Texas Jewish Post (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 2020 Page: 5 of 16
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TEXAS JEWISH POST $ SINCE 1947
July 16,2020 I 5
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see PALATE, p.15
Passover, has reopened with a new
to
The Mission of The Blue Cord is to
If you are a Holocaust Survivor
living in Dallas and are in financial
need please contact The Blue Card
at: 212-239-2251 or
Tonia Stevens
lnfo@bluecardfund.org
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We can potentially assist you with:
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RETAIL | OFFICE | INDUSTRIAL | LAND
provide direct financial assistance
to Needy Holocaust Survivors.
• Food, rent, utilities and other essentials such as
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• Help with certain types of insurance.
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I
Meals and
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---
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Palate Grill Chef Millicent Pursley in
the North Dallas kitchen, here cooking
a new fan favorite, honey habanero
smoked wings. "No one else is doing
what we do," said Pursley, whose
condiments, sauces and dressings
from scratch are newtothe menu. "I'm
happy every day I'm in the kitchen
knowing that our customers are likely
trying something new."
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Photos: Courtesy Kosher Palate
"This community has been good to us and however we can we try to give back, no
questions asked," said Kosher Palate owner Chaim Goldfeder of the restaurant's
donation of 50 boxes of produce. "I believe we're a community resource and if
we can't help, why are we here?" He is pictured here with the Palate Grill's new
chef Millicent Pursely.
available and masks are required
for employees and customers.
Palate Grill, the newly designed
restaurant side of the Goldfeders’
■
The Kosher Palate and Palate Grill serve up
delectable foods while serving those in need
setup, menu and chef.
“To say she has passion in the
kitchen, is an understatement,”
Goldfeder said of Millicent
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LF Jo1,;
By Deb Silverthorn
The tables are filling with guests
and the online shopping carts are
full at Kosher Palate, the North
Dallas restaurant and grocery
owned by Chaim and Miriam
Goldfeder.
The Goldfeders recently
underwrote the cost of shipping
more than 50 boxes of fruits and
vegetables to distribute free to
people in need.
“This community has been
good to us and however we can
we try to give back, no questions
asked,” said Chaim Goldfeder.
“I believe we’re a community
resource and if we can’t help, why
are we here?”
The boxes of produce were
shipped from Minneapolis and
donated to that community by
Agudath Israel Illinois.
“The gifts of this nourishment
came about through a tremendous
confluence of partners,” said
Agudath Israel Minnesota Co-
President Rabbi Yehoshua “JB”
T Y
E A
Borenstein. “Together, our
singular focus was to work together
to move the ‘ball down the field,’
and feed as many people in need as
possible.”
Rabbi Borenstein said Jewish
leadership in Chicago and
Minneapolis were aware of
the Goldfeders’ reputation of
dedication and devotion to those
in need. From Hurricane Harvey
to October’s tornado in Dallas and
in many private cases, the Kosher
Palate has showed up to feed
thousands.
During the pandemic, Kosher
Palate has scheduled early
shopping hours from 9 to 10 a.m.
on Thursdays, for at-risk shoppers,
and has created an online shopping
cart with order pickup in-store,
curbside or by delivery through
Mercato.com.
“We’re always on top of the
cleanliness of our place but now
there’s special and additional foodery, which closed just before
attention
shopping carts
between
Goldfeder.
that hand sanitizer stations are
door handles,
and counters
customers,” said
He also pointed out
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Wisch-Ray, Sharon. Texas Jewish Post (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 74, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 16, 2020, newspaper, July 16, 2020; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1305751/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .