JTF.ORG Forum
General Category => General Discussion => Topic started by: Yonathan Ben Yakov on August 31, 2008, 11:32:32 AM
-
?
-
We'd better eat there and support it! Before you know it, the way these libs work, I wouldn't be surprised if there's a strictly Arab terrorist food restaurant that serves amd caters to Arabs. G-d help us!
-
I am vegetarian
-
I'm Vegan.
-
I'm Vegan.
It saves a lot of money so from this angle of view I can advertise it, but I really would miss hard cooked eggs, salmon, smoked meat, cheese, steaks, stewed chicken, goose, duck, roasted scheep and of course milk for my tea. :-\
But the most tasty things are the expensive ones :'(
I am always curious to try new things. So I would go there and eat something in order to compare the taste :)
But this would be not very often, because McDonalds is too expensive. :(
-
I'm Vegan.
It saves a lot of money so from this angle of view I can advertise it, but I really would miss hard cooked eggs, salmon, smoked meat, cheese, steaks, stewed chicken, goose, duck, roasted scheep and of course milk for my tea. :-\
But the most tasty things are the expensive ones :'(
I am always curious to try new things. So I would go there and eat something in order to compare the taste :)
But this would be not very often, because McDonalds is too expensive. :(
McDonalds is supposed to be a cheap fast food restaurant. It is also very convenient to tourists. And i think that it is less likely to get food poisoning there because the food is pre-packed.
-
McDonalds currently is a big supporter of homosexuality and the homosexual agenda. Even if it were prepared in accordance with Jewish law, it wouldn't be Kosher.
-
McDonalds currently is a big supporter of homosexuality and the homosexual agenda. Even if it were prepared in accordance with Jewish law, it wouldn't be Kosher.
who cares about the homos, the Kosher McDonald's wouldn't support them.
-
i made this topic cause i know someone who wants to open up a kosher McDonald's in Brooklyn or maybe Queens
-
No Zelhar. McDonalds is not cheap. I get one whole fresh chicken, potatoes and red cabbage for the prize of one greater burger. If I will add in the McDonald restaurant some pommes, a salad and a dessert - I can buy two average bottles of healthy red wine in addition to the other stuff. :-\
But I am curious, so I would test it one time, because I never ate kosher McDonalds.
-
but it's really really bad for you and is accounting for the increased obesity in Israel...woudl strongly suggest not to eat even unhealthy kosher food...
-
maybe the Jews who eat at McDonalds will eat in a Kosher McDonalds
-
jews and all other decent people shouldn't eat garbage kosher or nonkosher
-
I might try a kosher flafel if I were in NY. Or better- a kosher humus if I could find one.
-
I'm going to credit Rabbi Akiva's judgment that it is less important how someone says the Shma as long they say it. The same applies to eating Kosher food. If more people will eat Kosher as a result of this idea, then I support it. What I would like to see is a kosher restaurant that is competitive with all other restaurants. For Parva I believe this should not be difficult to do. For meat, I believe it can be made much cheaper but at least understand the additional expense of processing it. Some things that I see most Kosher places do, such as refusing to serve cups of water so they can sell $0.05 bottles for $3.00 a piece demonstrate that they are abusing the monopoly they have instead of reaching out to Jews to keep Kosher.
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
-
The Kosher subway should have $5 subs(12") just like every other subway. At least the veggie pattie sub should be a $5 one. Does the Kosher Subway give cups of water like the others do?
I would love to see a Kosher Chick-Fil-A. It could be marketed to seventh day adventists but make Kosher for Jewish people. Some seventh day adventists actually keep Kosher. It would be closed on Saturday instead of Sunday.
-
what about KFC
Kosher Fried Chiken
-
what about KFC
Kosher Fried Chiken
(http://www.thetangentnewspaper.co.uk/images/may2008/rabbisanders.jpg) :::D
-
NO
-
That's a fascinating poll.
