Pardes’ Chef Wendel Featured in the Forward

Forward

Kosher restaurants are not usually known for taking culinary risks. In response to guests’ demands, kosher chefs tend to play it safe. But Moshe Wendel, chef and owner of Pardes restaurant, in Brooklyn’s hip Boerum Hill neighborhood, is no ordinary kosher chef. And he doesn’t run your typical kosher restaurant.

Pardes serves fresh, seasonal and nuanced dishes — like beef cheek pizza — which change almost daily, opening kosher diners up to new kinds of food. And it’s noticeably un-frum location has opened religious customers up to a new Brooklyn neighborhood.

Wendel — who became religious through Chabad five years ago — admits that his original plan for Pardes was to cook more traditional meat dishes like steaks and burgers. But his wife and partner in the restaurant, Shana — who like her husband, once worked in the non-kosher restaurant world and became religious later in life — steered him against it.

She knew that he had perfected all kinds of food in the “regular world,” and wanted him to show what he had learned. “She tried my food and said it wasn’t as good as the stuff I was making when I cooked treyf,” said Wendel.

“When you become religious you lower your expectations for what you’re going to do in the kitchen. That’s not necessarily a bad thing. Being a chef is a very rough job, and I wanted something low stress. But my wife thought I was selling myself short. Now I cook what I really want to be cooking,” he said. Though he can’t use the cheese or butter he used use in his meat dishes, Wendel thinks the food he’s making now is better. “I think I’m more in tune with food now than ever before.”

Wendel, 32, attended a culinary apprenticeship program in Pennsylvania and then cooked around the South of France before moving on to mostly French restaurants in the Philadelphia area. He eventually ran the kitchen at the ever-popular Django restaurant in Philadelphia.

When he became religious, his attention turned toward kosher food. In March 2010, he helped open Basil Pizza & Wine Bar in Crown Heights, which is known for blending gourmet and religious sensibilities in a neighborhood where kosher restaurants are anything but inventive.

In October, Wendel broke away to open Pardes. “It’s just like any Brooklyn bistro, it just happens to be kosher,” Wendel said.

Wendel described the neighborhood — about ten minutes from where his wife grew up — as “Jewish no-man’s land.” But he thinks that that’s part of the restaurant’s appeal. “It’s so off-the-beaten path that people feel they can relax. Jewish neighborhoods can be overwhelming,” he said.

“People are not going to travel from [the traditionally religious neighborhoods of] Flatbush or Crown Heights to Boerum Hill, and wait days for reservations to have a well done burger,” he said.

Wendel alters his menu almost every day depending on what’s fresh, and serves diners dishes rarely seen in the kosher world, such as a salt cod “crab cake,” and duck-stuffed aroncini (Italian fried saffron rice balls). He recently put a candied eggplant on his tasting menu.

The restaurant uses free-range chickens (“more humane and tastier,” he said) and much of his produce is organic (“it’s higher quality and more interesting”).

Despite his forward-thinking approach to food, Wendel’s not taking any shortcuts when it comes to kashrut. His restaurant is under the supervision of the Orthodox Union. He plays mostly Jewish music, though he’ll play secular music if someone in the band is Jewish. The restaurant is outfitted with tzedakah boxes and siddurs. A photo of the rebbe was the first thing he put in the restaurant, he said.

The restaurant’s name, Pardes, means orchard in Hebrew, but it also has a Kabalistic meaning — Pardes is an acronym for the four levels of learning torah (Peshat, Remez, Derash and Sod). “Chabad Chasidish is meant to be the ultimate level, combining all four of them,” Wendel said.

“I am a Chasidic Jew. This is my Chabad house. In my Chabad house, we show that kosher food can be great. It doesn’t have to be what you think it is.”

This non-traditional way of presenting traditional food seems to be paying off, with rave reviews and filled seat. If you don’t have a reservation at the 34-seat restaurant, you probably won’t get in.

When asked whether he plans to expand to another location, Wendel said he’s first focusing on perfecting Pardes.

” I think the end goal might be to open another location. I want the seats to be full in Pardes for a year, and then everything else will come after that. Nothing’s more laughable than inexperienced restaurateurs who open new places too soon.”

And, while the first few months have been good for Wendel, getting to where he is now wasn’t easy. The Wendels ran out of money and leveraged their house against the restaurant. When it came to opening day, they had no money to buy food and wine. “Thank god, our mothers pitched in the final money. If we had not been packed since the minute we opened up, we would have been closed,” he said.

“Crown Heights came out for us, Flatbush came next. I think God paid us back in spades.”

9 Comments

  • Jewish dude

    Lets eat and judge for our self i’m always open for improvement.
    And lets support our kosher restaurants.

  • Pardes

    I love the food but not waiting for it. It’s a great restaurant but they have to minimize the lengthy wait times between ordering and serving.

  • ADDRESS PLEASE?.

    Where are you situated. What subway or bus routes are near to PARDES, FROM CROWN hEIGHTS, plus your address please, thankyou?.

  • hungry and wating

    been there twice, both time had to wait almost one hour for the main course and 45 minutes for appetizers. once the food came it was very good, but i will not be returning before i hear that waiting time has improved.

  • es

    Best experience I have ever had at a kosher restaurant was at Pardes. Great to see then getting the good press they deserve.

  • Steven L.

    Hungry and waiting: It seems like you are employed by Basil restuarant and always trying to ruin moshe’s name and reputation. Get a life! and want to ruin Pardes reputation. I eat there 2-3 times a week and I have no problems!

  • anonymous

    the place is to small ! when i went there i felt that it was one big conversation with everyone listening in! But they did have good food.

  • Howard from LI

    Food was amazing. i eat out all the time and i must say the travel to brooklyn was well worth it. i was amazed at the quality of food served. the plating was comparable to any top rated non-kosher eatery. for those upset by the wait, try going to lavo, lion, cipriani or any top end non-kosher restaurant in the city and you will experience the definition of wait! it takes time to prepare good food!