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TBEā€™s Community Voice

My love for food has deep roots. I grew up outside of Philadelphia in a multicultural town. My mom was single, raising my two brothers and me on her own, and as they say, it takes a village. Many of our meals came from the beautiful people and cultures who lived around us. Homemade Korean kimchi from our neighbors next door, smoked salmon from my Pop Pop Sonnyā€™s deli and Sunday afternoon Indian while my mom chanted Hare Krishna. To be honest, I think Sundays were really just for the free meal.

My mom was constantly covered in flour, hovering over her stove, making meals right back for all. Thatā€™s what everybody did. We made meals for each other.

I became a Holistic Chef because it married my two passions: cooking and living a healthy lifestyle. I think itā€™s important to be aware of what youā€™re putting in your body. It needs to be healthy and delicious.

When I was pregnant with our first daughter, I was on bedrest for two months and not able to cook. We didnā€™t live near family so we relied on take-out. The occasional home-cooked meal that a friend brought over meant the world to me. I literally cried every single time. I didnā€™t care how good it was, you could just taste the love.

And thatā€™s why, when I was invited to be a part of the Caring Committee to cook for Gan Elohim families, I was all in. Iā€™m honored to provide that experience to celebrate a new baby, mourn the passing of a loved one, or deliver extra TLC from the community. Itā€™s been four years now, but each time it still warms my heart just as much knowing Gan Elohim families are receiving love and comfort through my food.

 

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