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Remembering

My Dad, Ivan Rosenstrach (1936-2023)

By January 2, 2024January 4th, 2024190 Comments

Greetings to my dear eaters and readers. I hope you all had joyful and meaningful holidays however you celebrate. I write this first newsletter of 2024 with a deeply heavy heart โ€” my father, Ivan Rosenstrach, died on December 25, 2023. His life was rich with family and community and friendship and we spent the last week of the year celebrating him. If you are interested, here is my fatherโ€™s officialย obituaryย and below is the eulogy I read at his funeral.


One of the first things I think of when I think of my father is the Larchmont Train Station. Iโ€™m not sure if itโ€™s still the same today, but back in the 1990s, when I would take Metro North up from New York City to visit my parents in the suburb where I grew up, there was a system for picking up people at the station. Cars had to wait in a specific lane and space was kind of tight so that pick-up line would often snake all the way up the hill, out of the parking lot, and around the corner into town. It could sometimes get hectic. But in the ten years that I lived in the city and got off that train to visit, there was never a question which car would be first in line. The driverโ€™s side window would be rolled down and Dadโ€™s lanky arm would be waving to help me find him, as if I didnโ€™t know exactly where to find him, as if heโ€™d ever been anything other than first in line, ahead of all those suckers who only allowed themselves five minutes to make the five-minute drive to the station.

My father was the most dependable person Iโ€™ve ever known. His love language was โ€œbeing there.โ€ His dependability was so much a part of who he was that, as a kid, I didnโ€™t think to notice it or call it anything. Whose father wasnโ€™t staying awake all night waiting for the midnight call that would inevitably come from his daughter, still too scared to make it through the sleepover? Whose dad wasnโ€™t sitting at his midtown office ready to drop everything in order to meet his daughter at the Oyster Bar for lunch? In 1993, when my car broke down at exit 58 on the Long Island Expressway, I didnโ€™t call triple A or a towing service. I called my dad and waited on the side of the highway until he arrived an hour later. My dad being there for us has always been like the sun rising in the morning. It was as sure a thing as I ever knew.

When I was growing up, I could count on Dad walking in the back door every night after work just before 7:00. He never missed dinner. The moment he walked in was the moment we all started gravitating to the kitchen to start tearing off pieces of the baguette he always picked up at Chatsworth bakery on his walk home from the station. His arrival, announced by the creaky swing of the back screen door, was the signal that dinner was about to be served. At least it was until I was in fourth grade. At that point, my mom decided she wanted to go to law school, a decision that was 100% supported by my father. Iโ€™m sure there was nonstop negotiating going on behind the scenes to make sure our busy little lives still ran smoothly, but the only thing I remember was the way the two of them coordinated dinner for us on the three nights a week when Mom had to attend class. To be clear: my Dad was not a cook. His only specialities, at that point, were pasta with โ€œbutter sauceโ€ and the drive-thru at McDonalds. But my mother somehow taught him how to make chicken cutlets. Before my dad came home from work, Mom would set up dredging stations with three platesโ€”one for the flour, one for the egg, one for the bread crumbs. Dad started taking an earlier train to accommodate her new schedule, and as soon as he walked in, heโ€™d take off his coat and she put hers on, then kiss each other hello and goodbye. Dad would then finish what my mom had started, moving the cutlets from plate to plate, then finally into the hot skillet. From a ten-year-oldโ€™s perspective, my parentsโ€™ do-si-do routine was seamless, and their acts of sacrifice for the family expected. But from my perspective now, I feel lucky to have had a front-row seat to such an equality-minded marriage. My father was ahead of his time in that way. He was of course a provider and a protector, and he was a beloved and respected colleague at work, but his job didnโ€™t define him. Being there for us did. It was his lifeblood and his joy.

