of goggles.
Recipe information
Yield
about 2 cups
Ingredients
Preparation
Step 1
Finely grate the horseradish and the beets with a hand grater, or in a food processor fitted with a shredding disk, into a large bowl. Toss with the lemon juice and salt.
Step 2
Put the sugar in the vinegar or beet-juice water in a small pan, and set over medium heat to dissolve. Bring slowly to a boil, and turn off after about 3 minutes. Stir this liquid into the horseradish and beets. If too dry, stir in some of the reserved beet-cooking liquid.
Step 3
Put the horseradish and some of the liquid in a jar, and keep tightly closed in the refrigerator for a day. Then remove and taste, adding more salt, sugar, or beet liquid as needed.