Kosher Blog

Is It Kosher? Category

Shapes of the Cape

The other day, for our multi-reason celebration, a friend of ours brought a new snack — Shapes of the Cape by the Cape Cod Potato Chip Company, a division of Lance®. Ordinarily, this wouldn’t be such a big deal at all, but these cheese snacks (in the shapes of lighthouses, whale tails, seagulls, and seashells) had two interesting marks on the package — 1) in ginormous writing (okay, maybe not quite ginormous) the package said made with real Cabot cheddar, and 2) a prominent OU-D. You are now thinking, “Hey Jon, I didn’t know Cabot cheddar was supervised by the OU.” And I’m thinking, “Neither did I.” So, an inquiry has been sent and a response is awaited. Stay tuned for more information. In the meantime, enjoy your new bag of Shapes of the Cape.
Thanks for waiting — here is the OU’s response:

Dear Jonathan,

Thank you for checking with the OU on your Kashruth question.

The following is certified kosher dairy when the OU-D appears on the label.

Label Name Symbol Brand Name
Shapes Of The Cape Cheddar Crackers OU-D Cape Cod

The cheese used for this product is certified kosher dairy by the OU and is not available for consumer use.

Please don?t hesitate to contact us again should you have any further questions.

With best wishes for a joyful, peaceful and healthy summer season, we remain

Sincerely,

The Web (be) Rebbe

Hebrew National reengaging the Hebrew Nation

Hebrew National has hit the news once again, with the Rabbinical Assembly officially approving its products for use by Conservative Jews:

Forvartz
Hebrew National Certified Kosher ? But Not Kosher Enough for Some
By Miriam Colton and Steven I. Weiss

The headline (by highlighting the negative “Not Kosher Enough For Some”) makes the issue seem more controversial than it really is. In fact, the headline is more controversial than the well-written article it accompanies. The fact of the matter, which has always been the case, is that HN’s beef isn’t glatt. What would have been nice is a categorical explanation why HN and Rabbi Tibor Stern’s oversight was problematic not just for the Orthodox but for the Conservative. What would be really controversial is an exposé ¯f the issues behind that handful of hekshers most people (and their rabbis) find “questionable” or “unacceptable.” Maybe a little to touchy even for the Forward.

But I digress. Something that never requires lung inspection to be kosher is poultry (despite the misuse of the word “glatt” on poultry products), and Hebrew National does that one right. Their roasted turkey breast is both cheaper than Empire’s and better suited to sandwich-making, given its thinner slices. For all you kosher Atkins dieters, this turkey is probably your wonder food - 50 calories in 2 oz., no fat, plenty of protein - and it won’t break the bank.

Kosher Foie Gras

If you ever decide to fork out the dough for some kosher Foie Gras, it may be useful to know that the French Delice brand (glatt, OU) is fully cooked (as is appropriate for liver) and ready to eat out of the container. Thanks to the OU’s Webbe Rebbe for the info.

Kosher Alert: Paesana Balsamic Vinegar

While shopping at the Brighton Mills Shaw’s yesterday, I noticed in their expansive Kosher section a bottle of Paesana aged balsamic vinegar. All the many Paesana products I’ve used in the past have been hekshered, so I didn’t bother to look at this bottle.

When I got home, I noticed that it did not have a heksher, and after reviewing the product description at the online Paesana store, I discovered that is indeed not kosher. I’ve sent an e-mail to Shaw’s regarding the vinegar, and hopefully they’ll rectify the situation.

Pesach Condensed Milk?

I have a recipe for a delicious dessert which could be made for Passover if only Pesadik condensed milk were available. Anyone seen such a product?

