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Jackie boasts a heritage of culinary riches with her
Jamaican-Italian-Russian Jewish roots. The pursuit and
production of delicious food started in her family well
before she was born...
The Jamaican Side
The Russian-Italian-Jewish Side
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The Jamaican
Side "The building of the Panama Canal was
fueled on the food of my ancestors.", Jackie says.
"My great grandmother, Rosa Adams, was a caterer
there. She fed the men who built it."
Jackie's Jamaican-born, great grandmother,
Rosa, cooked and sold food from the West Indies to Central
America. She cooked her family's way to New York City.
There she was lost to cancer and most of her recipes
passed with her. To this day, her now 92-year-old daughter
Maude's ("Grandma" ), Jackie's grandmother, biggest
regret is never learning to cook from her mother, whom
she swears was ten times the cook she is. Jackie finds
this difficult to believe:
"The Gordon family would beg to differ because
"Grandma" has always been an amazing cook! I got my
"excess is best" motto directly from my grandmother.
Her incredible holiday and Sunday dinners were as delicious
as they were feats of space."
Grandma cooked sumptuous meals from 'soup
to nuts' in a pivot kitchen. A room so small you could
stand in the center and touch the four walls. And if
the variety didn't floor you, the quantity did. At times
she borrowed neighbors' apartments to seat all her guests.
AND every guest had to have food to take home for the
next day. Grandma's theory was the dinner was ruined
if your guests had to cook the next day.

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Then there was Granddad, Marcus Gordon
Sr., direct from Jamaica. He bought and cooked the meat.
Nothing but the best!
"One year, he spent so much money on a standing
rib roast from Macy's that Grandma insisted on hanging
the receipt on the wall so the guests could thoroughly
appreciate the food."
He worked for decades at a midtown hotel
that exposed him to diverse cultures and developed his
taste for a wide variety of foods. He introduced Jewish
food into the family's repertoire of favorite food in
the pre-grandchildren days. A trip to Zabar's was one
of his greatest pleasures up to his passing at the tender
age of 94.
"The men behind the smoked fish counter were
on a first name basis with my grandmother. She was very
popular because she bought out the store - a feast of
smoked salmon, sable and sturgeon, herring in cream
sauce with onions, chopped liver, shrimp salad, horseradish
beets, rye bread with the seeds, and bialys, and bagels,
and, and, and, and . . . I would always ask her "Now
you're POSITIVE you're not the source of my Jewish ancestry?"

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The Italian-Russian-Jewish
Side - "Let 'em eat cake!" or rather in the household
of Jackie's mother, Bernice,"Make her eat cake!"
That was the battle cry of Jackie's Italian grandmother
Stella, and her Russian grandfather, Joseph. It was
their solution to their daughter, Bernice, being too
skinny. Cake "four times a day" would turn her into
her father's ideal of beauty, namely a robust peasant
girl. She never got any fatter, just borderline hyperglycemic.
To this day, she suffers a wicked sweet
tooth that compromises her otherwise healthy lifestyle.
"Food was God in my house." says Bernice. "My father
wasn't fussy about anything else, but our food had to
be the best. We supported the local merchants. They
used to bow when my mother walked into the store."
Joseph's greatest joy was seeing family
and friends served wonderful meals in his home. But
he didn't cook. Bernice's mother, Stella, was queen
of her kitchen! She was from a large Italian family
of exceptional cooks, but she converted to Judaism.
Having to pass herself off as a Jew after marrying and
converting to Judaism, she was forced to learn to cook
the food, everything from gefilte fish to blintzes.
And the food never gave her away.
Bernice, the rebel, avoided the kitchen
at all costs, especially because her father insisted,
"The only way you'll get a man is if you learn to cook
like your mother." She proved him wrong, but that's
not a food story.
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As Jackie remembers:
"My mother always said what distinguishes
great cooks from good cooks is that great cooks love
to cook. Every meal is an opportunity to express that
love."
Bernice was a good cook but HAVING to
shop, cook and work full time while raising three kids
on her own was a nightmare. Bernice remembers:
"It was like feeding a small army every day.
I used to rejoice when I had leftovers, then cry the
next day when I got home from work and found that 'someone'
had eaten them and left just a tablespoon in the bottom
of the pot."
She really could have used a personal
chef in those days. Bernice cooked under duress, and
only ever enjoyed doing it when she found the time to
cook for company. Fortunately, for almost everyone,
cooking became Jackie's chore.
For her two brothers, it was an exercise
in "the pleasure with pain." Not only did they have
to eat at the odd hours when her culinary masterpieces
were finally finished, but they had to clean up after
her! It was the beginning of the number #1 Gordon House
Rule. If you cook, you don't clean. Could this be what
inspired Jackie to be a great cook?
Jackie's mother was disconnected from
her family, but after 35 years she reunited with her
brother. And as it turns out, Jackie is related to chef
Larry Forgione, the champion of American food and produce,
on her Italian grandmother's side. And they both worked
at the River Café. Years apart, so they never met, but
it's a bit spooky just the same...
Next page - "I
Cook, Now!" or choose another page below
about
us : is it in the genes?
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