Secaucus, NJ – The Manischewitz Story

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    Secaucus, NJ – One of the world’s top matza manufacturers got started with a simple premise: “I’m going to bake matzas this year. …We’ll see how it goes.”

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    That’s what 19th century Rabbi Dov Behr Manischewitz is said to have told his wife after they arrived in America, Jewish immigrants from Lithuania struggling to survive and to create something new.

    In 1888, he founded the company that revolutionized production of the unleavened bread at the core of Jewish ritual meals, turning it into a mass-marketed, packaged product.

    The weeklong Passover feast, starting at sundown on Wednesday, April 8, this year, marks the ancient Hebrews’ hurried escape from Egypt, before their bread had time to rise. Hence, the flat, unleavened matza.

    Manischewitz now is America’s largest producer of processed kosher food, making not only their staple matza but everything from salad dressing and low-calorie borscht to matza ball mix and wasabi horseradish. The company was run by the family until 1990, when it was sold for $42.5 million.

    The Manischewitz wine ad slogan, “Man, oh, Manischewitz,” even became so popular that Apollo 17 astronaut Gene Cernan was heard exclaiming it during his 1973 moonwalk.

    “Manischewitz changed forever the way we eat at Passover,” says Joan Nathan, cookbook author and host of the PBS television series “Jewish Cooking in America.”

    The old-fashioned, uneven rounds, made slowly by hand for centuries, were replaced with today’s perfect, square crackers churned out by machines that produce up to 4,000 pounds of matza per hour.

    To Manischewitz’s great-granddaughter, the family firm represented much more than food or fortune.

    “Food brings up such a response from the heart in people,” says Laura Manischewitz Alpern in a telephone interview. “It’s the connection between the food we have for Passover and the wealth of Jewish culture that’s behind it.”

    The 63-year-old Manischewitz heir now lives in Switzerland, where she celebrates the holiday with matza imported from France; she says Manischewitz is not available where she lives, in Geneva.

    Dov Behr was not born a Manischewitz – some say he was an Abramson – and there are mysterious stories about how he took the new name. One version is that he purchased the passport of a dead man named Manischewitz to gain passage to America, another that he did it to avoid the 20-year military service required by the Russian czar.

    Once here, Manischewitz plunged into an American balancing act: mixing technology with the spirit of Jewish ritual.

    He started his production in Cincinnati, at first baking in his basement and supplying only his family and friends. But the young rabbi was ambitious, soon building a factory and introducing technology that came with the industrial revolution.

    “He was a little hot-headed and he ran into trouble very quickly,” says his great-granddaughter, author of the book “Manischewitz, the Matza Family: The Making of an American Icon.”

    Fellow rabbis insisted that matza be made as it always was painstakingly by hand and in less than the 18 minutes it takes for the mixed batter to begin to rise, according to rabbinic law.

    Instead, after the turn of the last century, the forward-looking rabbi created the matza-making machines and replaced older coal stoves with gas-fired ovens. The finished product rolled onto conveyor belts and was packaged for shipment worldwide.

    “Dov Behr did for matza what Henry Ford did for automobiles,” says Rabbi Yaakov Horowitz, who supervises all kosher operations for Manischewitz.
    Dov Behr marketed his matza by traveling to small towns and introducing himself to observant Jews. “He prayed alongside them, so they would see that the man behind the matza was to be trusted,” says Alpern.

    She left her native Cincinnati as a teenager, living in New Jersey before moving to Israel, where she met her husband while both were studying at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. They settled in Geneva, where she worked as a United Nations librarian until her retirement several years ago.

    After Dov Behr died in 1914, his five sons took over the business. The Manischewitz Company – now owned by Alabama-based Harbinger Capital Partners and smaller shareholders – has a new $14 million matza plant in Newark, N.J., that will ship more than 3 million boxes of kosher-for-Passover matza this year.

    The chief competitors are the kosher giant Streit’s, plus several large companies in Israel as well as artisanal bakeries still making matza the old-fashioned way.

    Alpern, of course, prefers Manischewitz, “which really is at the center of Jewish culture in America.”


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    24 Comments
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    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    So – the mitzva of bakng matzot were taken over by a bunch of goyim trying to capture an ethnic market?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    What they fail to note is how some have made big dollars ripping off yidden by making a fetish or chumrah around so called “schmura matzohs” or hand-made matzohs, which can cost 500 percent more than regular matzoh which is clearly good enough even for most gadolim.

    Man oh man
    Man oh man
    14 years ago

    Dov Behr was send to America by his Community as a Schocet to serve the new jewish Lithuania community in Cincinnati then he needed matzos for Passover so he stared the matzo bakery

    Yank
    Yank
    14 years ago

    Let’s agree on one thing we can all eat Manischewitz products MOST of the year, all but 8 days.

    joe
    joe
    14 years ago

    Manischewitz is the same company as Mishpacha, they have the best Matzo the best, I buy it all the time

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    acording to kabalah matazah is called a food of emunah that is why so many people choose to be extra machmir on matzah

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    just to clarify; machine matzah is fine for 346 days of the year, and shmurah matzah is definetely the best option for pesach. only on that can someone say over it “leshaim mitzvas matzah”

    Robroy560
    Robroy560
    14 years ago

    A friend of mine has smicha and he usually only eats machine shmura at the sedarim. Why? Supposedly one year their was a big problem with hand shmura. Apparently ‘air pockets’ were created when it was baked. So it created an issue if it became chameitz or not. Machine shmura is almost always perfect. So, my friend stopped buying hand shmura.

    It’s also less expensive and you’ll probably get a full box of unbroken pieces.

    Chaim S.
    Chaim S.
    14 years ago

    The issurim and heterim are all well known and documented. As far as gedolim? I think that Horav Yonesen Shteif Ztzl of the Viener community is gadol enough. Many very ultra orthodox Viener yidden still use Viener machine made matzos. Granted that the process is much different than Mani or Streits or the Israeli machines, but keep in mind that its still machine made. What many seem to forget is that Yiddishkeit, that means Orthodox Judaism, is full of debates on halachas, with seemingly opposite sides. The ones who are maikel have plenty of big halachic artlliery on their side. Walk into any Pesach store today and you’ll see products for Pesach that were unheard of even 20 years ago. And many frum yidden don’t buy these products? Why? They aren’t kosher for pesach? No, because they want to be machmir on Pesach. How about we stop having personal agenda problems and feeling holier than thou and understanding other sides in Orthodox Jewry and maybe then Moshiach will come during the month of Geulah.