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Kashrut
Kashrut
from Wikipedia

Kashrut (also kashruth or kashrus, כַּשְׁרוּת) is a set of dietary laws dealing with the foods that Jewish people are permitted to eat and how those foods must be prepared according to Jewish religious law. Food that may be consumed is deemed kosher (/ˈkʃər/ in English, Yiddish: כּשר), from the Ashkenazi pronunciation of the term that in Sephardi or Modern Hebrew is pronounced kashér (כָּשֵׁר‎), meaning "fit" (in this context: "fit for consumption"). Food that may not be consumed, however, is deemed treif (/trf/ in English, Yiddish: טרײף), also spelled treyf (Yiddish: טריף). In case of objects the opposite of kosher is pasúl (/pəˈsul/ in English, Yiddish: פָּסוּל).

Although the details of the laws of kashrut are numerous and complex, they rest on a few basic principles:

  • Only certain types of mammals, birds, and fish, meeting specific criteria are kosher; the consumption of the flesh of any animals that do not meet these criteria, such as pork, frogs, and shellfish, is forbidden, except for locusts, which are the only kosher invertebrate.[1]
  • The most basic eating rule in the Torah is that blood is not to be consumed; therefore, as a step to being kosher, mammals and birds must be slaughtered according to a process known as shechita, in which a certified ritual slaughterer, called a shochet, severs the trachea, esophagus, carotid arteries, and jugular veins in a single, quick cut using an ultra-sharp instrument called a chalaf; doing so causes rapid and massive blood loss.
  • The meat must still go through a process known as koshering or kashering to be considered fit for consumption. The three approved methods are broiling, roasting, and soaking & salting.
  • Meat and meat derivatives may never be mixed with milk and milk derivatives. Separate equipment must be used for the storage and preparation of meat-based and dairy-based foods.

Every food that is considered kosher is also categorized as follows:

  • Meat products (also called b'sari or fleishig) are those that 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; additionally, non-animal products that were processed on equipment used for meat or meat-derived products must also be considered as meat (b'chezkat basar).
  • Dairy products (also called c'halavi or milchig) contain milk or any derivatives such as butter or cheese; additionally, non-dairy products that were processed on equipment used for milk or milk-derived products must also be considered as milk (b'chezkat chalav).
  • Pareve (also called parve, parveh meaning "neutral") products contain neither meat, milk, nor their respective derivatives; they include foods such as kosher fish, eggs from permitted birds, grains, produce, and other edible vegetation. They remain pareve if they are not mixed with or processed using equipment that is used for any meat or dairy products.

While any produce that grows from the earth, such as fruits, grains, vegetables, and mushrooms, is always permissible, laws regarding the status of certain agricultural produce, especially that grown in the Land of Israel such as tithes and produce of the Sabbatical year, impact their permissibility for consumption.

Most of the basic laws of kashrut are derived from the Torah's books of Leviticus and Deuteronomy. Their details and practical application, however, are set down in the Oral Torah, (eventually codified in the Mishnah and Talmud), and elaborated on in the later rabbinical literature. Although the Torah does not state the rationale for most kashrut laws, some suggest that they are only tests of obedience,[2] while others have suggested philosophical, practical, and hygienic reasons.[3][4][5]

Over the past century, many kashrut certification agencies have started to certify products, manufacturers, and restaurants as kosher, usually authorizing the use of a proprietary symbol or certificate, called a hechsher, to be displayed by the food establishment or on the product, which indicates that they are in compliance with the kosher laws. This labeling is also used by some non-Jewish people, examples of which include those whose religions (including Islam) expect adherence to a similar set of dietary laws, people with allergies to dairy foods, and vegans, who use the various kosher designations to determine whether a food contains meat or dairy-derived ingredients.

The laws of Kashrut are a major area covered in traditional rabbinic ordination; see Yeshiva § Jewish law and Semikhah § Varieties of ordination. And numerous scholarly and popular works exist on these topics,[6] covering both practice and theory.

Explanations

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Philosophical

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Jewish philosophy divides the 613 commandments (or mitzvot) into three groups—laws that have a rational explanation and would probably be enacted by most orderly societies (mishpatim), laws that are understood after being explained, but would not be legislated without the Torah's command (eidot), and laws that do not have a rational explanation (chukim).

