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Jewish Chef Competes on ‘Hell’s Kitchen’ With Star of David Necklace

Chef Uri Elbaum competing on season 23 of “Hell’s Kitchen.” Photo: Screenshot

Season 23 of “Hell’s Kitchen” premiered on Fox on Thursday night, and one of the contestants is a Jewish chef from Long Branch, New Jersey, who appeared in the premiere episode wearing a Star of David necklace.

Chef Uri Elbaum — who had a Chabad upbringing in Buenos Aires, Argentina, before moving to the US — also has Star of David tattoos on both arms and a tattoo on his left forearm that says in Hebrew “Ahava,” which means love. The 28-year-old is the executive chef of the kosher restaurants The Butcher’s Steakhouse and Primavera in the Deal, New Jersey, area, and has also cooked on Passover programs.

“It’s a beautiful thing for me that I can make food for my people in kosher restaurants,” Elbaum previously said, as reported by the blog YeahThatsKosher. “What’s the first thing a Jew does before he eats? Makes a bracha [blessing]. What’s the last thing he does before he leaves? Makes a bracha. Having people say a bracha on my food is a great feeling.”

He also said that before participating in season 23 of “Hell’s Kitchen,” “My rabbi told me to both make the Jews watching at home proud of me and to remember that I should be proud to be Jewish.”

For the first time in the history of the show, the new season of “Hell’s Kitchen” was filmed on the east coast and the competitors are all head chefs of their respective restaurants. The competition took place at Gordon Ramsay’s Hell’s Kitchen restaurant inside the Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticut. The winner of season 23 will become head chef of Ramsay’s restaurant in Foxwoods and will also take home a prize of $250,000.

In the premiere episode of “Hell’s Kitchen” on Thursday, Ramsey asked the 18 contestants to create a signature dish in 40 minutes that represented who they are as chefs. Ramsey would then score the dishes on a scale of 1-5. The contestants were divided into two teams — nine female chefs are in the Red Team, with season 17 winner Michelle Tribble as their the sous chef, and nine male chefs are in the Blue Team, with James Avery as their sous chef.

For the first challenge, Elbaum cooked a handmade pappardelle pasta dish with an umami cream sauce that had mushrooms, ricotta cheese, lime zest, and scallions. Ramsey complimented Elbaum on the perfectly cooked pasta and the flavors in the dish, which he gave four points. However, Elbaum’s Blue Team lost the challenge overall. The Red Team was awarded the opportunity to dine at the Hell’s Kitchen restaurant in Foxwoods Resort Casino, along with Ramsey himself, while the Blue Team was forced to work in the kitchen cleaning dishes, and unloading and stocking deliveries.

Elbaum previously said he had dreamed of being a contestant on “Hell’s Kitchen.”

“When I was a little kid, I used to watch Gordon Ramsey on ‘Hell’s Kitchen.’ I really wanted to be there. I saw myself doing it,” he shared with the blog YeahThatsKosher. “I felt honored to be selected, but it’s all because of Hashem. I used to say that one day I’d be on TV cooking with Gordon Ramsey. People looked at me like I was joking. It was like a kid who says they are going to be an astronaut and go to space.”

He also revealed that he visited the gravesite of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the day before filming “Hell’s Kitchen” and the day after the show finished because “it was my way of showing how thankful I was for the opportunity.”

“Hell’s Kitchen” airs on Fox on Thursday nights at 8 pm ET, and episodes will stream on Hulu the next day.

The post Jewish Chef Competes on ‘Hell’s Kitchen’ With Star of David Necklace first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Israeli Forces Have Carried Out Raids in Lebanon for Months to Foil Hezbollah Invasion Plan, Military Says

Smoke billows amid ongoing hostilities between Hezbollah and Israeli forces, as seen from Tyre, southern Lebanon, Oct. 1, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Aziz Taher

Israeli forces have been carrying out raids into southern Lebanon for months, uncovering Hezbollah tunnels and weapon caches under homes and uncovering invasion plans by the Islamist terrorist group, Israeli military spokesman Daniel Hagari said on Tuesday.

Hagari said the details were being declassified, hours after Israel announced a ground operation against the Iran-backed Hezbollah in southern Lebanon.

Dozens of such operations had uncovered detailed plans by Hezbollah to enter Israel and carry out an attack similar to the one led by the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas in southern Israel on Oct. 7 last year.

“Our soldiers entered Hezbollah’s underground infrastructure; exposed Hezbollah’s hidden weapons caches and seized and destroyed the weapons including advanced, Iranian-made weapons,” Hagari said.

The findings and evidence discovered under homes in villages in southern Lebanon during the raids will be presented to the international community, Hagari said.

Hagari showed videos filmed on troops’ body-cameras from what he said were Hezbollah tunnels under three Lebanese villages that lie across the border from three Israeli towns. The forces also found maps marking Israeli communities and army posts, he said.

“The operations that we de-classified tonight are only a small number of dozens of operations that we will reveal going forward, including the destruction of Hezbollah’s strategic assets and capabilities,” he said.

Hagari said that the ground raids would continue until tens of thousands of uprooted Israelis living near the border are able to return safely to their homes, but that the military’s aim was to complete them as fast as they can.

“We’re not going to Beirut. We’re not going to the cities in southern Lebanon. We are focusing on the area of those villages next to our border,” said Hagari.

