Kashrut: Jewish Dietary
Laws
Kashrut is the
body of Jewish law dealing with what foods we can
and cannot eat and how those foods must be
prepared and eaten. "Kashrut" comes
from the Hebrew root Kaf-Shin-Resh, meaning
fit, proper or correct. It is the same root as
the more commonly known word "kosher,"
which describes food that meets these standards.
The word "kosher" can also be used, and
often is used, to describe ritual objects that
are made in accordance with Jewish law and are
fit for ritual use.
There is no such
thing as "kosher-style" food. Kosher is
not a style of cooking. Chinese food can be
kosher if it is prepared in accordance with
Jewish law, and there are many fine kosher
Chinese restaurants in Philadelphia and New York.
When a restaurant calls itself
"kosher-style," it usually means that
the restaurant serves these traditional Jewish
foods, and it almost invariably means that the
food is not actually kosher.
Food that is not
kosher is commonly referred to as treyf (lit.
torn, from the commandment not to eat animals
that have been torn by other animals).
Why Do We Observe the Laws
of Kashrut?
Many modern Jews
think that the laws of kashrut are simply
primitive health regulations that have become
obsolete with modern methods of food preparation.
There is no question that some of the dietary
laws have some beneficial health effects. For
example, the laws regarding kosher slaughter are
so sanitary that kosher butchers and
slaughterhouses have been exempted from many USDA
regulations.
However, health is
not the only reason for Jewish dietary laws. Many
of the laws of kashrut have no known connection
with health. To the best of our modern scientific
knowledge, there is no reason why camel or rabbit
meat (both treyf) is any less healthy than cow or
goat meat. In addition, some of the health
benefits to be derived from kashrut were not made
obsolete by the refrigerator. For example, there
is some evidence that eating meat and dairy
together interferes with digestion, and no modern
food preparation technique reproduces the health
benefit of the kosher law of eating them
separately.
The short answer
to why we observe these laws is: because the
Torah says so. The Torah does not specify any
reason for these laws, and for a Torah-observant,
traditional Jew, there is no need for any other
reason. Some have suggested that the laws of
kashrut fall into the category of
"chukkim," laws for which there is no
reason. We show our obedience to G-d by following
these laws even though we do not know the reason.
Others, however, have tried to ascertain G-d's
reason for imposing these laws.
In his book
"To Be a Jew" (an excellent resource on
traditional Judaism), Rabbi Hayim Halevy Donin
suggests that the dietary laws are designed as a
call to holiness. The ability to distinguish
between right and wrong, good and evil, pure and
defiled, the sacred and the profane, is very
important in Judaism. Imposing rules on what you
can and cannot eat ingrains that kind of self
control. In addition, it elevates the simple act
of eating into a religious ritual. The Jewish
dinner table is often compared to the temple
altar in rabbinic literature.
How Difficult is it to
Keep Kosher?
People who do not
keep kosher often tell me how difficult it is.
Actually, keeping kosher is not particularly
difficult in and of itself; what makes it
difficult to keep kosher is the fact that the
rest of the world does not do so.
As we shall see
below, the basic underlying rules are fairly
simple. If you buy your meat at a kosher butcher
and buy only kosher certified products at the
market, the only thing you need to think about is
the separation of meat and dairy.
Keeping kosher
only becomes difficult when you try to eat in a
non-kosher restaurant, or at the home of a person
who does not keep kosher. In those situations,
your lack of knowledge about your host's
ingredients and the food preparation techniques
make it very difficult to keep kosher. Some
commentators have pointed out, however, that this
may well have been part of what G-d had in mind:
to make it more difficult for us to socialize
with those who do not share our religion.
General Rules
Although the
details of kashrut are extensive, the laws all
derive from a few fairly simple, straightforward
rules:
- Certain
animals may not be eaten at all. This
restriction includes the flesh, organs,
eggs and milk of the forbidden animals.
- Of the
animals that may be eaten, the birds and
mammals must be killed in accordance with
Jewish law.
- All blood
must be drained from the meat or broiled
out of it before it is eaten.
- Certain parts
of permitted animals may not be eaten.
- Meat (the
flesh of birds and mammals) cannot be
eaten with dairy. Fish, eggs, fruits,
vegetables and grains can be eaten with
either meat or dairy. (According to some
views, fish may not be eaten with meat).
- Utensils that
have come into contact with meat may not
be used with dairy, and vice versa.
