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Kosher foods

Kosher foods are foods that conform to the Jewish dietary regulations of kashrut (dietary law). The laws of kashrut apply to food derived from living creatures and kosher foods are restricted to certain types of mammals, birds and fish meeting specific criteria; the flesh of any animals that do not meet these criteria is forbidden by the dietary laws. Furthermore, kosher mammals and birds must be slaughtered according to a process known as shechita and their blood may never be consumed and must be removed from the meat by a process of salting and soaking in water for the meat to be permissible for use. All plant-based products, including fruits, vegetables, grains, herbs and spices, are intrinsically kosher, although certain produce grown in the Land of Israel is subjected to other requirements, such as tithing, before it may be consumed.

Kosher food also distinguishes between meat and dairy products. Meat products are those that comprise or contain kosher meat, such as beef, lamb or venison, kosher poultry such as chicken, goose, duck or turkey, or derivatives of meat, such as animal gelatin; non-animal products that are processed on equipment used for meat or meat-derived products are also considered to belong to this category. Dairy products are those which contain milk or any derivatives such as butter or cheese; non-dairy products that are processed on equipment used for milk or milk-derived products are also considered as belonging to this category. Because of this categorization, meat and milk or their respective derivatives are not combined in kosher foods, and separate equipment for the storage and preparation of meat-based and dairy-based foods is used in order for food to be considered kosher.

Another category of kosher food, called pareve contains neither meat, milk nor their derivatives; they include foods such as fish, eggs from permitted birds, produce, grains, fruit and other edible plants. They remain pareve if they are not mixed with or processed using equipment that is used for any meat or dairy products.

Because of the complexities of modern food manufacturing, kashrut agencies supervise or inspect the production of kosher foods and provide a certification called a hechsher to verify for kosher food consumers that it has been produced in accordance with Jewish law.

Jewish dietary law is primarily derived from Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14:1-21. Foods that may be consumed according to Jewish religious law are termed kosher (/ˈkʃər/) in English, from the Ashkenazi pronunciation of the Hebrew term kashér (כָּשֵׁר‎), meaning "fit" (in this context, fit for consumption). Foods that are not in accordance with Jewish law are called treif (/trf/; Yiddish: טרײף, derived from Hebrew: טְרֵפָה ṭərēfā) meaning "torn."

Permitted and forbidden animals edit

The Torah permits eating only those land animals that chew their cud and have cloven hooves.[1] Four animals, the hare, hyrax, camel, and pig, are specifically identified as being forbidden because they possess only one of the above characteristics: the hare, hyrax and camel are hindgut fermenters and chew their cud but do not have cloven hooves, while the pig has a cloven hoof but does not chew its cud.[2]

The Torah lists winged creatures that may not be consumed, mainly birds of prey, fish-eating water-birds, and bats. Certain domesticated fowl can be eaten, such as chicken, geese, quail, dove, and turkey.

The Torah permits only those fish which have both fins and scales to be eaten.[3] Monkfish is not considered kosher.[clarification needed] To comply with kosher requirements, a fish must have fins and easily detached scales; the scales of a sturgeon are extremely hard to remove, hence it is non-kosher.[citation needed] Other seafood considered non-kosher includes shellfish like clams, oysters, crabs and shrimp. There is also a risk of products like seaweed and kelp being contaminated by microscopic, non-kosher crustaceans.[4]

The Torah forbids two types of sherets (creeping things):

  • Earth crawlers, e.g. mouse, lizard[5]
  • Flying creeping things,[6] with four exceptions: Two types of locust, the cricket, and the grasshopper (translations of the species names vary).[7]

Animal products edit

In addition to meat, products of forbidden species and from unhealthy animals were banned by the Talmudic writers.[8] This included eggs (including fish roe),[9] as well as derived products such as jelly,[10] but did not include materials merely "manufactured" or "gathered" by animals, such as honey (although, in the case of honey from animals other than bees, there was a difference of opinion among the ancient writers).[11]

According to the rabbinical writers, eggs from ritually pure animals would always be prolate ("pointy") at one end and oblate ("rounded") at the other, helping to reduce uncertainty about whether consumption was permitted or not.[12]

Dairy products edit

The classic rabbinical writers imply that milk from an animal whose meat is kosher is also kosher. As animals are considered non-kosher if they are discovered to have been diseased after being slaughtered, this could make their milk retroactively non-kosher.

However, by adhering to the principle that the majority case overrules the exception, Jewish tradition continues to regard such milk as kosher, since statistically it is true that most animals producing such milk are kosher; the same principle is not applied to the possibility of consuming meat from an animal that has not been checked for disease.[13]

Rabbi Hershel Schachter argued that with modern dairy-farm equipment, milk from the minority of non-kosher cows is invariably mixed with that of the majority of kosher cows, thus invalidating the permissibility of consuming milk from a large dairy operation.[13] Many leading rabbis, however, rule milk permissible,[14] as do major kashrut authorities.[13]

Human breast milk edit

Breast milk from a woman is permitted.[15] However, authorities assert breast milk may be consumed directly from the breasts only by children younger than four (five if the child is ill), and children older than two were only permitted to continue to suckle if they had not stopped doing so for more than three consecutive days.[15]

Cheese edit

The situation of cheese is complicated as hard cheese often involves rennet, an enzyme that splits milk into curds and whey.

Many forms of rennet are derived from the stomach linings of animals, but since the 1990s rennet is often made recombinantly in microbes because it can be produced more efficiently[16] (though many artisanal cheeses and cheeses made in Europe still use animal rennet).

Because the rennet could be derived from animals, it could potentially be non-kosher. Rennet made recombinantly, or from the stomachs of kosher animals, if they have been slaughtered according to the laws of kashrut, can be kosher. Cheese made from plant-derived rennet can also be kosher.[17] Many authorities require that the cheese-making process follow certain stringencies to be kosher.

According to the Shulchan Aruch, a rabbinic decree (called gevinat akum) prohibits all cheese made by non-Jews without Jewish supervision, even if its ingredients are all kosher, because very frequently the rennet in cheese is not kosher.[18] Rabbeinu Tam[19] and some of the geonim[20] suggested that this decree does not apply in a location where cheese is commonly made with only kosher ingredients, a position that was practiced in communities in Narbonne[21] and Italy.[22]

Many contemporary Orthodox authorities do not follow this ruling, and hold that cheese requires formal kashrut certification to be kosher; some even argue this is necessary for cheese made with non-animal rennet. However, some such as Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik ate generic cheeses without certification.[23] Isaac Klein's tshuva authorized the use of cheese made from non-kosher rennet, and this is widely practised by observant Conservative Jews and Conservative institutions.[24]

Eggs edit

 
Jerusalem kugel made with egg noodle, caramelized sugar and black pepper

The eggs of kosher birds are kosher. Eggs are considered pareve despite being an animal product.[25]

Blood found in eggs edit

Occasionally blood spots are found within an egg, which can affect the kosher status of the egg. The halacha varies depending on whether or not there is a possibility of the egg being fertilized.

