Easiest. Rosh Hashanah dinner. Ever.

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Sheet-pan apricot Dijon chicken with Brussels sprouts and potatoes. Photosvia JTA
Sheet-pan apricot Dijon chicken with Brussels sprouts and potatoes.
Photo via JTA

Some people take great pride and pleasure in planning their Rosh Hashanah menus for weeks or months in advance, chugging away at kugels and cakes and soup to put in the freezer. I know my grandmother and Aunt Ruth both did their High Holidays cooking all summer so they would be “ready.”

But not everyone cooks for 20 people or enjoys the toil and preparation of holiday cooking for weeks on end. And for those people, this is for you.

Traditional Jewish New Year flavors of apple and pomegranate can show up in unexpected places — like sangria, which is a perfect, easy choice for entertaining, since you can make a large batch and chill until ready to serve. And even a simple roast chicken becomes special for the holiday with an apricot mustard makeover and crispy roast potatoes.

You can keep your preparations and flavors simple while serving up a sweet, delicious and deceptively impressive spread for family and friends.
Apple pomegranate sangria

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Sangria is the perfect drink to serve for Rosh Hashanah — it’s supposed to be sweet and is perfect paired with two traditional flavors of the holiday. You can use whatever wine you have lying around, or change things up with red wine if you prefer.

Ingredients
1 bottle white wine such as sauvignon blanc or pinot grigio (or moscato if you like very sweet wine)
1 cup pomegranate juice
4 ounces vodka (optional)
1 lemon, sliced
1 apple, cored and sliced
1 1/2 cups ginger ale or club soda
Pomegranate seeds (optional)

Directions

Place sliced apple and lemons in a sealable container. Add 1/2 cup pomegranate juice, 1/2 cup wine and vodka (optional). Refrigerate overnight.

When ready to serve, place fruit and liquid in a large carafe. Add remaining wine and pomegranate juice. Top with ginger ale or club soda to your liking. Serve chilled or with ice.

Optional: For a special presentation, make pomegranate seed ice cubes by adding a few seeds into each section of an ice cube tray. Fill with water or pomegranate juice and freeze overnight. When ready to serve, add 1 or 2 ice cubes in each guest’s glass, or all the ice cubes to the carafe of sangria.

Sheet-pan apricot Dijon chicken with Brussels sprouts and potatoes

Meat

Sheet pan dinners are all the rage this year and with good reason: Throw all your ingredients on one large sheet pan and then pop it in the oven. Your cleanup is reduced without sacrificing deliciousness. This recipe can easily be doubled to feed a larger crowd.

Ingredients
1 whole chicken
1 pound small red or Yukon gold potatoes, halved
1 pint Brussels sprouts, trimmed and halved
1/4 cup apricot jam
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon brown sugar
2 tablespoons olive oil
2 tablespoons orange juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
6 garlic cloves

Directions

Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

Cut chicken along the backside, removing spine. Flatten and lay on top of sheet pan.

In a small bowl, mix together apricot jam, mustard, brown sugar, olive oil, orange juice, salt and pepper.

Spread around three-quarters of the seasoning mixture on top of and under the skin of the chicken; reserve one quarter.

Spread potatoes on one side of the pan, Brussels sprouts on the other. Drizzle potatoes and Brussels sprouts with olive oil, salt and pepper. Add whole, unpeeled garlic cloves to the tray, alongside the potatoes and Brussels sprouts.

After 30 minutes, check on Brussels sprouts and, if caramelized to your liking, remove and set aside. Toss potatoes to ensure even cooking and place back into oven for another 25-30 minutes.

Remove from oven and spread remaining seasoning on top of chicken.

Cut chicken into quarters. Serve immediately.

Shannon Sarna is the editor of The Nosher.

—The Nosher via JTA

Thenosher.com food blog offers new and classic Jewish recipes and food news.

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