Utensils that have come into contact with
non-kosher food may not be used with
kosher food. This applies only where the
contact occurred while the food was hot.
- Grape
products made by non-Jews may not be
eaten.
The Details
Animals that may not be
eaten
Of the
"beasts of the earth" (which basically
refers to land mammals with the exception of
swarming rodents), you may eat any animal that
has cloven hooves and chews its cud. Lev. 11:3;
Deut. 14:6. Any land mammal that does not have
both of these qualities is forbidden. The Torah
specifies that the camel, the rock badger, the
hare and the pig are not kosher because each
lacks one of these two qualifications. Sheep,
cattle, goats and deer are kosher.
Of the things that
are in the waters, you may eat anything that has
fins and scales. Lev. 11:9; Deut. 14:9. Thus,
shellfish such as lobsters, oysters, shrimp,
clams and crabs are all forbidden. Fish like
tuna, carp, salmon and herring are all permitted.
For birds, the
criteria is less clear. The Torah lists forbidden
birds (Lev. 11:13-19; Deut. 14:11-18), but does
not specify why these particular birds are
forbidden. All of the birds on the list are birds
of prey or scavengers, thus the rabbis inferred
that this was the basis for the distinction.
Other birds are permitted, such as chicken,
geese, ducks and turkeys.
Of the
"winged swarming things" (winged
insects), a few are specifically permitted (Lev.
11:22), but the Sages are no longer certain which
ones they are, so all have been forbidden.
Rodents, reptiles,
amphibians, and insects (except as mentioned
above) are all forbidden. Lev. 11:29-30, 42-43.
Some authorities
require a post-mortem examination of the lungs of
cattle, to determine whether the lungs are free
from adhesions. If the lungs are free from such
adhesions, the animal is deemed "glatt"
(that is, "smooth"). In certain
circumstances, an animal can be kosher without
being glatt; however, the stringency of keeping
"glatt kosher" has become increasingly
common in recent years.
As mentioned
above, any product derived from these forbidden
animals, such as their milk, eggs, fat, or
organs, also cannot be eaten. Rennet, an enzyme
used to harden cheese, is often obtained from
non-kosher animals, thus kosher hard cheese can
be difficult to find.
Kosher slaughtering
The mammals and
birds that may be eaten must be slaughtered in
accordance with Jewish law. (Deut. 12:21). We may
not eat animals that died of natural causes
(Deut. 14:21) or that were killed by other
animals. In addition, the animal must have no
disease or flaws in the organs at the time of
slaughter. These restrictions do not apply to
fish; only to the flocks and herds (Num. 11:22).
Ritual slaughter
is known as shechitah, and the person who
performs the slaughter is called a shochet, both
from the Hebrew root Shin-Chet-Tav, meaning to
destroy or kill. The method of slaughter is a
quick, deep stroke across the throat with a
perfectly sharp blade with no nicks or
unevenness. This method is painless, causes
unconsciousness within two seconds, and is widely
recognized as the most humane method of slaughter
possible.
Another advantage
of shechitah is that ensures rapid, complete
draining of the blood, which is also necessary to
render the meat kosher.
The shochet is not
simply a butcher; he must be a pious man,
well-trained in Jewish law, particularly as it
relates to kashrut. In smaller, more remote
communities, the rabbi and the shochet were often
the same person.
Draining of Blood
The Torah
prohibits consumption of blood. Lev. 7:26-27;
Lev. 17:10-14. This is the only dietary law that
has a reason specified in Torah: we do not eat
blood because the life of the animal is contained
in the blood. This applies only to the blood of
birds and mammals, not to fish blood. Thus, it is
necessary to remove all blood from the flesh of
kosher animals.
The first step in
this process occurs at the time of slaughter. As
discussed above, shechitah allows for rapid
draining of most of the blood.
The remaining
blood must be removed, either by broiling or
soaking and salting. Liver may only be kashered
by the broiling method, because it has so much
blood in it and such complex blood vessels. This
final process must be completed within 72 hours
after slaughter, and before the meat is frozen or
ground. Most butchers and all frozen food vendors
take care of the soaking and salting for you, but
you should always check this when you are buying
someplace you are unfamiliar with.
An egg that
contains a blood spot may not be eaten. This
isn't very common, but I find them once in a
while. It is a good idea to break an egg into a
container and check it before you put it into a
heated pan, because if you put a blood-stained
egg into a heated pan, the pan becomes
non-kosher.
Forbidden Fats and Nerves
The sciatic nerve
and its adjoining blood vessels may not be eaten.