If the egg may have been fertilized, the Rishonim and Shulchan Aruch suggest a complex set of rules for determining whether the egg may be eaten;[26] among these rules, if blood appears on the yolk, the entire egg is forbidden.[27] To avoid the complexity of these rules, R' Moshe Isserles records a custom not to eat any such eggs with blood spots.[26]

If the egg was definitely unfertilized (laid by a hen kept isolated from roosters), many authorities (including Rabbis Moshe Feinstein and Ovadiah Yosef) rule that one may remove the blood spot and then eat the remainder of the egg.[26] This is the case nowadays, when battery eggs form the majority of available produce.[28]

Regarding the question of whether one must check an egg for blood spots, the Shulchan Aruch rules that one may eat hard-boiled eggs where checking is impossible.[29] R' Moshe Isserles adds that checking is not required, but that a custom exists to check eggs if they are cracked during the daytime (when blood could be seen).[29]

A contemporary Ashkenazi authority writes that while "halacha does not require" checking supermarket-bought eggs, "there is a minhag" to do so.[26] Nevertheless, eggs are not checked in commercial settings where doing so would be expensive.[26]

Gelatin edit

 
Kosher gummy bears

Gelatin is hydrolysed collagen,[30] the main protein in animal connective tissue, and therefore could potentially come from a non-kosher source, such as pig skin. Gelatin has historically been a prominent source of glue, finding uses from musical instruments to embroidery, one of the main historic emulsions used in cosmetics and in photographic film, the main coating given to medical capsule pills, and a form of food including jelly, trifle, and marshmallows; the status of gelatin in kashrut is consequently fairly controversial.

Due to the ambiguity over the source of individual items derived from gelatin, many Orthodox rabbis regard it as generally being non-kosher. However, Conservative rabbis[31] and several prominent Orthodox rabbis, including Chaim Ozer Grodzinski and Ovadia Yosef—the former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel—argue that gelatin has undergone such total chemical change and processing that it should not count as meat, and therefore would be kosher.[32]

Technically, gelatin is produced by separating the three strands in each collagen fiber's triple helix by boiling collagen in water. Rabbi David Sheinkopf, author of Gelatin in Jewish Law (Bloch 1982) and Issues in Jewish Dietary Laws (Ktav 1998), has published in-depth studies of the kosher uses of gelatin, as well as carmine and kitniyot.[33]

One of the main methods of avoiding non-kosher gelatin is to substitute gelatin-like materials in its place; substances with a similar chemical behaviour include food starch from tapioca, chemically modified pectins, and carrageenan combined with certain vegetable gums—guar gum, locust bean gum, xanthan gum, gum acacia, agar, and others. Although gelatin is used for several purposes by a wide variety of manufacturers, it has started to be replaced with these substitutes in a number of products, due to the use of gelatin also being a significant concern to vegans and vegetarians.

Today manufacturers are producing gelatin from the skins of kosher fish, circumventing many of these problems.[34]

Ritual slaughter edit

 
Kosher slaughter of a chicken

One of the few dietary laws appearing in Exodus prohibits eating the meat from animals that have been "torn by beasts";[35] a related law appears in Deuteronomy, prohibiting the consumption of anything that has died from natural causes.[36] While this law was primarily intended for the priests, it applied to all Israelites (but not "strangers").[37]

Traditional Jewish thought has expressed the view that all meat must come from animals that have been slaughtered according to Jewish law. These guidelines require the animal be killed by a single cut across the throat to a precise depth, severing both carotid arteries, both jugular veins, both vagus nerves, the trachea and the esophagus, no higher than the epiglottis and no lower than where cilia begin inside the trachea, causing the animal to bleed to death.

Some believe that this ensures the animal dies instantly without unnecessary suffering, but many animal-rights activists view the process as cruel, claiming that the animal may not lose consciousness immediately, and activists have called for it to be banned.[38][39] Animal science researcher Temple Grandin has stated that kosher slaughter, no matter how well performed, does not result in an instantaneous loss of consciousness, whereas stunning properly with a captive bolt is instantaneous.[40] She gives various times for loss of consciousness via kosher ritual slaughter, ranging from 15 to 90 seconds depending on measurement type and individual kosher slaughterhouse.[41]

To avoid tearing, and to ensure the cut is thorough, such slaughter is usually performed by a trained individual, with a large, razor-sharp knife, which is checked before each slaughter to ensure that it has no irregularities (such as nicks and dents); if irregularities are discovered, or the cut is too shallow, the meat is deemed non-kosher.

Rabbis usually require the slaughterer, known within Judaism as a shochet, to also be a pious Jew of good character and an observer of the Shabbat. In smaller communities, the shochet was often the town rabbi, or a rabbi from a local synagogue, but large slaughterhouses usually employ a full-time shochet if they intend to sell kosher meat[citation needed].

The Talmud, and later Jewish authorities, also prohibit the consumption of meat from animals who were slaughtered despite being in the process of dying from disease. This is an extension of the rules banning the meat from animals torn by beasts, and animals that die from natural causes.[42][43][44]

To comply with this Talmudic injunction against eating diseased animals, Orthodox Jews usually require that the corpses of freshly slaughtered animals be thoroughly inspected.

There are 70 different traditional checks for irregularities and growths; for example, there are checks to ensure that the lungs have absolutely no scars, which might have been caused by an inflammation. If these checks are passed, the meat is then termed glatt (גלאַט), the Yiddish word meaning 'smooth'.

An unusual situation is created when a live fetus is removed from a kosher slaughtered animal. The fetus is called a Ben pekuah and takes the status of the mother, so that if the mother was kosher, the fetus is kosher even if there were problems with the slaughter.[45]

Compromises in contenence with animal-cruelty laws that prohibit such practices involve stunning the animal to lessen the suffering that occurs while the animal bleeds to death. However, the use of electric shocks to daze the animal is often not accepted by some markets as producing meat that is kosher.[38]

Forbidden parts of a slaughtered animal edit

As forbidden fats, tendons, blood vessels and the gid hanasheh (sciatic nerve) must be removed, more difficult in the rear-quarters, often only cuts of meat from the forequarters are available.