-
what about KFC
Kosher Fried Chiken
Yea why not?
I think it probably would work better then mcdonalds expecially at Queens, Jews love chicken.
-
The food also needs to be healthy though. We don't want to be poisoning Jews either.
-
what about KFC
Kosher Fried Chiken
Are we sure the C stands for Chicken? ??? :::D
-
what about KFC
Kosher Fried Chiken
Are we sure the C stands for Chicken? ??? :::D
;D :D
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
You must have eaten many other things that were as Kosher as the hotdogs. If you look at the packaging on many foods you will see its marked Kosher. The preparation of food has a great deal to do with it also.
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
You must have eaten many other things that were as Kosher as the hotdogs. If you look at the packaging on many foods you will see its marked Kosher. The preparation of food has a great deal to do with it also.
I always laugh when I see anti-Semites saying kosher food is disgusting because they probably ate a tuna fish sandwich for lunch.
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
You must have eaten many other things that were as Kosher as the hotdogs. If you look at the packaging on many foods you will see its marked Kosher. The preparation of food has a great deal to do with it also.
I always laugh when I see anti-Semites saying kosher food is disgusting because they probably ate a tuna fish sandwich for lunch. lol
I might have eaten a lot more food that had the kosher stamp on it
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
You must have eaten many other things that were as Kosher as the hotdogs. If you look at the packaging on many foods you will see its marked Kosher. The preparation of food has a great deal to do with it also.
I always laugh when I see anti-Semites saying kosher food is disgusting because they probably ate a tuna fish sandwich for lunch. lol
I might have eaten a lot more food that had the kosher stamp on it
I think eggs are kosher too as long as they don't have blood spots in them.
-
I have only tried one type of food that is Kosher it is hotdogs that is it
You must have eaten many other things that were as Kosher as the hotdogs. If you look at the packaging on many foods you will see its marked Kosher. The preparation of food has a great deal to do with it also.
I always laugh when I see anti-Semites saying kosher food is disgusting because they probably ate a tuna fish sandwich for lunch. lol
I might have eaten a lot more food that had the kosher stamp on it
I think eggs are kosher too as long as they don't have blood spots in them.
I dont eat eggs that often maybe twice a month
-
Actually a lot of things say they are kosher but are not. The second avenue non kosher deli is an example. In Baltimore there is a place called Lennies. They will grill hotdogs that they say are kosher but as soon as they are taken out of the package and hit the grill that is used with cheese and unkosher meets they cease to be kosher. What I would like to see is a restaurant that is less strict, but still adheres to reasonable laws of kosher. One where customers don't have to pay for someone to sit around and supervise all day, but does not do anything blatantly unkosher like serving ham and cooking milk and meat together.
-
Actually a lot of things say they are kosher but are not. The second avenue non kosher deli is an example. In Baltimore there is a place called Lennies. They will grill hotdogs that they say are kosher but as soon as they are taken out of the package and hit the grill that is used with cheese and unkosher meets they cease to be kosher. What I would like to see is a restaurant that is less strict, but still adheres to reasonable laws of kosher. One where customers don't have to pay for someone to sit around and supervise all day, but does not do anything blatantly unkosher like serving ham and cooking milk and meat together.
Why are you not allowed to mix Meat with Dairy?
What makes it not kosher?
-
Actually a lot of things say they are kosher but are not. The second avenue non kosher deli is an example. In Baltimore there is a place called Lennies. They will grill hotdogs that they say are kosher but as soon as they are taken out of the package and hit the grill that is used with cheese and unkosher meets they cease to be kosher. What I would like to see is a restaurant that is less strict, but still adheres to reasonable laws of kosher. One where customers don't have to pay for someone to sit around and supervise all day, but does not do anything blatantly unkosher like serving ham and cooking milk and meat together.
What makes it not Kosher?
Why are you not allowed to mix Meat with Dairy?
What makes it not kosher?