Some Jewish scholars say that kashrut should be categorized as laws for which there is no particular explanation since the human mind is not always capable of understanding divine intentions. In this line of thinking, the dietary laws were given as a demonstration of God's authority, and man must obey without asking why.[7] Although Maimonides concurs that all the statutes of the Torah are decrees, he is of the view that whenever possible, one should seek out reasons for the Torah's commandments.[8]

Some theologians have said that the laws of kashrut are symbolic in character: kosher animals represent virtues, while non-kosher animals represent vices. The 1st-century BCE Letter of Aristeas argues that the laws "have been given [...] to awake pious thoughts and to form the character".[9] This view reappears in the work of the 19th-century Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch.[10]

The Torah prohibits "cooking the kid (goat, sheep, calf) in its mother's milk". While the Torah does not provide a reason, it has been suggested that the practice was perceived as cruel and insensitive.[11][12]

Hasidic Judaism believes that everyday life is imbued with channels connecting with Divinity, the activation of which it sees as helping the Divine Presence to be drawn into the physical world;[13] Hasidism argues that the food laws are related to the way such channels, termed 'sparks of holiness', interact with various animals. These 'sparks of holiness' are released whenever a Jew manipulates any object for a 'holy reason', (which includes eating);[14] however, not all animal products are capable of releasing their 'sparks of holiness'.[15] The Hasidic argument is that animals are imbued with signs that reveal the release of these sparks, and the signs are expressed in the biblical categorization of ritually 'clean' and ritually 'unclean'.[16]

Medical

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Although the reason for kashrut is that it is a decree from the Torah, there have been attempts to provide scientific support for the view that Jewish food laws have an incidental health benefit. One of the earliest is that of Maimonides in The Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190).

In 1953, David Macht, an Orthodox Jew and proponent of the theory of biblical scientific foresight, conducted toxicity experiments on many kinds of animals and fish.[17] His experiment involved lupin seedlings being supplied with extracts from the meat of various animals; Macht reported that in 100% of cases, extracts from ritually 'unclean' meat inhibited the seedling's growth more than that from ritually 'clean' meats.[18]

At the same time, these explanations are controversial. Scholar Lester L. Grabbe, writing in the Oxford Bible Commentary on Leviticus, says "[a]n explanation now almost universally rejected is that the laws in this section[19] have hygiene as their basis. Although some of the laws of ritual purity roughly correspond to modern ideas of physical cleanliness, many of them have little to do with hygiene. For example, there is no evidence that the 'unclean' animals are intrinsically bad to eat or to be avoided in a Mediterranean climate, as is sometimes asserted."[20]

Rules

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Prohibited foods

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Kosher airline meal approved by The Johannesburg Beth Din

The laws of kashrut can be classified according to the origin of the prohibition (Biblical or rabbinical) and whether the prohibition concerns the food itself or a mixture of foods.[21]

Biblically prohibited foods include:[21]

  • Non-kosher animals[22][23]—any mammals without certain identifying characteristics (cloven hooves and rumination); any birds of prey; any fish without fins or scales (thus excluding catfish, for instance). All invertebrates are non-kosher apart from certain types of locust, on which most communities lack a clear tradition. No reptiles or amphibians are kosher. There are also no rodents that are kosher.
  • Carrion (nevelah)—meat from a kosher animal that has not been slaughtered according to the laws of shechita. This prohibition includes animals that have been slaughtered by non-Jews.[24]
  • Injured (terefah)—an animal with a significant defect or injury, such as a fractured bone or particular types of lung adhesions.
  • Blood (dam)—the blood of kosher mammals and fowl is removed through salting, with special procedures for the liver, which is very rich in blood.
  • Particular fats (chelev)—particular parts of the abdominal fat of cattle, goats and sheep must be removed by a process called nikkur.
  • The twisted nerve (gid hanasheh)—the sciatic nerve, as according to Genesis 32:32 the patriarch Jacob's was damaged when he fought with an angel, so may not be eaten and is removed by nikkur.
  • A limb of a living animal (ever min ha-chai)[25]—according to Jewish law, God forbade Noah and his descendants to consume flesh torn from a live animal. Hence, Jewish law considers this prohibition applicable even to non-Jews,[26] and therefore, a Jew may not give or sell such meat to a non-Jew.
  • Untithed food (tevel)—produce of the Land of Israel requires the removal of certain tithes, which in ancient times were given to the kohanim (priests), Levites and the poor (terumah, maaser rishon and maasar ani respectively) or taken to the Old City of Jerusalem to be eaten there (maaser sheni).
  • Fruit during the first three years (orlah)—according to Leviticus 19:23,[27] fruit from a tree in the first three years after planting may not be consumed (both in the Land of Israel and the diaspora).[28] This applies also to the fruit of the vine—grapes, and wine produced from them.[29]
  • New grain (chadash)[30]—the Bible prohibits newly grown grain (planted after Passover the previous year) until the second day of Passover; there is debate as to whether this law applies to grain grown outside the Land of Israel.
  • Wine of libation (yayin nesekh)—wine that may have been dedicated to idolatrous practices.