Leviticus prohibits the eating of certain types of fat (chelev) from sacrificial land animals (cattle, sheep, and goats), since the fat is the portion of the meat exclusively allocated to God (by burning it on the altar).[46]

Foreleg, cheeks and maw edit

The gift of the foreleg, cheeks and maw of a kosher-slaughtered animal to a kohen is a positive commandment in the Hebrew Bible. Some rabbinic opinions maintain that consumption of the animal is forbidden before these gifts are given, though the accepted halacha is to permit this.

Furthermore, the actual foreleg, cheeks and maw of all kosher-slaughtered beef are forbidden to a non-kohen unless the kohen permits.[47]

Blood edit

One of the main biblical food laws forbids consuming blood on account of "the life [being] in the blood". This ban and reason are listed in the Noahide Laws[48] and twice in Book of Leviticus[49] as well as in Deuteronomy.[50]

Classical rabbis argued that only if it is impossible to remove every drop of blood, the prohibition against consuming blood was impractical, and there should be rare exceptions.

They claimed that consuming the blood that remained on the inside of meat (as opposed to the blood on the surface of it, dripping from it, or housed within the veins) should be permitted and that the blood of fish and locusts could also be consumed.[51]

To comply with this prohibition, a number of preparation techniques became practiced within traditional Judaism. The main technique, known as meliḥah, involves the meat being soaked in water for about half an hour, which opens pores.[52]

After this, the meat is placed on a slanted board or in a wicker basket, and is thickly covered with salt on each side, then left for between 20 minutes and one hour.[52] The salt covering draws blood from the meat by osmosis, and the salt must be subsequently removed from the meat (usually by trying to shake most of it off and then washing the meat twice[52]) to complete the extraction of the blood. The type of salt used in the process is known as kosher salt.

Meliḥah is not sufficient to extract blood from the liver, lungs, heart, and certain other internal organs, since they naturally contain a high density of blood, and therefore these organs are usually removed before the rest of the meat is salted. Roasting, on the other hand, discharges blood while cooking, and is the usual treatment given to these organs. It is also an acceptable method for removing blood from all meat.[52]

Food preparation by non-Jews edit

 
Rabbi in a kosher wine shop

Classical rabbis prohibited any item of food that had been consecrated to an idol or had been used in the service of an idol.[53]

Since the Talmud views all non-Jews as potential idolaters, and viewed intermarriage with apprehension, it included within this prohibition any food that has been cooked or prepared completely by non-Jews.[54] (Bread sold by a non-Jewish baker was not included in the prohibition.[54]) Similarly, a number of Jewish writers believed food prepared for Jews by non-Jewish servants would not count as prepared by potential idolaters, although this view was opposed by Jacob ben Asher.[55]

Consequently, Orthodox Jews generally rule that wine, certain cooked foods, and sometimes dairy products,[56][57][58] should be prepared only by Jews.

The prohibition against drinking non-Jewish wine, traditionally called yayin nesekh (literally meaning "wine for offering [to a deity]"), is not absolute. Cooked wine (Hebrew: יין מבושל‎, yayin mevushal), meaning wine that has been heated, is regarded as drinkable on the basis that heated wine was not historically used as a religious libation; thus kosher wine will often be prepared by Jews and then pasteurised, after which it can be handled by a non-Jew.

Some Jews refer to these prohibited foods as akum, an acronym of Ovde Kokhavim U Mazzaloth (עובדי כוכבים ומזלות‎), meaning "worshippers of stars and planets (or Zodiac)". Akum is thus a reference to activities that these Jews view as idolatry, and in many significant works of post-classical Jewish literature, such as the Shulchan Aruch, it has been applied to Christians in particular.

However, among the classical rabbis, there were a number who refused to treat Christians as idolaters, and consequently regarded food that had been manufactured by them as being kosher.[citation needed]

Conservative Judaism is more lenient; in the 1960s, Rabbi Silverman[specify] issued a responsum, officially approved by the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards, in which he argued that wine manufactured by an automated process was not "manufactured by gentiles", and therefore would be kosher.

A later responsum of Conservative Judaism was issued by Rabbi Dorff,[specify] who argued, based on precedents in 15th- to 19th-century responsa, that many foods, such as wheat and oil products, which had once been forbidden when produced by non-Jews, were eventually declared kosher. On this basis he concluded wine and grape products produced by non-Jews would be permissible.[citation needed]

Milk and meat edit

Three times the Torah specifically forbids "seething" a young goat "in its mother's milk".[59] The Talmud interprets this as a general prohibition against cooking meat and dairy products together, and against eating or deriving any benefit from such a mixture.

To help prevent accidental violation of these rules, the modern standard Orthodox practice is to classify food into either being fleishig (meat), milchig (dairy), or neither; this third category is more usually referred to as pareve (also spelled parve and parev) meaning "neutral".

As the biblical prohibition uses the word gedi ("kid") and not the phrase gedi izim ("goat-kid") used elsewhere in the Torah, the rabbis concluded that the flesh of all domestic mammals (behemoth) is included in the prohibition.

Flesh of fish and bugs is not included, and therefore is considered pareve. By rabbinic decree, the flesh of birds and wild mammals (chayot), such as deer, is considered as "meat", rather than pareve.

By rabbinic law and custom, not only are meat and milk not cooked together, but they are not eaten even separately within a single meal.

Safety concerns edit

Pikuach nefesh edit

The laws of kashrut can be broken for pikuach nefesh (preservation of human life). For example, a patient is allowed to eat non-kosher food if it is essential for recovery,[60] or where the person would otherwise starve.[61][62]

Tainted food edit

The Talmud adds to the biblical regulations a prohibition against consuming poisoned animals.[63] Similarly, Yoreh De'ah prohibits the drinking of water, if the water had been left uncovered overnight in an area where there might be snakes, on the basis that a snake might have left its venom in the water.[44] In a place where there aren't usually snakes, this prohibition does not apply.[64]

Fish and meat edit

The Talmud and Yoreh De'ah suggest that eating meat and fish together may cause tzaraath.[65] Strictly Orthodox Jews thus avoid combining the two,[66][67] while Conservative Jews may or may not.[67]

Kosherfest edit

Each year, 5,000 food industry vendors, kosher certification agencies, journalists and other professionals gather in New York City to sample kosher fare from 300 event attendees.

Among the offerings at the 2018 Kosherfest were plantain croutons from Ecuador. The gluten-free croutons won the Kosherfest award for best new snack.