Spiritual Spirits

KosherBlog reader Heather asks what hard liquors are available for Passover. All acceptable alcohols are from the non-grain category (no whiskey!). Here’s a list of the Pesach spirits I could find:

* Arack (Carmel)
* Brandies (Carmel, Givon, Slivovitz, Rodrigues)
* Cognac (R&B Lanxner, Montaigne)
* Gin (Seagram)
* Grappa (Carmel)
* Liqueurs (Bartenura amaretto, hazelnut, etrog, lemon, apricot, lime, mandarin, peach; Sabra chocolate-orange)
* Vodka (Kedem, Carmel, Seagram)
* Vermouth (Kedem)

For more detail, the Orthodox Union’s list of K-F-P liquors is available in the T-Z section of their annual Passover guide, under “Wines & Liquors”.

KosherWine.com and QueenAnneWine.com both offer several of these products. KosherWine.com indicates on every product they sell whether it is Kosher for Passover. (It would be great if either of them could offer searches based solely on Pesach Kashrut!)

Soft Matzah

R’ Yuter has an interesting post on soft matzah baked in the sephardic tradition, as well as a site from which they can be ordered. I had long heard of these matzot, which seem to resemble pita bread, and I wonder if the ashkenazic tradition has any objection to them.

Coffee Shop Kashrus

For me, collapsing in bed past midnight and hauling myself out of bed before daybreak is pretty much par for the course. Long time fans may remember the Hillel mass emails that I?d send out at a bright-eyed and bushytailed 4:30am. Needless to say, caffeine?s more or less replaced at least two of the four food groups in my diet. Bad for my formerly pearly whites but fabulous for Starbucks

Coffee is one of the few beverages (and by few I mean the only one besides water and certain alcohols) that, if you do it right, doesn?t require a hekhsher. Just follow the Star-K?s guidelines when shmoozing up your barista:

  • All unflavored, roasted coffees (both regular and decaffeinated) may be purchased in a disposable cup. Sugar may be added. Milk (not creamer) may be added for those not maqpid (stringent) on (cholov Yisroel
  • Creamers and flavors may be added separately (i.e., mixed in by hand and not added/stirred in via a machine) after the consumer verifies that the label on the original container bears reliable certification.
  • Frapuccino, whipped toppings and other beverages are not recommended since they are made in carafes/pump pots that are not exclusively used for kosher beverages.
  • Only packaged food items bearing reliable certification may be purchased.
  • Starbucks bottled beverages bearking a “KD” are certified kosher, dairy, chalav stam (i.e. not cholov Yisroel) by Rabbi Zevulun Charlop, Dean of the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (Yeshiva Univeristy?s semikha program, which has schooled more ex-boyfriends than I care to admit).

Bonus blogosphere tie-in: Rabbi Charlop?s right-hand man in micromanaging RIETS is Rabbi Chaim Bronstein, whose oldest son Avraham is one of the most well-reputed Jewish bloggers of our time. Of course, by “our time” I mean the past 18 months. I know Avraham, Avraham knows his father, his father knows Rabbi Charlop, Rabbi Charlop deals with Starbucks recipe and production departments in administering their bottled beverages’ hashgachah and the recipe and production departments must have a solid working relationship with Starbucks CEO and MOT Howard Schultz.

I smell a shiddukh! Oh no wait, it?s just spilled espresso.

HN hires a higher, higher authority

Hebrew National

Spurred by news that Hebrew National’s former certifying rabbi passed away last week, I looked into the hot dog maker’s current kashrut status, after not having eaten their products for years. According to Hebrew National’s FAQ, all their products are now under the supervision of Triangle-K’s Rabbi Ralbag. Aaron Abadi’s post on Kashrut.org attests to the reliability of Triangle-K’s operations at Hebrew National.

UPDATE: Zackary Sholem Berger gives his thoughts on Hebrew National and the Orthodox migration from local Kosher supervision to the monolithic, national hechsherim.

The Feast of Delights — Rabbi Nosson Slifkin

(As fwd-ed to the JTS Bible Department mailing list by Professor Alan Cooper.)

The event was of tremendous historic significance. It was of extraordinary halachic importance. It was of unbelievably exceptional uniqueness. And parts of it were gross.

