© Vaad L`Hatzolas Nidchei Yisroel - 2023
WHAT IS KOSHER?
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
(/ˈkoʊʃər/)
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
(/treɪf/; Yiddish: טרײף, derived from Hebrew: טְרֵפָה trāfáh) meaning "torn."
Permitted and forbidden animals
The
Torah
permits
eating
only
those
land
animals
that
chew
their
cud
and
have
cloven
hooves.
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.
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.
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.
The Torah forbids two types of sherets (creeping things):
Earth crawlers, e.g. mouse, lizard. Flying creeping things, with four exceptions: Two types of locust, the cricket, and the
grasshopper (translations of the species names vary).
Animal products
In
addition
to
meat,
products
of
forbidden
species
and
from
unhealthy
animals
were
banned
by
the
Talmudic
writers.
This
included
eggs
(including
fish
roe),
as
well
as
derived
products
such
as
jelly,
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).
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.
Dairy products
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.
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. Many leading rabbis, however, rule milk permissible, as do major kashrut authorities.
Human breast milk
Breast
milk
from
a
woman
is
permitted.
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.
Cheese
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
(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.
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.
Rabbeinu
Tam
and
some
of
the
geonim
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 and Italy.
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.
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.
Eggs
The eggs of kosher birds are kosher. Eggs are considered pareve despite being an animal product.
Blood found in eggs
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;
among
these
rules,
if
blood
appears
on
the
yolk,
the
entire
egg
is
forbidden.
To
avoid
the
complexity
of
these rules, R' Moshe Isserles records a custom not to eat any such eggs with blood spots.
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.
This
is
the
case
nowadays, when battery eggs form the majority of available produce.
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.
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).
A
contemporary
Ashkenazi
authority
writes
that
while
"halacha
does
not
require"
checking
supermarket-bought
eggs,
"there
is
a minhag" to do so. Nevertheless, eggs are not checked in commercial settings where doing so would be expensive.
Gelatin
Gelatin
is
hydrolysed
collagen,
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
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.
Technically,
gelatin
is
produced
by
separating
the
three
strands
in
each
collagen
fiber's
triple
helix
by
boiling
collagen
in
water.
Rabbi
Dr.
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.
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.
Ritual slaughte - Shechita
One
of
the
few
dietary
laws
appearing
in
Exodus
prohibits
eating
the
meat
from
animals
that
have
been
"torn
by
beasts";
a
related
law
appears
in
Deuteronomy,
prohibiting
the
consumption
of
anything
that
has
died
from
natural
causes.
While
this
law
was primarily intended for the priests, it applied to all Israelites (but not "strangers").
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
not
based
on
concern
for
the
health
of
the
eater,
instead
being
an
extension of the rules banning the meat from animals torn by beasts, and animals that die from natural causes.
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.
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.
Forbidden parts of a slaughtered animal
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).
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.
Blood
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 and twice in Book of Leviticus as well as in Deuteronomy.
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.
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.
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.
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)
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.
Milk and meat
Three
times
the
Torah
specifically
forbids
"seething"
a
young
goat
"in
its
mother's
milk".
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
Pikuach nefesh
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.
Tainted food
The Talmud adds to the biblical regulations a prohibition against consuming poisoned animals.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. In a place where there aren't usually snakes, this prohibition does not apply.
Fish and meat
The
Talmud
and
Yoreh
De'ah
suggest
that
eating
meat
and
fish
together
may
cause
tzaraath.
Strictly
Orthodox
Jews
thus
avoid combining the two, while Conservative Jews may or may not.
Kosherfest
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"