Biblically prohibited mixtures include:[21]

  • Mixtures of meat and milk[31][32][33] (basar be-chalav)—this law derives from the broad interpretation of the commandment not to "cook a kid in its mother's milk";[31][32][33] other non-kosher foods are permitted for non-dietary use (e.g. to be sold to non-Jews), but Jews are forbidden to benefit from mixtures of meat and milk in any way.[34]
  • Different species of plants grown together (kilayim)—in the Land of Israel different species of plants are to be grown separately and not in close proximity according to Leviticus 19:19 and Deuteronomy 22:9–11.
    • A specific subdivision of this law is kil'ei ha-kerem, the prohibition of planting any grain or vegetable near a grapevine; this law applies to Jews throughout the world, and a Jew may not derive benefit from such produce.

Rabbinically prohibited foods include:[21]

  • Non-Jewish milk (chalav akum)—milk that may have an admixture of milk from non-kosher animals (see below for current views on this prohibition).
  • Non-Jewish cheese (gevinat akum)—cheese that may have been produced with non-kosher rennet.
  • Non-Jewish wine (stam yeinam)—wine that while not produced for idolatrous purposes may otherwise have been poured for such a purpose or alternatively when consumed will lead to intermarriage.
  • Food cooked by a non-Jew (bishul akum)—this law was enacted for concerns of intermarriage. (Minor)
  • Non-Jewish bread (pat akum)—this law was enacted for concerns of intermarriage.
  • Health risk (sakanah)—certain foods and mixtures are considered a health risk, such as mixtures of fish and meat.

Permitted and forbidden animals

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Cloven hooves in goats (upper left), pigs (lower left), and cattle (lower right). Horse hooves (upper right) are not cloven.

Only meat from particular species is permissible. Mammals that both chew their cud (ruminate) and have cloven hooves can be kosher. Animals with one characteristic but not the other (the camel, the hyrax, and the hare because they have no cloven hooves, and the pig because it does not ruminate) are specifically excluded.[22][35][36]

In 2008, a rabbinical ruling determined that giraffes and their milk are eligible to be considered kosher. The giraffe has both split hooves and chews its cud, characteristics of animals considered kosher. Findings from 2008 show that giraffe milk curdles, meeting kosher standards. Although kosher, the giraffe is not slaughtered today because the process would be very costly. Giraffes are difficult to restrain, and their use for food could cause the species to become endangered.[37][38][39]

Non-kosher birds are listed outright in the Torah,[40] but the exact zoological references are disputed and some references refer to families of birds (24 are mentioned). The Mishnah[41] refers to four signs provided by the sages.[42] First, a dores (predatory bird) is not kosher. Additionally, kosher birds possess three physical characteristics: an extra toe in the back (which does not join the other toes in supporting the leg), a zefek (crop), and a korkoban (gizzard) with a peelable lumen. However, individual Jews are barred from merely applying these regulations alone; an established tradition (masorah) is necessary to allow birds to be consumed, even if it can be substantiated that they meet all four criteria. The only exception to this is the turkey. There was a time when certain authorities considered the signs sufficient, so Jews started eating this bird without a masorah because it possesses all the signs (simanim) in Hebrew.[43]

Fish must have fins and scales to be kosher.[44] Shellfish and other non-fish water fauna are not kosher.[45] (See kosher species of fish) Insects are not kosher, except for certain species of kosher locust.[46] Any animal that eats other animals, whether they kill their food or eat carrion,[47] is generally not kosher, as well as any animal that has been partially eaten by other animals.[48]

Class Forbidden kinds
Mammals Carnivores; animals that do not chew the cud (e.g. pork); animals that do not have cloven hooves (e.g., the camel, the hare, the horse and the hyrax); bats; rodents
Birds Birds of prey; scavengers
Reptiles and amphibians All
Water animals All non-fish. Among fish, all those that do not have both fins and scales
Insects All, except particular types of locust or grasshopper that, according to most, cannot be identified today

Separation of meat and milk

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Meat and milk (or derivatives) may not be mixed[49] in the sense that meat and dairy products are not served at the same meal, served or cooked in the same utensils, or stored together.