Dad was Find My Phone before there was Find My Phone. At any given moment, he knew where all his children were and how and when they were coming home, and could never feel at ease until he had a handle on the logistics. Before Iโ€™d go on vacation, he would check in, not to say bon voyage, but to find out what airline we were flying and what the flight number was. I am 52 years old, and it was only this past year when I stopped texting him, โ€œlanded,โ€ after my plane touched ground. When my brother, sister, and I were teenagers and started driving places on our own, it was not unusual to find him staring out our kitchen window, standing outside our house, sometimes even standing in the middle of the street, looking in the general direction of where the car might be coming from, as though his watchful presence might manifest his childrensโ€™ safe arrival.

He had the worst handwriting, but wrote the best toasts. He knew exactly what to say at the Thanksgiving table, at the Passover seder, for an anniversary speech celebrating the love of his life, my mother. I got married 26 years ago, and to this day guests who were at my wedding still come up to me and say they remember the speech he gave, specifically a story he told about my husband, Andy. I want to read one paragraph from it so you get a sense of how well he wrote, and so you can hear his voice and humor. I will refrain from imitating his old-school Bronx accent, but please try to picture him in his tux, beaming with happiness at the mic:

โ€œAndy earned his stripes during one snowy night in the blizzard of 1993. Andy was still at Amherst, Jenny had graduated and was living at home. She wanted to visit him but instead of driving like usual, she was going to take the train to Springfield, where Andy was scheduled to meet her. Some five hours into this trip and after listening to a lot of alarming weather reports it became apparent to Jody and myself, who tend to be alarmists by nature, that it would be near impossible for Jenny to meet Andy. I immediately sprung into action, warming up our old carโ€ฆwhich didnโ€™t move too well in the snow. I was all set to once again be the rescuer. In our minds, the Springfield train station was very Dickensian and we imagined that Jenny was about to arrive to find herself in the midst of all sorts of unsavory characters. We were in a panic. Then the phone rang. It was Jenny. Two words: Andyโ€™s hereโ€ฆAndyโ€™s here.โ€

He went on to speak about a little piece of him feeling sad that he was not the white knight that day, but he made it clear how happy he was that I had chosen well, that I had chosen someone I could count on. I mean chosen someone he could count on.

My father had so many passions and enthusiasms and Iโ€™d like to just mention a few, with the warning that an unhealthy percentage of them fall under the dessert category. He loved Russian literature, Russian history, pretty much any book about World War II. The John Keats poem โ€œOde on a Grecian Urn.โ€ Dr. Zhivago. The movie โ€œJudgment at Nuremberg.โ€ Corduroy pants, cashmere sweaters, turtlenecks, and those fur-lined Cossack hats that made him look like a Russian senator. Mahlerโ€™s Ninth. The opera. Simon and Garfunkel. Judy Collins singing โ€œSend in the Clowns.โ€ Joe Dimaggio, Clyde Frazier. The Lou Gehrig retirement speech where Gehrig famously said โ€œtoday I feel like the luckiest man on earth.โ€ A full tank of gas. A joke at his expense. Walking into town for a cup of coffee. Emptying the dishwasher. Setting the breakfast table before he went to sleep at night. Going to the US Open every year. Summer evenings on the tennis courts with mom. A hot dog and a side of potato puffs from Walterโ€™s. Temptee cream cheese on a plain toasted bagel, Manhattan clam chowder at the Oyster Bar in Grand Central, and those green marzipan bars from Lilac in New York. Babka (as long as it was chocolate and not cinnamon; baklava (as long as it was pistachio and not walnut), a box of Mallomars, a freshly baked challah with golden raisins. Anything from Entenmmanโ€™s but especially the discontinued Sour Cream and Chocolate Chip Nut Loaf. Dove ice cream bars, Mallomars, and halvah. Dark chocolate, milk chocolate, Cadbury milk and fruit bars, chocolate truffle cake, Mallomars, my momโ€™s chocolate pudding pie. Mallomars. Are you sensing a theme here?