There were breaded dessert ravioli stuffed with sweet ricotta and chocolate chips, pareve and vegan "ice cream" cake made from cherry and passion fruit sorbet, butter substitute made from coconut oil, and a gluten-free variation of Syrian sambusak dumplings.[68]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Leviticus 11:3–4; Deuteronomy 14:6–7
  2. ^ Abramowitz, Rabbi Jack (29 October 2013). "OU Torah". OU Torah. Retrieved 1 September 2019.
  3. ^ Leviticus 11:9; Deuteronomy 14:9
  4. ^ "Opinion - Can Seafood Be Kosher and Sustainable?". The New York Times. 13 December 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2020.
  5. ^ Leviticus 11:41
  6. ^ Deuteronomy 14:19; Leviticus 11:20
  7. ^ Leviticus 11:22
  8. ^ Bekorot 5b
  9. ^ Abodah Zarah 41a; Maimonides Mishneh Torah, Ma'akalot Asurot:20-24; Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah, 83:5-10
  10. ^ "Dietary Laws". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  11. ^ Bekorot 7b; Maimonides, Mishneh Torah Ma'akalot Asurot:3; Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah, 8-9
  12. ^ Hullin 64a; Maimonides Yad, Ma'akalot Asurot:7-11; Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah, 86
  13. ^ a b c "YUTorah Online - The Kashrut of Commerically [sic] Sold Milk (Rabbi Michoel Zylberman)". www.yutorah.org.
  14. ^ "Is Milk Kosher?". 8 November 2006.
  15. ^ a b Maimonides, Mishneh Torah Ma'akalot Asurot:3; Ketubot 60a; Bekorot 6a; Hullin 112b; Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah, 81
  16. ^ Law, Barry A. (2010). Technology of Cheesemaking. UK: WILEY-BLACKWELL. pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-1-4051-8298-0.
  17. ^ Gordimer, Avraham (Winter 2005). "Say Cheese!". Kashrut.com. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  18. ^ Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh Deah 115:2
  19. ^ Gerstner, Eli (May 2016). "Cold Whey". oukosher.com. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  20. ^ Quoted in Mishneh Torah, Hilchot Maachalot Asurot 3:14
  21. ^ Tosafot, Avodah Zarah 35a s.v. Chada
  22. ^ "How Do We Make Kosher Cheese?". RabbiKaganoff.com. 8 July 2012.
  23. ^ Dolinger, Rabbi Barry (26 May 2017). "What's the Deal with Kosher Cheese?". website. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  24. ^ Susskind Goldberg, Monique (March 2005). . Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies. Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  25. ^ "Meat, Dairy & Pareve". OK Kosher Certification.
  26. ^ a b c d e "Blood Spots in Eggs \ Rabbi Michael Broyde". www.daat.ac.il.
  27. ^ Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah 66
  28. ^ Neustadt, Doniel (2004). "The Status of Blood in Halacha". Torah.org. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  29. ^ a b Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 66:8
  30. ^ Geliko Kosher Gelatin, Functional & Nutraceutical Properties.
  31. ^ United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, Keeping Kosher: A Diet For the Soul (2000)
  32. ^ Yabia Omer, Vol. 8; Yoreh De'ah No. 11
  33. ^ "Gelatin in Jewish Law". koshersupervisoryservices.com. Retrieved 2 April 2021.
  34. ^ Dr. Bernard Cole Pr.Sci.Nat. . Gelatin.co.za. Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  35. ^ Exodus 22:30
  36. ^ Deuteronomy 14:21
  37. ^ "Carcass". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved 21 February 2013.; see Deuteronomy 14:21, Ezekiel 4:14, Ezekiel 44:31; the implication in Ezekiel that ordinary Israelites did not keep these laws was noticed by the classical rabbis, who declared "the prophet Elijah shall some day explain this problematic passage" (Menahot 45a)
  38. ^ a b "Sheep killing branded cruel". The Age. 3 August 2007. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  39. ^ "Halal and Kosher slaughter 'must end'". BBC News. 10 June 2003. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  40. ^ Yanklowitz, Rabbi Shmuly (13 June 2018). "Improving Animal Treatment in Slaughterhouses: An Interview with Dr. Temple Grandin". Medium. Retrieved 7 April 2021.
  41. ^ "Kosher Box Operation, Design, and Cutting Technique will Affect the Time Required for Cattle to Lose Consciousness". www.grandin.com. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  42. ^ Hullin 3
  43. ^ Maimonides Yad, Ma'akalot Asuro:5-11
  44. ^ a b Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah 29-60
  45. ^ "YUTorah Online - Chaburah on Ben Pekuah (Ezer Diena)". www.yutorah.org. Retrieved 5 April 2021.
  46. ^ Leviticus 7:23–25
  47. ^ Shulchan Aruch, Yoreh Deah 61:31
  48. ^ Genesis 9:4
  49. ^ Leviticus 3:17; Leviticus 17:11
  50. ^ Deuteronomy 12:16
  51. ^ Keritot 2a, 20b; Hullin 111a, 117a
  52. ^ a b c d "Meliḥah ("salting")". Jewish Encyclopedia. 1906. Retrieved 21 February 2013.
  53. ^ Abodah Zarah 29b
  54. ^ a b Abodah Zarah 35b, 38a
  55. ^ Jacob ben Asher, Yoreh De'ah, 113:4
  56. ^ Chalav Yisrael - Part I: Rav Soloveitchik's View 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ [1] 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  58. ^ [2] 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  59. ^ Exodus 23:19, Exodus 34:26, and Deuteronomy 14:21
  60. ^ "Pikuach Nefesh". www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org.
  61. ^ Julius H. Schoeps, Olaf Glöckner (7 February 2011). A Road to Nowhere? Jewish Experiences in Unifying Europe. p. 130. ISBN 978-9004201583.
  62. ^ Farbstein, Esther (2007). Hidden In Thunder: Perspectives on Faith, Halachah and Leadership. p. 282. ISBN 9789657265055.
  63. ^ Hullin 58b
  64. ^ Tosafot, Beitzah 6a
  65. ^ Pesahim 76b; Yoreh De'ah 116:2
  66. ^ Luban, Rabbi Yaakov. "The Kosher Primer". oukosher.org. Orthodox Union. Retrieved 1 June 2007.
  67. ^ a b Shulman, Shlomo (7 July 2006). "Mixing Fish and Meat". jewishanswers.org. Project Genesis. Retrieved 1 June 2007.
  68. ^ "5 Unique Kosher Foods You'll be Eating in 2019". JTA. 1 February 2019. Retrieved 1 February 2019.

