: square or triangular dumplings filled with ground meat or cheese, boiled or fried, and usually served in soup
Examples of kreplach in a Sentence
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Famous specialized in Jewish meals, at its peak serving a million kreplach and three million knishes a year.—Jeff Kleinman, Miami Herald, 1 Apr. 2025 The kreplach is the Jewish element that brings everything together.—Katie Chang, Forbes, 23 Dec. 2021 Last week, the store’s shelves were starting to look empty — but most were still laden with frozen beef kreplach, rows of cereal and oatmeal and neatly arranged vegetables under bright white fluorescent lights.—Jennifer Barrios, Washington Post, 28 Mar. 2018 For a heartier spin on Jewish penicillin, add egg noodles, white rice, or kreplach, dumplings made with ground beef and onion, to the chicken broth for $1.—Samantha Nelson, RedEye Chicago, 24 Jan. 2018 Located in the former Brooklyn Water Bagel Co. space at the Hooks Village complex, the Essen Room is fueled by good old-fashioned values, starting with the onsite cooking of such deli staples as knishes, kreplach and kugel.—Tim Smith, baltimoresun.com, 10 Jan. 2018 In one grouping, the diners — of Irish, German, Polish, Mexican, Cambodian and Italian descents — talked about a dumpling being a universal food, with multiple cultures having a version: pierogi, ravioli, empanadas, kreplach.—Natalie Pompilio, The Seattle Times, 24 June 2017 The dish evolved, spread from Italian shores, and gave rise to countless forms around the world: as kreplach for Rosh Hashanah, say, or breaded and deep-fried in St. Louis.—Katherine Lagrave, Condé Nast Traveler, 20 Mar. 2017