We are commanded not to "Cook the baby in the mothers milk", according to the Torah.
This has been taught to mean that we cannot cook meat with cheese or milk. It was for several 'reasons' including that it is a merciful thing, because milk is for the babys goodness, not for its death. And also because the Idol worshipping nations would always cook meat with cheese {sorta like Mexican food}.
From Rambams list of Mitzvahs this is Mitzvah # 195
195) Not to eat meat and milk cooked together Ex. 23:19
23:19 The choicest first-fruits of thy land thou shalt bring into the house of the LORD thy God. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk.
There are many good resources which will explain it...
http://www.aish.com/torahportion/livelyparsha/Lively_Parsha_Mishpatim.asp
KEEPING KOSHER
The Torah says: "Do not cook a kid in his mother's milk." These words are found 3 times in the Torah, representing 3 separate prohibitions.
1. Do not cook meat with milk.
2. Do not eat meat cooked with milk. (Yes, including cheeseburgers - oh no!)
3. Do not derive any benefit from meat cooked with milk - even unintentionally!
The reason the Torah uses the words "kid in its mothers milk," is to teach us that even though the main sustenance of the kid is its mothers milk, it is still considered a foreign substance and forbidden to be mixed. Certainly all other milk is forbidden to be cooked with meat.
The Torah's specific wording also limits the prohibition to kosher milk (mother's milk), kosher meat (goat, sheep, cow) and only animals (as opposed to birds). Rabbinic law, however, prohibits all types of meat, and even meat mixed (but not cooked) with milk - since these could easily be confused with the forbidden stuff.
I hope this helps...
muman613
-
Actually a lot of things say they are kosher but are not. The second avenue non kosher deli is an example. In Baltimore there is a place called Lennies. They will grill hotdogs that they say are kosher but as soon as they are taken out of the package and hit the grill that is used with cheese and unkosher meets they cease to be kosher. What I would like to see is a restaurant that is less strict, but still adheres to reasonable laws of kosher. One where customers don't have to pay for someone to sit around and supervise all day, but does not do anything blatantly unkosher like serving ham and cooking milk and meat together.
What makes it not Kosher?
Why are you not allowed to mix Meat with Dairy?
What makes it not kosher?
We are commanded not to "Cook the baby in the mothers milk", according to the Torah.
This has been taught to mean that we cannot cook meat with cheese or milk. It was for several 'reasons' including that it is a merciful thing, because milk is for the babys goodness, not for its death. And also because the Idol worshipping nations would always cook meat with cheese {sorta like Mexican food}.
From Rambams list of Mitzvahs this is Mitzvah # 195
195) Not to eat meat and milk cooked together Ex. 23:19
23:19 The choicest first-fruits of thy land thou shalt bring into the house of the LORD thy G-d. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in its mother's milk.
There are many good resources which will explain it...
http://www.aish.com/torahportion/livelyparsha/Lively_Parsha_Mishpatim.asp
KEEPING KOSHER
The Torah says: "Do not cook a kid in his mother's milk." These words are found 3 times in the Torah, representing 3 separate prohibitions.
1. Do not cook meat with milk.
2. Do not eat meat cooked with milk. (Yes, including cheeseburgers - oh no!)
3. Do not derive any benefit from meat cooked with milk - even unintentionally!
The reason the Torah uses the words "kid in its mothers milk," is to teach us that even though the main sustenance of the kid is its mothers milk, it is still considered a foreign substance and forbidden to be mixed. Certainly all other milk is forbidden to be cooked with meat.
The Torah's specific wording also limits the prohibition to kosher milk (mother's milk), kosher meat (goat, sheep, cow) and only animals (as opposed to birds). Rabbinic law, however, prohibits all types of meat, and even meat mixed (but not cooked) with milk - since these could easily be confused with the forbidden stuff.
