Blog
» Categories
» Kashrut
When is a part of a non-kosher animal kosher? When it is no longer food. It is clear in the Talmud that although a dead bug is not kosher, a bug that has turned to dust is of no consequence. We also find that the hooves and horns of non-kosher...
Comments
Likes
Trigger warning! I will now tell a horror story. If "The Godfather" was too difficult for you to watch, please skip this post.The story begins about seveneen years ago, in a community that had for many years, followed a very liberal, albeit...
Comments
Likes
Up until about 1970, kosher restaurants in the United States, and most other countries, were either 'self-supervised", or had a local rabbi pop in for a spot check, usually once a week. For canned and other packaged goods, the consumer relied on...
Comments
Likes
To me, one of the greatest heroes of modern Jewish history is the much hated, but much feared, Rabbi Yitzckak Abadi. Imagine, if you will, an erudite figure who studied at the feet of great rabbis of the last generation, and is looking over the...
Comments
Likes
Another area of Kashrut is not Biblical, but rather rabbinic. During the Roman occupation, the rabbis were concerned about the Jews becoming Romanized. In addition, many Jews were fleeing Eretz Yisrael for what seemed to be safety. What better way...
Comments
Likes
The issue of milk is a contentious one, which divides us into factions. Many put it into the same category as wine; expanding an existing law (in this case, the milk of non Kosher animals) into a safeguard against intermarriage. Others consider...
Comments
Likes
Cheese, too, is a most contentious topic. As with milk, the confusion is due to a lack of information. In this case, however, it seems that the Sages did not want us to know. We read in the Mishnah, that right after the decree had been made by the...
Comments
Likes
The array of opinions as to the kashrut of cheese has led to many different standards. There are those who consider any cheese made by a non Jew to be forbidden, regardless of the ingredients. This view is the one accepted by most Hareidi (Ultra...
Comments
Likes
Another two enactments, whose goal was to limit the chances of intermarriage, were "Bishul Akum" (Idolater's Cooking), and "Pat Akum" (Idolater's Bread). Both of these have extremely strict and extremely lenient interpretations. The implications...
Comments
Likes
One of the most misunderstood aspects of Kashrut is the issue of utensils. How can a utensil become non kosher? How can it be made kosher again? (n.b. the almost universal folklore of burying a utensil over night has absolutely no basis in...
Comments
Likes