The post Israeli Forces Have Carried Out Raids in Lebanon for Months to Foil Hezbollah Invasion Plan, Military Says first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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US Has Indications Iran Preparing to Launch Ballistic Missile Attack on Israel, White House Official Says

Unidentified men carrying a model of Iran’s first-ever hypersonic missile, Fattah, past a mosque during a gathering to celebrate a failed Iranian attack on Israel, in Tehran, Iran, on April 15, 2024. Photo: Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Reuters Connect

The United States has indications that Iran is preparing to imminently launch a ballistic missile attack against Israel that could be at least as large as a strike that Tehran staged earlier this year, US officials said on Tuesday.

The United States is actively supporting preparations to defend Israel against a new Iranian missile attack, a senior White House official said.

“A direct military attack from Iran against Israel will carry severe consequences for Iran,” the official said.

A second US official said that the Iranian strike could be as large or potentially bigger than one that Tehran launched with missiles and drones in April.

That attack was in retaliation for what Iran called an Israeli strike on its Damascus consulate that killed seven Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps officers, including two senior commanders.

Iran’s mission to the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The US warning of a looming Iranian strike followed Israel‘s announcement that its forces staged raids into southern Lebanon in a limited incursion as it pursues two weeks of strikes against Hezbollah terrorists that have killed the Iran-backed group’s leader and senior commanders.

Israeli leaders have vowed to pursue operations against the terrorists until it is safe for civilians to return to their homes in northern Israel from which they were evacuated after Hezbollah began missile strikes on Oct. 8, a day after Hamas’ assault into Israel.

The Hamas assault triggered the ongoing Israeli offensive that has devastated Gaza.

The US military on Sunday warned Iran against expanding the conflict and said it was increasing air support capabilities in the region and putting troops on increased readiness.

The post US Has Indications Iran Preparing to Launch Ballistic Missile Attack on Israel, White House Official Says first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Mexico’s Sheinbaum Takes Office, Making History as First Jewish Woman President

Mexico’s President-elect Claudia Sheinbaum in Mexico City, Mexico, Sept. 25, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Raquel Cunha

When Claudia Sheinbaum takes her oath of office on Tuesday, formally becoming Mexico’s first Jewish woman president, she will adopt a new government logo that nods to the aspirations of young girls.

“A young Mexican woman will be the emblem of Mexico’s government,” Sheinbaum wrote a day earlier in a post on social media, unveiling the logo showing a young woman in profile hoisting a Mexican flag, her hair pulled back into a ponytail not unlike the incoming president’s signature look.

Sheinbaum has embraced her historic feat in one of Latin America’s more socially conservative countries, which until now has been ruled by a series of 65 men since winning its independence from Spain two centuries ago.

The former mayor of the sprawling Mexican capital, Sheinbaum has been bolstered by the popularity of outgoing leftist President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, her political benefactor going back nearly a quarter century.

But as the former climate scientist steps out of her predecessor’s shadow to lead the world’s largest Spanish-speaking nation, Sheinbaum will also face doubts and opposition from critics alarmed by the outgoing president’s 11th-hour reform drive.

Enacted last month, the reforms included a judicial overhaul that will over the next three years replace all of the country’s judges with new jurists elected by popular vote.

“Our hard-won democracy will be transformed, for all practical purposes, into a one-party autocracy,” wrote former President Ernesto Zedillo in a Sunday guest essay for Britain’s Economist Magazine.

Critics of Lopez Obrador and Sheinbaum fear their ruling Morena party has too much power, and that democratic checks on executive power will be undermined.

The judicial overhaul’s implementation will fall to Sheinbaum, who will also face a widening government budget deficit that could crimp popular welfare spending and costly crime-fighting initiatives at a time when the economy is only expected to grow modestly.

The 62-year-old Sheinbaum promised continuity on the campaign trail, and now faces the balancing act of advancing Lopez Obrador’s state-centric economic polices, especially over natural resources such as oil and minerals, while also making progress on issues seen as his weak points like the environment and security.

She also makes history as the first president of Jewish heritage in the overwhelmingly Roman Catholic country.

A BIGGER LANDSLIDE

Sheinbaum’s inauguration caps an unlikely four-decade climb that has taken the daughter of activist academics to the presidential palace.

Six years ago, she made history as Mexico City’s first elected woman mayor. Until she stepped down last year to run for president, Sheinbaum was known as a data-driven manager, winning plaudits for reducing the megacity’s homicide rate by half, by boosting security spending on an expanded police force with higher salaries.

She has pledged to replicate the strategy across Mexico, where drug cartels exert widespread influence.

Sheinbaum has also promised to continue generous social spending on old-age pensions and youth scholarships, even though the government’s 2024 fiscal deficit is estimated at nearly 6 percent of gross domestic product.

While she has expressed interest growing renewable energy projects, she has also said she will ensure the dominance of Mexico’s state-owned oil and power companies while opposing any privatizations.

In 1995, Sheinbaum earned her doctorate in energy engineering from the National Autonomous University of Mexico, and then pursued an academic career, including a stint on the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which later shared a Nobel Peace Prize with former US Vice President Al Gore.

She launched her political career in 2000, when Lopez Obrador, then-Mexico City’s newly elected mayor, tapped her to be his environmental chief, tasked with improving the smoggy capital’s air quality, highways and public transport.

Sheinbaum served as the chief spokesperson for Lopez Obrador’s first campaign for president in 2006, which he narrowly lost.

In 2015, she was elected to run Mexico City’s largest borough, Tlalpan, and became the capital’s mayor three years later. That was the same year that Lopez Obrador’s third bid for the presidency ended in his own triumph, winning by a margin of more than 17 million votes.

Last June, Sheinbaum bested her mentor’s margin of victory, polling more than 19 million votes ahead of her closest competitor, who was also a woman.

The post Mexico’s Sheinbaum Takes Office, Making History as First Jewish Woman President first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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