My dad had the sweetest face. He had Touretteโ€™s syndrome, which meant that this sweet face would twitch involuntarily. When I was a kid, maybe 9 or 10, I was in the kitchen and overheard my mother and my sister talking about his facial tic. I donโ€™t remember the specifics of what they said, but I remember being confused. Dad has a facial tic, I asked? They laughed at how clueless I was. I had no idea. I never saw any tic. I never saw anything but my dadโ€™s kind eyes, his big warm smile, his handsome face. I realize that itโ€™s not unusual for parentsโ€™ eyes to light up when they see their children, but the way he did this was still remarkable to me. In the 1990s, my sister and I both worked within seven blocks of his office on Third Avenue in midtown Manhattan. This was a dream come true for him since he could count on seeing us for lunch at least once a week. I bring this up here because I can remember walking towards whatever corner I was meeting him on, watching for the moment heโ€™d see me coming, because his reaction was so predictable and so comforting. You could tell from his eyes how he felt such delight, such pride in me, in all of us. My brother and sister touched upon the story of how he felt like he โ€œwon the lotteryโ€ in life and it was as if every time he saw me โ€“ or any of his kids or grandkidsย  โ€“ he was realizing his own good fortune for the first time all over again. I still remember the day I was running out the door to visit him in Larchmont and at the last minute grabbed a few copies of my daughtersโ€™ official school photos that were on the kitchen counter. They were the wallet-size ones with the cheesy background and I grabbed them almost as an afterthought. When I handed them to him, he didnโ€™t just look at them. He sat down, put on his reading glasses, and studied them. โ€œIsnโ€™t that something?โ€ he said, shaking his head. And he was right. It was something. It is something. His love for his family was profound and real and beautiful and I feel so lucky that I had him in my life โ€“ and that my whole family will have his love in our hearts forever. Wherever he is, I know heโ€™s looking out the window, waiting for us.

Thank you for reading.

190 Comments

  • Avatar Kristin says:

    So very sorry for your loss. I lost my mother last year, and I know how much it hurts to lose our beloved parents. But we were so lucky to have had these beautiful, loving people in our lives for so long โ€” and they are with us always, maybe even more after death than before. May you find peace and comfort.

  • Avatar Daniela says:

    Beautiful words, Jenny. I lost my dad in 2014 and I didnโ€™t feel I could eulogize him, for a number of reasons. This brought pangs to my heart, some because I envy you for having such a dependable and loving and PRESENT dad, and some because I wish I could have found the strength to say some good things about my dad. In any case, I feel like this kind of eulogy is something you must earn. You have to work for it. You put yourself out there and be vulnerable and share your love with your dear ones. Your dad was clearly special, and Iโ€™m sure he is feeling pretty glad that you were able to see him in just this way. xo

  • Avatar Lori says:

    Thank you for sharing your wonderful Dad with us! I feel inspired to continue to be his kind of parent to my kids.

  • Heidi says:

    Iโ€™m so sorry for this painful loss, Jenny. Thank you for sharing these beautiful things about your father. Iโ€™ve loved learning about him through your writing and cookbook โ€œstories,โ€ and was always impressed by the person he seemed to be. Losing a parent is like losing part of yourself. When I lost my mother a few years ago, it felt as through the whole cosmos changed course around me and that even my DNA was changed. Whatever it may feel like to you, let this first year be what it is and give yourself space and grace for all the weird ways grief tends to show up. May his memory be a blessing.

  • Avatar Michaela says:

    Whew, I am not much of a crier but I am sitting here smiling and teary at your stories of this beautiful man. What a giftโ€“thank you for sharing him with us.

  • Avatar Kate says:

    Jenny, That was a beautiful and touching tribute to your father. I think writing a eulogy for a parent must be one of the toughest things to do in the world, but you did such a lovely job. It brought tears to my eyes. I am so sorry for your loss.

  • Avatar Alicia Bartz says:

    Thank you for sharing this beautiful tribute. It reminds me of my own dependable dad, who we lost almost 8 years ago. Dependable is the most underrated big love. Iโ€™m sorry for your loss.

  • Avatar Karen says:

    Such a beautiful tribute, Jenny. Iโ€™m very sorry for your loss. What an inspiration to you and your family โ€“ he sounds like a truly remarkable man who will be missed by all. And Iโ€™m with him on the Mallomars โ€“ nothing better. Sending love to you and your family.