The purpose of the evening was to maintain a kosher status for creatures that are in danger of losing it. With birds, the Torah lists twenty-four types of non-kosher birds, and all the rest are kosher. However, it is impossible to identify the listed birds with any certainty. Thus, we may only eat birds for which we possess a mesorah, a continuous tradition, that the species is kosher and has been eaten. With mammals, the situation might seem more sraightforward; the Torah states that for a mammal to be kosher, it must have split hooves and chew the cud. However, some later authorities added a requirement that there must also be a mesorah with mammals. The problem is that in today’s industrialized age, the only things that people eat are factory-farmed chickens and cows. The mesorah for other species is dying out along with the remnant of Jews from Europe and other communities. And once the tradition is gone, it is lost until Mashiach comes. A practical ramification of this would be, for example, that if mad cow disease were ever to render the entire bovine population inedible, substitutes would be lacking.

In an effort to keep the mesorah for other species going, my chavrusa, Rabbi Dr. Ari Zivotofsky, and Dr. Ari Greenspan, longtime friends and shochtim, arranged a ?halachic dinner.? During this dinner, all kinds of
unusual species were served, along with lectures explaining why they are kosher, and a 150-page book of source material for each participant. The dinner thereby publicized and maintained the mesorah for these creatures. As preparation for this, the two Aris had spent twenty years interviewing
elderly shochtim and asking them which species they remember slaughtering in Europe, Africa, and Yemen.

Another person involved with arrangements for the evening was Dr. Zohar Amar, whose particular specialty is locusts. The Torah states that certain locusts are kosher and may be eaten. The Torah and Talmud even give signs by which these may be recognized. Again, however, according to most views, a mesorah is required. Such a tradition still exists in some Yemenite and Moroccan communities, and Dr. Amar was working to ensure that it wouldn’t die out.

Amongst the guests at the dinner were several scholars who specialize in the topic of identifying animals in the Torah, including Rabbi Dr. Yisroel Meir Levinger of Basel, Rabbi Dr. Moshe Tendler, Rabbi Shabtai Rappaport, Professor Mordechai Kislev, and Professor Yehudah Feliks, the pioneer of this field of study. A government minister, Rabbi Yitzchak Levi, was also present; his cooperation had been invaluable in securing permission to slaughter some of the species. The dinner was held at the Eucalyptus restaurant in Jerusalem’s Safra Square. The world famous chef at this restaurant, Moshe Basson, specializes in cooking with Biblical herbs and other ingredients, so this dinner was right up his alley.

The restaurant looked like any other restaurant set up for eighty or so diners, with one exception. Prominently displayed was an exhibit of many of the creatures that would be eaten. Hooves and horns of various mammals were on show. A live duck, a guinea fowl and two quails clucked in their cages. Locusts in varying stages of development swarmed around their vivarium. It was a wonderful opportunity to meet the meat.

First, for hors d’ouvres, dove and pigeon soup was served, along with a halachic intrigue: fleishige eggs. Although eggs are usually parve, these were incompletely-formed eggs that had been removed from a dead chicken, and therefore possessed the status of meat.

Next was turkey on rosemary skewers, in zatar sauce. Turkey doesn’t sound like an exotic dish, but its halachic status is actually extremely complicated. There clearly cannot be a mesorah for a bird that was only discovered after Columbus! The difficult solutions to this problem were
explored by Rabbi Dr. Zivotofsky.

A fig, stuffed with chicken, was halachically innocent, if culturally exotic. But this launched a series of bird courses. First was the ?duck pond? ? a delicious plate of goose, duck, muscovy duck, and mulard (a hybrid of muscovy duck and pekin duck). The unusual muscovy duck had formerly been prohibited by such authorities as Rabbi Samson Raphael
Hirsch, due to the lack of a mesorah. However, the subsequent discovery that it could hybridize with regular ducks proved that for halachic purposes, it was one and the same type.