Further reading edit

  • Hasia R. Diner and Simone Cinotto (eds.), Global Jewish Foodways: A History. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press, 2018.

External links edit

  • Religious Rules: Laws of Judaism Concerning Food
  • Aish.com: ABCs of Kosher
  • Chabad.org: Kosher - Eating Jewishly
  • Kashrut.com: The Premier Kosher Information Source on the Internet
  • OU Kosher certification
  • OK Kosher Certification
  • Yeshiva.co: What is Kosher?

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Kosher foods are foods that conform to the Jewish dietary regulations of kashrut dietary law The laws of kashrut apply to food derived from living creatures and kosher foods are restricted to certain types of mammals birds and fish meeting specific criteria the flesh of any animals that do not meet these criteria is forbidden by the dietary laws Furthermore kosher mammals and birds must be slaughtered according to a process known as shechita and their blood may never be consumed and must be removed from the meat by a process of salting and soaking in water for the meat to be permissible for use All plant based products including fruits vegetables grains herbs and spices are intrinsically kosher although certain produce grown in the Land of Israel is subjected to other requirements such as tithing before it may be consumed Kosher food also distinguishes between meat and dairy products Meat products are those that comprise or contain kosher meat such as beef lamb or venison kosher poultry such as chicken goose duck or turkey or derivatives of meat such as animal gelatin non animal products that are processed on equipment used for meat or meat derived products are also considered to belong to this category Dairy products are those which contain milk or any derivatives such as butter or cheese non dairy products that are processed on equipment used for milk or milk derived products are also considered as belonging to this category Because of this categorization meat and milk or their respective derivatives are not combined in kosher foods and separate equipment for the storage and preparation of meat based and dairy based foods is used in order for food to be considered kosher Another category of kosher food called pareve contains neither meat milk nor their derivatives they include foods such as fish eggs from permitted birds produce grains fruit and other edible plants They remain pareve if they are not mixed with or processed using equipment that is used for any meat or dairy products Because of the complexities of modern food manufacturing kashrut agencies supervise or inspect the production of kosher foods and provide a certification called a hechsher to verify for kosher food consumers that it has been produced in accordance with Jewish law Jewish dietary law is primarily derived from Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14 1 21 Foods that may be consumed according to Jewish religious law are termed kosher ˈ k oʊ ʃ er in English from the Ashkenazi pronunciation of the Hebrew term kasher כ ש ר meaning fit in this context fit for consumption Foods that are not in accordance with Jewish law are called treif t r eɪ f Yiddish טרײף derived from Hebrew ט ר פ ה ṭerefa meaning torn Contents 1 Permitted and forbidden animals 2 Animal products 2 1 Dairy products 2 1 1 Human breast milk 2 2 Cheese 2 3 Eggs 2 3 1 Blood found in eggs 2 4 Gelatin 3 Ritual slaughter 3 1 Forbidden parts of a slaughtered animal 3 1 1 Foreleg cheeks and maw 3 1 2 Blood 4 Food preparation by non Jews 5 Milk and meat 6 Safety concerns 6 1 Pikuach nefesh 6 2 Tainted food 6 3 Fish and meat 7 Kosherfest 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPermitted and forbidden animals editMain articles Kosher animals and Unclean animal The Torah permits eating only those land animals that chew their cud and have cloven hooves 1 Four animals the hare hyrax camel and pig are specifically identified as being forbidden because they possess only one of the above characteristics the hare hyrax and camel are hindgut fermenters and chew their cud but do not have cloven hooves while the pig has a cloven hoof but does not chew its cud 2 The Torah lists winged creatures that may not be consumed mainly birds of prey fish eating water birds and bats Certain domesticated fowl can be eaten such as chicken geese quail dove and turkey The Torah permits only those fish which have both fins and scales to be eaten 3 Monkfish is not considered kosher clarification needed To comply with kosher requirements a fish must have fins and easily detached scales the scales of a sturgeon are extremely hard to remove hence it is non kosher citation needed Other seafood considered non kosher includes shellfish like clams oysters crabs and shrimp There is also a risk of products like seaweed and kelp being contaminated by microscopic non kosher crustaceans 4 The Torah forbids two types of sherets creeping things Earth crawlers e g mouse lizard 5 Flying creeping things 6 with four exceptions Two types of locust the cricket and the grasshopper translations of the species names vary 7 Animal products editIn addition to meat products of forbidden species and from unhealthy animals were banned by the Talmudic writers 8 This included eggs including fish roe 9 as well as derived products such as jelly 10 but did not include materials merely manufactured or gathered by animals such as honey although in the case of honey from animals other than bees there was a difference of opinion among the ancient writers 11 According to the rabbinical writers eggs from ritually pure animals would always be prolate pointy at one end and oblate rounded at the other helping to reduce uncertainty about whether consumption was permitted or not 12 Dairy products edit The classic rabbinical writers imply that milk from an animal whose meat is kosher is also kosher As animals are considered non kosher if they are discovered to have been diseased after being slaughtered this could make their milk retroactively non kosher However by adhering to the principle that the majority case overrules the exception Jewish tradition continues to regard such milk as kosher since statistically it is true that most animals producing such milk are kosher the same principle is not applied to the possibility of consuming meat from an animal that has not been checked for disease 13 Rabbi Hershel Schachter argued that with modern dairy farm equipment milk from the minority of non kosher cows is invariably mixed with that of the majority of kosher cows thus invalidating the permissibility of consuming milk from a large dairy operation 13 Many leading rabbis however rule milk permissible 14 as do major kashrut authorities 13 Human breast milk edit Breast milk from a woman is permitted 15 However authorities assert breast milk may be consumed directly from the breasts only by children younger than four five if the child is ill and children older than two were only permitted to continue to suckle if they had not stopped doing so for more than three consecutive days 15 Cheese edit The situation of cheese is complicated as hard cheese often involves rennet an enzyme that splits milk into curds and whey Many forms of rennet are derived from the stomach linings of animals but since the 1990s rennet is often made recombinantly in microbes because it can be produced more efficiently 16 though many artisanal cheeses and cheeses made in Europe still use animal rennet Because the rennet could be derived