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Donate to the Unorthodox fundraising drive and help us keep going strong!
Our Jewish guest is Taffy Brodesser-Akner, New York Times Magazine writer and author of Fleischman is in Trouble. She tells us about the moment she learned her debut novel was a New York Times bestseller, why she writes from such a specific—and jewish—place, and why people are always asking her about Philip Roth.
Our Gentile of the Week is Umber Ahmad, the banker-turned baker behind Mah-Ze-Dahr bakery in Manhattan's West Village. She brings us their delicious old-fashioned donuts, which are made with buttermilk, lemon zest, and vanilla bean and are fried and then glazed. She tells us about growing up in Northern Michigan to Pakistani immigrant parents, and learning from a young age to use food to tell stories and create community. Her question for the hosts is about how food became such an integral part of the Jewish holiday calendar.
Email us at [email protected] or leave a message at our listener line: 914-570-4869.
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get new episodes, photos, and more.
Follow us on Twitter and Instagram, and join our Facebook group.
Get your Unorthodox T-shirts, sweatshirts, and baby onesies at bit.ly/unorthoshirt.
By Tablet Magazine4.6
14601,460 ratings
Donate to the Unorthodox fundraising drive and help us keep going strong!
Our Jewish guest is Taffy Brodesser-Akner, New York Times Magazine writer and author of Fleischman is in Trouble. She tells us about the moment she learned her debut novel was a New York Times bestseller, why she writes from such a specific—and jewish—place, and why people are always asking her about Philip Roth.
Our Gentile of the Week is Umber Ahmad, the banker-turned baker behind Mah-Ze-Dahr bakery in Manhattan's West Village. She brings us their delicious old-fashioned donuts, which are made with buttermilk, lemon zest, and vanilla bean and are fried and then glazed. She tells us about growing up in Northern Michigan to Pakistani immigrant parents, and learning from a young age to use food to tell stories and create community. Her question for the hosts is about how food became such an integral part of the Jewish holiday calendar.
Email us at [email protected] or leave a message at our listener line: 914-570-4869.
Subscribe to our weekly newsletter to get new episodes, photos, and more.
Follow us on Twitter and Instagram, and join our Facebook group.
Get your Unorthodox T-shirts, sweatshirts, and baby onesies at bit.ly/unorthoshirt.

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