The next course was pheasant and partridge. Rabbi Moshe Feinstein had prohibited the eating of pheasant, even though he was convinced of its kosher status, due to the lack of mesorah. But in 1981, the two Aris discovered that Rabbi Yosef Kapach, the late Yemenite Torah authority,
had a mesorah on pheasants. On the eve of the Lebanon war, the two Aris traveled to a kibbutz in the north of Israel to obtain a pair of pheasants. They brought these to Rav Kapach for identification and slaughter, and thereby kept the mesorah going.

Following this came quail and guinea fowl, on a bed of roasted wheat kernels. Several guests started singing Lehisaneg besa’anugim, barburim u’slav ve’dagim, the Shabbos song that speaks of rejoicing with the culinary delights of fattened birds and quail. It had been difficult to track down a mesorah for the guinea fowl; and in the process of interviewing an octogenarian shochet in Har Nof, one of the two birds had escaped. Finally, Dr. Zivotofsky tracked down an Algerian in Netanya and a Yemenite in Bnei Brak who possessed a mesorah.

With the conclusion of the bird dishes, it was time to move on to mammals. The first dish was made from a regular cow. However, it was not a side of beef, nor a T-bone steak, and not even tongue. Rather, it was cubed cow’s udders. I had a hard time keeping it down.

The seventh course was water buffalo and American bison (popularly but inaccurately also called buffalo), served as delectable dumplings in okra sauce. Water buffalo had already been explicitly identified as kosher by no less than the Shulchan Aruch itself. Dr. Greenspan showed a video of how he had brought the young buffalo from its ranch the previous day in the back of his car, which would never be the same again. The American bison, like the turkey, lacks a mesorah, but its ability to hybridize
with domestic cattle (to produce ?beefalo?) renders it kosher according to all opinions. This was followed by lamb, served along with the spices that were used to prepare the incense for the Temple.

The chef brought in the spectacular next course himself. It was a deer, brought in on a huge platter, whole, with only its head removed, and stuffed with rice and raisins. A deer is also a kosher animal; its halachic status as wild rather than domesticated animal means that its fat may also be eaten, but its blood must be covered by earth immediately after the slaughter.

Then, after a lengthy presentation by Dr. Amar, the highlight was served: grilled locusts. These were desert locusts, obtained from a laboratory and taken the previous day to recent Yemenite immigrants for identification and cooking. As the Talmud proscribes, they had four wings that covered most of their body, jumping legs and four other legs. Most importantly, the Yemenites had maintained a tradition that these were the kosher locusts specified in the Torah. A further indication was that they possessed the sign of the Hebrew letter chet on their chests, which is nature’s equivalent of an O.U. logo. Although some authorities had raised questions on the legitimacy of the Yemenite mesorah, it appeared that the responses to these difficulties were more than adequate. And so, in accordance with the ruling of many authorities, it was permitted for us (even th
ose of us who were not of Yemenite origin) to eat these locusts.I must admit that eating a locust was not an experience that I would hasten to repeat. They were served whole, neatly arranged on a plate.

According to the instructions, I removed the locust’s wings and legs, and unscrewed its head. Then, with my face screwed up in repulsion, I ate it. Like many candies, it was crunchy on the outside with a chewy center. But all that I could think at the time was, Yeuuuuchhh, I’m eating a bug!!! essert was ?milk and honey? ? almond milk with date and bee honey. This was followed by esrog liqueur. The meal had involved twelve courses and, with its lectures before each course, had lasted nearly six hours. We had ensured the perpetuation of the mesorah by putting this food down. just prayed that I would be able to keep it down.

Rabbi Nosson Slifkin is the director of Zoo Torah, an educational enterprise that offers a series of books, programs for both adults and children, zoo tours, and African safaris, all on the theme of Judaism and the animal kingdom. For more details and a taste of the experience, see www.zootorah.com.