from animals it could potentially be non kosher Rennet made recombinantly or from the stomachs of kosher animals if they have been slaughtered according to the laws of kashrut can be kosher Cheese made from plant derived rennet can also be kosher 17 Many authorities require that the cheese making process follow certain stringencies to be kosher According to the Shulchan Aruch a rabbinic decree called gevinat akum prohibits all cheese made by non Jews without Jewish supervision even if its ingredients are all kosher because very frequently the rennet in cheese is not kosher 18 Rabbeinu Tam 19 and some of the geonim 20 suggested that this decree does not apply in a location where cheese is commonly made with only kosher ingredients a position that was practiced in communities in Narbonne 21 and Italy 22 Many contemporary Orthodox authorities do not follow this ruling and hold that cheese requires formal kashrut certification to be kosher some even argue this is necessary for cheese made with non animal rennet However some such as Rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik ate generic cheeses without certification 23 Isaac Klein s tshuva authorized the use of cheese made from non kosher rennet and this is widely practised by observant Conservative Jews and Conservative institutions 24 Eggs edit nbsp Jerusalem kugel made with egg noodle caramelized sugar and black pepperThe eggs of kosher birds are kosher Eggs are considered pareve despite being an animal product 25 Blood found in eggs edit Occasionally blood spots are found within an egg which can affect the kosher status of the egg The halacha varies depending on whether or not there is a possibility of the egg being fertilized If the egg may have been fertilized the Rishonim and Shulchan Aruch suggest a complex set of rules for determining whether the egg may be eaten 26 among these rules if blood appears on the yolk the entire egg is forbidden 27 To avoid the complexity of these rules R Moshe Isserles records a custom not to eat any such eggs with blood spots 26 If the egg was definitely unfertilized laid by a hen kept isolated from roosters many authorities including Rabbis Moshe Feinstein and Ovadiah Yosef rule that one may remove the blood spot and then eat the remainder of the egg 26 This is the case nowadays when battery eggs form the majority of available produce 28 Regarding the question of whether one must check an egg for blood spots the Shulchan Aruch rules that one may eat hard boiled eggs where checking is impossible 29 R Moshe Isserles adds that checking is not required but that a custom exists to check eggs if they are cracked during the daytime when blood could be seen 29 A contemporary Ashkenazi authority writes that while halacha does not require checking supermarket bought eggs there is a minhag to do so 26 Nevertheless eggs are not checked in commercial settings where doing so would be expensive 26 Gelatin edit nbsp Kosher gummy bearsGelatin is hydrolysed collagen 30 the main protein in animal connective tissue and therefore could potentially come from a non kosher source such as pig skin Gelatin has historically been a prominent source of glue finding uses from musical instruments to embroidery one of the main historic emulsions used in cosmetics and in photographic film the main coating given to medical capsule pills and a form of food including jelly trifle and marshmallows the status of gelatin in kashrut is consequently fairly controversial Due to the ambiguity over the source of individual items derived from gelatin many Orthodox rabbis regard it as generally being non kosher However Conservative rabbis 31 and several prominent Orthodox rabbis including Chaim Ozer Grodzinski and Ovadia Yosef the former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel argue that gelatin has undergone such total chemical change and processing that it should not count as meat and therefore would be kosher 32 Technically gelatin is produced by separating the three strands in each collagen fiber s triple helix by boiling collagen in water Rabbi David Sheinkopf author of Gelatin in Jewish Law Bloch 1982 and Issues in Jewish Dietary Laws Ktav 1998 has published in depth studies of the kosher uses of gelatin as well as carmine and kitniyot 33 One of the main methods of avoiding non kosher gelatin is to substitute gelatin like materials in its place substances with a similar chemical behaviour include food starch from tapioca chemically modified pectins and carrageenan combined with certain vegetable gums guar gum locust bean gum xanthan gum gum acacia agar and others Although gelatin is used for several purposes by a wide variety of manufacturers it has started to be replaced with these substitutes in a number of products due to the use of gelatin also being a significant concern to vegans and vegetarians Today manufacturers are producing gelatin from the skins of kosher fish circumventing many of these problems 34 Ritual slaughter editMain article Shechita nbsp Kosher slaughter of a chickenOne of the few dietary laws appearing in Exodus prohibits eating the meat from animals that have been torn by beasts 35 a related law appears in Deuteronomy prohibiting the consumption of anything that has died from natural causes 36 While this law was primarily intended for the priests it applied to all Israelites but not strangers 37 Traditional Jewish thought has expressed the view that all meat must come from animals that have been slaughtered according to Jewish law These guidelines require the animal be killed by a single cut across the throat to a precise depth severing both carotid arteries both jugular veins both vagus nerves the trachea and the esophagus no higher than the epiglottis and no lower than where cilia begin inside the trachea causing the animal to bleed to death Some believe that this ensures the animal dies instantly without unnecessary suffering but many animal rights activists view the process as cruel claiming that the animal may not lose consciousness immediately and activists have called for it to be banned 38 39 Animal science researcher Temple Grandin has stated that kosher slaughter no matter how well performed does not result in an instantaneous loss of consciousness whereas stunning properly with a captive bolt is instantaneous 40 She gives various times for loss of consciousness via kosher ritual slaughter ranging from 15 to 90 seconds depending on measurement type and individual kosher slaughterhouse 41 To avoid tearing and to ensure the cut is thorough such slaughter is usually performed by a trained individual with a large razor sharp knife which is checked before each slaughter to ensure that it has no irregularities such as nicks and dents if irregularities are discovered or the cut is too shallow the meat is deemed non kosher Rabbis usually require the slaughterer known within Judaism as a shochet to also be a pious Jew of good character and an observer of the Shabbat In smaller communities the shochet was often the town rabbi or a rabbi from a local synagogue but large slaughterhouses usually employ a full time shochet if they intend to sell kosher meat citation needed The Talmud and later Jewish authorities also prohibit the consumption of meat from animals who were slaughtered despite being in the process of dying from disease This is an extension of the rules banning the meat from animals torn by beasts and animals that die from natural causes 42 43 44 To comply with this Talmudic injunction against