Spinoza, on the other hand, dined sparingly because he believed that God existed in everything and it's intimidating to wolf down a knish if you think you're ladling mustard onto the First Cause of All Things. |
The folded pizza slice, the hot dog and the crusty knish have a built-in mobility that lets hungry New Yorkers eat on the street. |
It is temperature themed: hot dog, hot pretzel, hot sausage, hot knish, cold soda. |
The Cornish pasty is, indeed, a kissing cousin of the knish. |
Seiffert's free verse is not as good as her debonair balladry, nor are the poems of Elijah Hay equal to those of Emanuel Morgan or Anne Knish. |
On the streets of New York, the knish is a piping hot square of fried mashed potatoes served with a ribbon of mustard. |