  • Avatar Betsy W. says:

    What a wonderful tribute to a man who was, obviously, a wonderful father. Thank you for sharing this with all of us and may his memory be a blessing to you and your whole family.

  • BethB says:

    Och Jenny, what a gorgeous tribute to him.

  • Avatar Rayna says:

    This is so beautiful, thank you for sharing. So glad you had his love and always will

  • Avatar Jessica says:

    Jenny, thank you for sharing your dad with us. Sending love to you and your entire family. My mom also loves mallomars (she stocks up before they go out of season). May his memory be a blessing.

  • Avatar Josh Hamermesh says:

    Hi Jenny,

    My sincere condolences on the loss of your father. I remember that epic speech he gave at your wedding! The man had a way with words and knew how to tell a good story. Your eulogy was a beautiful way to honor him. Many of the things you wrote about Ivan remind me of my father.

    I hope you are able to have a healthy mourning process and continue to honor your dadโ€™s memory.

    Thinking of you.

    Josh Hamermesh

  • Avatar Ellen says:

    Oh Jenny. Iโ€™m crying right now at this beautiful tribute of a wonderful man, husband, and father. May his memory be a blessing to you, your family, and all who knew him.

  • Avatar Lynn says:

    Jenny, what an incredibly beautiful tribute and what a great legacy he leaves. Praying for your family as you navigate the world without him.

  • Avatar Evan says:

    Thanks for sharing this, Jenny. Even though I never met your dad, your words conveyed a deep warmth. So, in that sense, I feel like I got to know him a little bit.

    When my parents pass on, I hope to write something just as meaningful.

    Thanks again for sharing. Thinking of you all!

  • Avatar Laura says:

    Oh, Jenny, I am so sorry for your loss. May his memory be a blessing to you and your family. What a beautiful tribute! You captured him so fully and gave us a glimpse at what a great person he was.

  • Avatar crislin says:

    This is so beautiful. Thank you for sharing. I am so sorry for your loss.

  • Avatar Noellen says:

    I am so sorry for your loss. Your tribute was beautiful. Sending you and your family love.

  • Avatar Catherine says:

    What beautiful tributes to your wonderful father.
    My sincere condolences to you and your entire family.

  • Avatar Leslie says:

    What an extraordinary man with a delightful family. I am so sorry for your loss but grateful to have the opportunity to hear these memories. Your words left me crying and smiling at the same time.

  • Avatar Maureen says:

    What a wonderful eulogy and remembrance of your sweet father. Lucky indeed, all of you to have someone like that. Thank you for sharing this with us. As I write this, my 27 year old is driving back to Boulder with his dog from Chicago and the holidays, and I am of course checking in with him to see how he is doing!! It never stopsโ€ฆ

  • Avatar Sarah Dawson says:

    Oh Jenny, losing our beloved papaโ€™s is so very hard. In those first grief-stricken weeks when I was mourning my dadโ€™s death in 2018, a friend told me that losing a beloved father is one of of the hardest things we must endure in this life and I found an odd comfort in that. I had lost him, in the earthly sense, but I was still breathing in and out. One of the last gifts he gave me was resilience. I am sure your father has passed the same onto you. Still, doesnโ€™t make it any easier. Sending you so much love and compassion as you walk this walk. I hope, like I was, you are able to find the beauty in this acute mourning. Holding your heart close to mine. xo

  • Avatar Tina says:

    My condolences Jenny! What beautiful words about your father! I love that you had such an amazing Dad!

  • Avatar brenda gaughan says:

    oh man iโ€™m in tears. what a lovely tribute to your father. i feel like i knew him after reading your beautiful eulogy. what an inspiration he was! iโ€™m so sorry for you and your whole family, but, iโ€™m reminded of my favorite saying for sympathy cards โ€“ itโ€™s adapted from โ€˜winnie the pooโ€™: how lucky am i to love someone who makes saying goodbye so hard? blessings to you and yours.

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