eating diseased animals Orthodox Jews usually require that the corpses of freshly slaughtered animals be thoroughly inspected There are 70 different traditional checks for irregularities and growths for example there are checks to ensure that the lungs have absolutely no scars which might have been caused by an inflammation If these checks are passed the meat is then termed glatt גלא ט the Yiddish word meaning smooth An unusual situation is created when a live fetus is removed from a kosher slaughtered animal The fetus is called a Ben pekuah and takes the status of the mother so that if the mother was kosher the fetus is kosher even if there were problems with the slaughter 45 Compromises in contenence with animal cruelty laws that prohibit such practices involve stunning the animal to lessen the suffering that occurs while the animal bleeds to death However the use of electric shocks to daze the animal is often not accepted by some markets as producing meat that is kosher 38 Forbidden parts of a slaughtered animal edit See also Nikkur As forbidden fats tendons blood vessels and the gid hanasheh sciatic nerve must be removed more difficult in the rear quarters often only cuts of meat from the forequarters are available Leviticus prohibits the eating of certain types of fat chelev from sacrificial land animals cattle sheep and goats since the fat is the portion of the meat exclusively allocated to God by burning it on the altar 46 Foreleg cheeks and maw edit Main article Foreleg cheeks and maw The gift of the foreleg cheeks and maw of a kosher slaughtered animal to a kohen is a positive commandment in the Hebrew Bible Some rabbinic opinions maintain that consumption of the animal is forbidden before these gifts are given though the accepted halacha is to permit this Furthermore the actual foreleg cheeks and maw of all kosher slaughtered beef are forbidden to a non kohen unless the kohen permits 47 Blood edit One of the main biblical food laws forbids consuming blood on account of the life being in the blood This ban and reason are listed in the Noahide Laws 48 and twice in Book of Leviticus 49 as well as in Deuteronomy 50 Classical rabbis argued that only if it is impossible to remove every drop of blood the prohibition against consuming blood was impractical and there should be rare exceptions They claimed that consuming the blood that remained on the inside of meat as opposed to the blood on the surface of it dripping from it or housed within the veins should be permitted and that the blood of fish and locusts could also be consumed 51 To comply with this prohibition a number of preparation techniques became practiced within traditional Judaism The main technique known as meliḥah involves the meat being soaked in water for about half an hour which opens pores 52 After this the meat is placed on a slanted board or in a wicker basket and is thickly covered with salt on each side then left for between 20 minutes and one hour 52 The salt covering draws blood from the meat by osmosis and the salt must be subsequently removed from the meat usually by trying to shake most of it off and then washing the meat twice 52 to complete the extraction of the blood The type of salt used in the process is known as kosher salt Meliḥah is not sufficient to extract blood from the liver lungs heart and certain other internal organs since they naturally contain a high density of blood and therefore these organs are usually removed before the rest of the meat is salted Roasting on the other hand discharges blood while cooking and is the usual treatment given to these organs It is also an acceptable method for removing blood from all meat 52 Food preparation by non Jews editMain article Bishul Yisrael See also Kosher wine nbsp Rabbi in a kosher wine shopClassical rabbis prohibited any item of food that had been consecrated to an idol or had been used in the service of an idol 53 Since the Talmud views all non Jews as potential idolaters and viewed intermarriage with apprehension it included within this prohibition any food that has been cooked or prepared completely by non Jews 54 Bread sold by a non Jewish baker was not included in the prohibition 54 Similarly a number of Jewish writers believed food prepared for Jews by non Jewish servants would not count as prepared by potential idolaters although this view was opposed by Jacob ben Asher 55 Consequently Orthodox Jews generally rule that wine certain cooked foods and sometimes dairy products 56 57 58 should be prepared only by Jews The prohibition against drinking non Jewish wine traditionally called yayin nesekh literally meaning wine for offering to a deity is not absolute Cooked wine Hebrew יין מבושל yayin mevushal meaning wine that has been heated is regarded as drinkable on the basis that heated wine was not historically used as a religious libation thus kosher wine will often be prepared by Jews and then pasteurised after which it can be handled by a non Jew Some Jews refer to these prohibited foods as akum an acronym of Ovde Kokhavim U Mazzaloth עובדי כוכבים ומזלות meaning worshippers of stars and planets or Zodiac Akum is thus a reference to activities that these Jews view as idolatry and in many significant works of post classical Jewish literature such as the Shulchan Aruch it has been applied to Christians in particular However among the classical rabbis there were a number who refused to treat Christians as idolaters and consequently regarded food that had been manufactured by them as being kosher citation needed Conservative Judaism is more lenient in the 1960s Rabbi Silverman specify issued a responsum officially approved by the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards in which he argued that wine manufactured by an automated process was not manufactured by gentiles and therefore would be kosher A later responsum of Conservative Judaism was issued by Rabbi Dorff specify who argued based on precedents in 15th to 19th century responsa that many foods such as wheat and oil products which had once been forbidden when produced by non Jews were eventually declared kosher On this basis he concluded wine and grape products produced by non Jews would be permissible citation needed Milk and meat editMain article Milk and meat in Jewish law Three times the Torah specifically forbids seething a young goat in its mother s milk 59 The Talmud interprets this as a general prohibition against cooking meat and dairy products together and against eating or deriving any benefit from such a mixture To help prevent accidental violation of these rules the modern standard Orthodox practice is to classify food into either being fleishig meat milchig dairy or neither this third category is more usually referred to as pareve also spelled parve and parev meaning neutral As the biblical prohibition uses the word gedi kid and not the phrase gedi izim goat kid used elsewhere in the Torah the rabbis concluded that the flesh of all domestic mammals behemoth is included in the prohibition Flesh of fish and bugs is not included and therefore is considered pareve By rabbinic decree the flesh of birds and wild mammals chayot such as deer is considered as meat rather than pareve By rabbinic law and custom not only are meat and milk not cooked together but they are not eaten even separately within a single meal Safety concerns editPikuach nefesh edit The laws of kashrut can be broken for pikuach nefesh preservation of human life For example a patient is allowed to eat non