I hope this helps...
muman613
It does Thank You
-
I would try it in Israel. Not to say that is all I'd eat or that I'd eat it a lot. You also have to be careful they have treif McDonald's
-
the cheese at mcdonalds would have to be parve
-
I'm curious about something.
A lot of times there are milk products in non-dairy creamers and soy cheese.
Casein is derived from milk and I don't understand how nondairy creamers can call themselves nondairy when they have casein in them.
-
"What I would like to see is a restaurant that is less strict, but still adheres to reasonable laws of kosher."
You have that today with most Kosher restaurants. Why would you want that anyway? People in a buisness can and do make mistakes, without a supervisor (or someone you can trust) who is to say that they will be honest, or even if they are- that they know the laws correctly. Anyway aren't you a certified Machgiach?
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
Hehe, I know you are referring to Grillpoint on Jewel Avenue. What you are saying is very true.
-
I would try it in Israel. Not to say that is all I'd eat or that I'd eat it a lot. You also have to be careful they have treif McDonald's
The Israeli with the McDonalds license in Israel is an extreme leftists activist. I think we should boycott him.
-
DownwithIslam, I wouldn't eat at D___Donald's if my life depended on it. That chemical factory grants whole new meaning to the term "food poisoning". Yimach schmo to the people who run this evil corporation. (But I hope Fag Buchanus and Bill Clinton continue to eat at McD's a lot.)
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
Hehe, I know you are referring to Grillpoint on Jewel Avenue. What you are saying is very true.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there is only a Kosher Subway in Brooklyn. I don't know of any in the Main Street area.
Kosher Bite in Baltimore is pretty good. I also like the Falafel at Carmels.
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
Hehe, I know you are referring to Grillpoint on Jewel Avenue. What you are saying is very true.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there is only a Kosher Subway in Brooklyn. I don't know of any in the Main Street area.
Kosher Bite in Baltimore is pretty good. I also like the Falafel at Carmels.
Their is a Glat Kosher Subway right next to Grill Point on Main Street and Jewel ave.
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
Hehe, I know you are referring to Grillpoint on Jewel Avenue. What you are saying is very true.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there is only a Kosher Subway in Brooklyn. I don't know of any in the Main Street area.
Kosher Bite in Baltimore is pretty good. I also like the Falafel at Carmels.
Their is a Glat Kosher Subway right next to Grill Point on Main Street and Jewel ave.
I'll have to take a trip there on Sunday and bite the bullet to spend $8 for a 6". I'm interesting in trying Shwarma at a subway. Did they get rid of the old place on the corner of Main and Jewel? The one that was across the street from the bus stop.
-
That's sad. Why does it cost eight dollars to get a freaking six-inch sandwich at the NY Subways? In Cali (not an inexpensive state to live), footlongs generally run in the vicinity of $6.45. The above sounds like highway robbery. >:(
-
I would try it, but if they make buisness like the kosher subway, then I would just try it once and then not come again. These places should lower prices, I understand if it is not too low, but still $8 for a 6' sub is not worth it when you have a swarma place next door which gives you a lot of meat for like a doller or 2 more. So my pointer to these places- have good prices, serve good food and people will come. (anyway with Mcdonalds even if I eat their I will very little anyway if it contains the usual things in the food).
Hehe, I know you are referring to Grillpoint on Jewel Avenue. What you are saying is very true.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but there is only a Kosher Subway in Brooklyn. I don't know of any in the Main Street area.
Kosher Bite in Baltimore is pretty good. I also like the Falafel at Carmels.
Their is a Glat Kosher Subway right next to Grill Point on Main Street and Jewel ave.
I'll have to take a trip there on Sunday and bite the bullet to spend $8 for a 6". I'm interesting in trying Shwarma at a subway. Did they get rid of the old place on the corner of Main and Jewel? The one that was across the street from the bus stop.
I dont know if they have swarma their. Maybe they do, I dont know.