The process of removing this nerve is time
consuming and not cost-effective, so most
American slaughterers simply sell the hind
quarters to non-kosher butchers.
A certain kind of
fat, known as chelev, which surrounds the vital
organs and the liver, may not be eaten. Kosher
butchers remove this. Modern scientists have
found biochemical differences between this type
of fat and the permissible fat around the muscles
and under the skin.
Separation of Meat and
Dairy
On three separate
occasions, the Torah tells us not to "boil a
kid in its mother's milk." (Ex. 23:19; Ex.
34:26; Deut. 14:21). The Torah explains that this
passage prohibits eating meat and dairy together.
The rabbis extended this prohibition to include
not eating milk and poultry together. In
addition, the Talmud prohibits cooking meat and
fish together or serving them on the same plates,
because it is considered to be unhealthy. It is,
however, permissible to eat fish and dairy
together, and it is quite common. It is also
permissible to eat dairy and eggs together.
This separation
includes not only the foods themselves, but the
utensils, pots and pans with which they are
cooked, the plates and flatware from which they
are eaten, the dishwashers or dishpans in which
they are cleaned, and the towels on which they
are dried. A kosher household will have at least
two sets of pots, pans and dishes: one for meat
and one for dairy.
One must wait a
significant amount of time between eating meat
and dairy. Opinions differ, and vary from three
to six hours. This is because fatty residues and
meat particles tend to cling to the mouth. From
dairy to meat, however, one need only rinse one's
mouth and eat a neutral solid like bread, unless
the dairy product in question is also of a type
that tends to stick in the mouth.
The Yiddish words
fleishig (meat), milchig (dairy) and pareve
(neutral) are commonly used to describe food or
utensils that fall into one of those categories.
Note that even the
smallest quantity of dairy (or meat) in something
renders it entirely dairy (or meat) for purposes
of kashrut. For example, most margarines are
dairy for kosher purposes, because they contain a
small quantity of whey or other dairy products to
give it a dairy-like taste. Animal fat is
considered meat for purposes of kashrut. You
should read the ingredients very carefully, even
if the product is kosher-certified.
Utensils
Utensils (pots,
pans, plates, flatware, etc., etc.) must also be
kosher. A utensil picks up the kosher
"status" (meat, dairy, pareve, or
treyf) of the food that is cooked in it or eaten
off of it, and transmits that status back to the
next food that is cooked in it or eaten off of
it. Thus, if you cook chicken soup in a saucepan,
the pan becomes meat. If you thereafter use the
same saucepan to heat up some warm milk, the
fleishig status of the pan is transmitted to the
milk, and the milchig status of the milk is
transmitted to the pan, making both the pan and
the milk a forbidden mixture.
Kosher status can
be transmitted from the food to the utensil or
from the utensil to the food only in the presence
of heat, thus if you are eating cold food in a
non-kosher establishment, the condition of the
plates is not an issue. Likewise, you could use
the same knife to slice cold cuts and cheese, as
long as you clean it in between, but this is not
really a recommended procedure, because it
increases the likelihood of mistakes.
Stove tops and
sinks routinely become non-kosher utensils,
because they routinely come in contact with both
meat and dairy in the presence of heat. It is
necessary, therefore, to use dishpans when
cleaning dishes (don't soak them directly in the
sink) and to use separate spoon rests and trivets
when putting things down on the stove top.
Dishwashers are a
kashrut problem. If you are going to use a
dishwasher in a kosher home, you either need to
have separate dish racks or you need to run the
dishwasher in between meat and dairy loads.
You should use
separate towels and pot holders for meat and
dairy. Routine laundering kashers such items, so
you can simply launder them between using them
for meat and dairy.
Certain kinds of
utensils can be "kashered" if you make
a mistake and use it with both meat and dairy.
Grape Products
The restrictions
on grape products derive from the laws against
using products of idolatry. Wine was commonly
used in the rituals of all ancient religions, and
wine was routinely sanctified for pagan purposes
while it was being processed. For this reason,
use of wines and other grape products made by
non-Jews was prohibited. (Whole grapes are not a
problem, nor are whole grapes in fruit cocktail).
For the most part,
this rule only affects wine and grape juice. This
becomes a concern with many fruit drinks or
fruit-flavored drinks, which are often sweetened
with grape juice. You may also notice that it is
virtually impossible to find kosher baking
powder, because baking powder is made with cream
of tartar, a by-product of wine making.
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