kosher food if it is essential for recovery 60 or where the person would otherwise starve 61 62 Tainted food edit The Talmud adds to the biblical regulations a prohibition against consuming poisoned animals 63 Similarly Yoreh De ah prohibits the drinking of water if the water had been left uncovered overnight in an area where there might be snakes on the basis that a snake might have left its venom in the water 44 In a place where there aren t usually snakes this prohibition does not apply 64 Fish and meat edit The Talmud and Yoreh De ah suggest that eating meat and fish together may cause tzaraath 65 Strictly Orthodox Jews thus avoid combining the two 66 67 while Conservative Jews may or may not 67 Kosherfest editEach year 5 000 food industry vendors kosher certification agencies journalists and other professionals gather in New York City to sample kosher fare from 300 event attendees Among the offerings at the 2018 Kosherfest were plantain croutons from Ecuador The gluten free croutons won the Kosherfest award for best new snack There were breaded dessert ravioli stuffed with sweet ricotta and chocolate chips pareve and vegan ice cream cake made from cherry and passion fruit sorbet butter substitute made from coconut oil and a gluten free variation of Syrian sambusak dumplings 68 See also edit nbsp Food portal nbsp Judaism portalComparison of Islamic and Jewish dietary laws Comparison between halal and kosher dietary laws Food and drink prohibitions Prohibitions related to foods and drinks Halal Islamic term for permissible things Hechsher Kosher certification mark Jhatka Animal slaughter Kashrut Jewish dietary laws Kosher airline meal Meal served to airline passengers that follows Jewish dietary laws Kosher restaurant Restaurant serving food permissible in Jewish dietary law Kosher salt Coarse additive free edible salt Kosher style a restaurant that serves foods which either may or may not be kosherPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Kosher tax One of several indirect taxes imposed on Jews Mashgiach Jew who supervises the kashrut status of a kosher establishment List of diets List of Jewish cuisine dishes List of kosher restaurantsReferences edit Leviticus 11 3 4 Deuteronomy 14 6 7 Abramowitz Rabbi Jack 29 October 2013 OU Torah OU Torah Retrieved 1 September 2019 Leviticus 11 9 Deuteronomy 14 9 Opinion Can Seafood Be Kosher and Sustainable The New York Times 13 December 2014 Retrieved 27 May 2020 Leviticus 11 41 Deuteronomy 14 19 Leviticus 11 20 Leviticus 11 22 Bekorot 5b Abodah Zarah 41a Maimonides Mishneh Torah Ma akalot Asurot 20 24 Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 83 5 10 Dietary Laws Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved 21 February 2013 Bekorot 7b Maimonides Mishneh Torah Ma akalot Asurot 3 Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 8 9 Hullin 64a Maimonides Yad Ma akalot Asurot 7 11 Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 86 a b c YUTorah Online The Kashrut of Commerically sic Sold Milk Rabbi Michoel Zylberman www yutorah org Is Milk Kosher 8 November 2006 a b Maimonides Mishneh Torah Ma akalot Asurot 3 Ketubot 60a Bekorot 6a Hullin 112b Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 81 Law Barry A 2010 Technology of Cheesemaking UK WILEY BLACKWELL pp 100 101 ISBN 978 1 4051 8298 0 Gordimer Avraham Winter 2005 Say Cheese Kashrut com Retrieved 21 February 2013 Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 115 2 Gerstner Eli May 2016 Cold Whey oukosher com Retrieved 8 July 2019 Quoted in Mishneh Torah Hilchot Maachalot Asurot 3 14 Tosafot Avodah Zarah 35a s v Chada How Do We Make Kosher Cheese RabbiKaganoff com 8 July 2012 Dolinger Rabbi Barry 26 May 2017 What s the Deal with Kosher Cheese website Retrieved 5 April 2021 Susskind Goldberg Monique March 2005 Kashrut of Cheese and Gelatin Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies Archived from the original on 3 April 2015 Retrieved 21 February 2013 Meat Dairy amp Pareve OK Kosher Certification a b c d e Blood Spots in Eggs Rabbi Michael Broyde www daat ac il Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 66 Neustadt Doniel 2004 The Status of Blood in Halacha Torah org Retrieved 21 February 2013 a b Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 66 8 Geliko Kosher Gelatin Functional amp Nutraceutical Properties United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism Keeping Kosher A Diet For the Soul 2000 Yabia Omer Vol 8 Yoreh De ah No 11 Gelatin in Jewish Law koshersupervisoryservices com Retrieved 2 April 2021 Dr Bernard Cole Pr Sci Nat Gelatine Consumer Information Gelatin co za Archived from the original on 6 June 2014 Retrieved 3 December 2011 Exodus 22 30 Deuteronomy 14 21 Carcass Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved 21 February 2013 see Deuteronomy 14 21 Ezekiel 4 14 Ezekiel 44 31 the implication in Ezekiel that ordinary Israelites did not keep these laws was noticed by the classical rabbis who declared the prophet Elijah shall some day explain this problematic passage Menahot 45a a b Sheep killing branded cruel The Age 3 August 2007 Retrieved 3 December 2011 Halal and Kosher slaughter must end BBC News 10 June 2003 Retrieved 7 May 2010 Yanklowitz Rabbi Shmuly 13 June 2018 Improving Animal Treatment in Slaughterhouses An Interview with Dr Temple Grandin Medium Retrieved 7 April 2021 Kosher Box Operation Design and Cutting Technique will Affect the Time Required for Cattle to Lose Consciousness www grandin com Retrieved 20 April 2021 Hullin 3 Maimonides Yad Ma akalot Asuro 5 11 a b Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 29 60 YUTorah Online Chaburah on Ben Pekuah Ezer Diena www yutorah org Retrieved 5 April 2021 Leviticus 7 23 25 Shulchan Aruch Yoreh Deah 61 31 Genesis 9 4 Leviticus 3 17 Leviticus 17 11 Deuteronomy 12 16 Keritot 2a 20b Hullin 111a 117a a b c d Meliḥah salting Jewish Encyclopedia 1906 Retrieved 21 February 2013 Abodah Zarah 29b a b Abodah Zarah 35b 38a Jacob ben Asher Yoreh De ah 113 4 Chalav Yisrael Part I Rav Soloveitchik s ViewArchived 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine 1 Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine 2 Archived 11 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Exodus 23 19 Exodus 34 26 and Deuteronomy 14 21 Pikuach Nefesh www jewishvirtuallibrary org Julius H Schoeps Olaf Glockner 7 February 2011 A Road to Nowhere Jewish Experiences in Unifying Europe p 130 ISBN 978 9004201583 Farbstein Esther 2007 Hidden In Thunder Perspectives on Faith Halachah and Leadership p 282 ISBN 9789657265055 Hullin 58b Tosafot Beitzah 6a Pesahim 76b Yoreh De ah 116 2 Luban Rabbi Yaakov The Kosher Primer oukosher org Orthodox Union Retrieved 1 June 2007 a b Shulman Shlomo 7 July 2006 Mixing Fish and Meat jewishanswers org Project Genesis Retrieved 1 June 2007 5 Unique Kosher Foods You ll be Eating in 2019 JTA 1 February 2019 Retrieved 1 February 2019 Further reading editHasia R Diner and Simone Cinotto eds Global Jewish Foodways A History Lincoln NE University of Nebraska Press 2018 External links editReligious Rules Laws of Judaism Concerning Food Aish com ABCs of Kosher Chabad org Kosher Eating Jewishly Kashrut com The Premier Kosher Information Source on the Internet OU Kosher certification OK Kosher Certification Yeshiva co What is Kosher Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kosher foods amp oldid 1207098418, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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