I think that place you are speaking about is either the Kosher Subway or the Kosher Wine store (both are new). Some time ago their was a Jewish bookstore their, but they moved right around the corner to a bigger place.
-
That's sad. Why does it cost eight dollars to get a freaking six-inch sandwich at the NY Subways? In Cali (not an inexpensive state to live), footlongs generally run in the vicinity of $6.45. The above sounds like highway robbery. >:(
Its all supply and demand. If one is able and willing, they can make any prices they want as long as they do not force you to buy what they are selling.
-
My best friend is Israeli, so I've eaten plenty of kosher food. I've had good and bad kosher, it's all relative. Kosher has nothing to do with food tasting good or not though..
-
That's sad. Why does it cost eight dollars to get a freaking six-inch sandwich at the NY Subways? In Cali (not an inexpensive state to live), footlongs generally run in the vicinity of $6.45. The above sounds like highway robbery. >:(
Its all supply and demand. If one is able and willing, they can make any prices they want as long as they do not force you to buy what they are selling.
When supply and demand gets out of balance, people look for other solutions. In the case of a Kosher restaurant with a monopoly, the alternative is not to eat kosher, as repulsive as this is, this is the choice that most Jews opt for. If we want to see more people eating kosher, the Kosher restaurants have to remain competitive with not only other Kosher restaurants, but all restaurants. They need to find other solutions to the extra expense than jacking up the price beyond the extra cost. One example would be to pay the Hasgucha on tips rather than a salary. This would encourage him to do a better job also. Keep in mind that some things such as water don't even cost them more. Subway's big thing is the $5.00 footlong. To use the Subway name The Kosher subway should really participate in this promotion even if it is just the veggie patty.
-
YES, ABSOLUTELY!!! I suffered e-coli poison from vegetables. I almost believe that EVERYTHING ought to just go kosher at this point, b/c of the illegal occupiers situation.
-
That's why Chaim will not eat at a Kosher restaurant if the food is being handled by savages.
-
YES, ABSOLUTELY!!! I suffered e-coli poison from vegetables. I almost believe that EVERYTHING ought to just go kosher at this point, b/c of the illegal occupiers situation.
If everything was labelled kosher (besides obvious products that couldn't be, like ham) then the standards would be lowered and you could never know for certain what was truly kosher and what wasn't.
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
-
No, I prefer subway.
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
NO KOSHER ;)
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Really!! WOW I didnt know that, is this WHY it tastes even better than b4? I had a Hebrew National Knockwurst last night- OMG! WAS IT GOOD! I never have gotten sick from Hebrew National.
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Really!! WOW I didnt know that, is this WHY it tastes even better than b4? I had a Hebrew National Knockwurst last night- OMG! WAS IT GOOD! I never have gotten sick from Hebrew National.
i would never eat Hebrew national because its not Glatt Kosher but i did hear from many non-Jews that its very good
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Really!! WOW I didnt know that, is this WHY it tastes even better than b4? I had a Hebrew National Knockwurst last night- OMG! WAS IT GOOD! I never have gotten sick from Hebrew National.
i would never eat Hebrew national because its not Glatt Kosher but i did hear from many non-Jews that its very good
It is good
-
First off, let's not be a bunch of dummies... We want our fellow Kosher Jews to live a long time and eat healthy.
Fast food, no matter kosher or nonKosher is bad for and will cause heart problems amongst other things. These types of foods have a certain type of sodium and perservative that makes you addicted to eat it more often.
and it's not just the fast food..it's also the kosher chinese foods..
The best food and kosher food one can ever eat is the one which he/she makes at the comfort of their home...and fish fish fish fish with vegetables and fruits with other proteins. Carbs found in rice and bread (which shoudl be multi-grain) should be eaten as well, but more sparingly than other things.
Again FAST FOOD Kosher or nonKosher is terrible for the health! It's a moot point whether any of us would ever eat a kosher burger king...kosher or non kosher...it will bring a demise to one's health!
