Want a great kosher eating experience? Go to Miami!

Kosher Inspired Restaurant Motek

With nine locations in Miami and four more recently opened in Brooklyn and Manhattan, Motek is the sort of place that welcomes you with bright yellow walls, a frozen rosé made with kosher wine and topped with peaches and strawberries, and a boisterous Mediterranean menu.

The music is loud, the service is cheerful, and the food is terrific, which explains the chain’s rapid growth. But here’s the thing: while the meat served in Motek is all glatt kosher, the restaurant is not technically kosher certified. It’s open on Shabbat, and though no one dish combines meat and dairy, any diner who so wishes may order a side of tzatziki next to her schnitzel.

To the more observant among us, these aberrations make Motek a non-starter. But for many more Jews, the chain offers a meaningful alternative, welcoming in a growing population of Jews who would never eat non-kosher meat but who are delighted with a place that serves kosher fare without some of the strictures they don’t abide by anyway.

Motek, in other words, opens up a whole new space in kosher dining, a space that is warmly traditional if not strictly adhering to halachah, or Jewish law. It’s a space Jews from Petach Tikvah to Palm Beach know all too well: Everywhere you look these days, you see more and more Jews identifying as Masorti, or traditional, celebrating the beauty and the meaning of Judaism even if they don’t always follow its commandments. In recent decades, this spirit has completely transformed Israeli society, inspiring, if not always outright religiosity, then at least a robust wave of renewed interest in traditional texts and practices. And now, courtesy of eateries like Motek, it’s making its way stateside, too.

And that is a very, very good thing.

It doesn’t take a rabbi to know that the American denominational system is in freefall. Non-Orthodox groups like Conservative and Reform Judaism are rapidly losing congregants, many of whom are searching for more—here comes that word again—traditional alternatives, which is why groups like Chabad are everywhere growing exponentially. But a traditional Chabad House on campus or Chabad shul down the block isn’t always enough to sustain Jewish life; for that, you need gathering places that offer American Jews ways to reconcile both sides of their hyphenated identities, delivering experiences that are both pleasurable and meaningful. Few establishments can do this better than restaurants, and now we’ve a Michelin star to attest to the fact that, at least in Miami, we’re learning how to do it well.

https://www.thejc.com/opinion/want-a-great-kosher-eating-experience-go-to-miami-rzlz1ne0

By The JC

SOCIAL MEDIA

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