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Really!! WOW I didnt know that, is this WHY it tastes even better than b4? I had a Hebrew National Knockwurst last night- OMG! WAS IT GOOD! I never have gotten sick from Hebrew National.
i would never eat Hebrew national because its not Glatt Kosher but i did hear from many non-Jews that its very good
Well, I am going to have to find GLATT, b/c I do NOT want to get e-coli poison EVER again. This was when the lettuce and spinach incident was happening. I thought NOTHING of eating my vegetables! NOW I DO!
-
What is the difference between GLATT Kosher and Kosher?
-
What is the difference between GLATT Kosher and Kosher?
For meat to be kosher, it must come from a kosher animal and be slaughtered in a kosher way.
For meat to be glatt kosher, in addition to the two above conditions, the meat must also come from an animal with adhesion-free lungs.
The word glatt means smooth in Yiddish.
In Jewish Law, the term glatt is used to refer to the lungs of animals.
After the animal is slaughtered, the animal is opened and examined to determine whether the lungs are smooth.
If defects on the lungs are found, the meat is considered treif (torn, mortally injured, non-kosher).
If the lungs are found to be defect-free or smooth, the meat is considered to be glatt kosher
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Why isn't it kosher? And where is the source that it is reform?
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Why isn't it kosher? And where is the source that it is reform?
i heard it was reform or be Gentiles. Religious Jews dont eat Hebrew national
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
i think there might be a problem with Hebrew National many Jews don't trust The Triangle K which is the mark for Hebrew national, they way i heard that it is a reform Jewish company i could be wrong though
Why isn't it kosher? And where is the source that it is reform?
i heard it was reform or be Gentiles. Religious Jews dont eat Hebrew national
What ???
-
i heard that the Triangle K which is the Kosher symbol for many products such as for Hebrew National is not really kosher.
that the Triangle K is a company which is manufactured by either Reform Jews or Gentiles.
but i could be wrong, this is what i heard. mostly all religious Jews don't eat products from triangle K
-
No.
-
They have the Triangle k above the bar code
(http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/P/B00032I1R4.01-A3CDPEGSIQM61V._SCLZZZZZZZ_.jpg)
-
Kosher meat never had any sorts of problems. even when all other meat had mad cow disease and other things
I TOTALLY agree Yonathan! KOSHER ALL THE WAY, plus Hebrew National has the BEST hot dogs, the BEST. Of course there are NAZIS that would say 'no kosher' b/c they are sick demented freaks. Good let em eat the mad cow, they deserve it.
Nazis would usually not complain about Kosher being stricter. If one asks Orthodox Rabbis they would also say not to eat from that company.
Also 1 point to make- what is concidered "Kosher" as opposed to "Glatt Kosher" is really a leniency that some Askenazim approve. ALL Sefardim for sure have to eat Glatt Kosher, most religious Askenazim also eat Glatt Kosher (the Hassidim b/c of rulings of their Rabbis and also many ordinary Orthodox Religious Jews- not to take a chance). The regular Kosher what happens is that the lungs do have a certain layer over them- which is an indication actually of the animals health, and the law is that Jews cant eat the animal if it has that, BUT the Askenazi (Rama) found a leniency where they say that removing it would then allow the animal to be consumed, while Sefardim (the Beit Yosef) say no it is not allowed to begin with because it had it while it was alive.
Also another thing- one has to know which kosher is truly Kosher according to Halacha and which kosher is just by others standards (like reform or anyone else). So that is why you have trademark symbols like the OU and others. And just having a K symbol, legally ANYONE can have, but if a company selling a non-kosher product for example uses OK or OU (their symbol), they can then be sued for it, so the chances as that they would not do it. (but theoretically it is possible, but still we go by statistics). Also some of the K sybol products are Kosher, you just have to check with you Rabbi or someone who knows about it, about which products are okay (for example Corn Flakes are allowed).