Observant Jews have separate sets of dishes, and sometimes different kitchens, for meat and milk, and wait anywhere between one and six hours after eating meat before consuming milk products.[50] The milchig and fleishig (literally "milky" and "meaty") utensils and dishes are the commonly referred-to Yiddish delineations between dairy and meat ones, respectively.[51]

According to the Shulchan Aruch, a six-hour waiting period is recommended between consuming meat and dairy. During this time, it is generally advised to abstain from brushing and rinsing the mouth.[52]

Shelomo Dov Goitein writes, "the dichotomy of the kitchen into a meat and a milk section, so basic in an observant Jewish household, is [...] never mentioned in the Geniza." Goitein believed that in the early Middle Ages Jewish families kept only one set of cutlery and cooking ware.[53] According to David C. Kraemer, the practice of keeping separate sets of dishes developed only in the late 14th and 15th centuries.[54] It is possible observant Jews before then waited overnight for the meat or dairy gravy absorbed in a pot's walls to become insignificant (lifgam) before using the pot for the other foodstuff (meat or dairy).[55]

Kosher slaughter

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A 15th-century depiction of shechita

Mammals and fowl must be slaughtered by a trained individual (a shochet) using a special method of slaughter, shechita.[56] Shechita slaughter severs the jugular vein, carotid artery, esophagus, and trachea in a single continuous cutting movement with an unserrated, sharp knife. Failure to meet any of these criteria renders the meat of the animal non-kosher.

The body of the slaughtered animal must be checked after slaughter to confirm that the animal had no medical condition or defect that would have caused it to die of its own accord within a year, which would make the meat unsuitable.[57]

These conditions (treifot) include 70 different categories of injuries, diseases, and abnormalities whose presence renders the animal non-kosher.

It is forbidden to consume certain parts of the animal, such as certain fats (chelev) and the sciatic nerves from the legs, the process of excision being done by experts before the meat is sold.

As much blood as possible must be removed[58] through the kashering process; this is usually done through soaking and salting the meat, but the liver, as it is rich in blood, is grilled over an open flame.[59]

Fish (and kosher locusts, for those who follow the traditions permitting them) must be killed before being eaten, but no particular method has been specified in Jewish law.[60][61] Legal aspects of ritual slaughter are governed not only by Jewish law but civil law as well.

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.[62][63]

Preparation of meats

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When an animal is ritually slaughtered (shechted) the raw meat is traditionally cut, salted, and rinsed, prior to cooking. Salting of raw meat draws out the blood that lodges on the inner surface of the meat. The salting is done with coarse grain salt, commonly referred to as kosher salt, after which the meat is laid over a grating or colander to allow for drainage, remaining so for the duration of time that it takes to walk one biblical mile[64] (approximately 18–24 minutes). Afterwards, the residue of salt is rinsed away with water, and the meat cooked.

Meat that is roasted requires no prior salting, as fire causes a natural purging of blood.

Turei Zahav ("Taz"), a 17th-century commentary on the Shulchan Arukh, ruled that the pieces of meat can be "very thick" when salting.[65] The Yemenite Jewish practice, however, follows Saadiah Gaon, who required that the meat not be larger than half a "rotal" (i.e. roughly 216 grams (7.6 oz)) when salting.[66] This allows the effects of the salt to penetrate.

Some Orthodox Jewish communities require the additional stricture of submersing raw meat in boiling water prior to cooking it, a practice known as ḥaliṭah (Hebrew: חליטה), "blanching."[67] This was believed to constrict the blood lodged within the meat, to prevent it from oozing out when the meat was eaten. The raw meat is left in the pot of boiling water for as long as it takes for the meat to whiten on its outer layer.

If someone wanted to use the water for soup after making ḥaliṭah in the same pot, they could simply scoop out the film, froth and scum that surface in the boiling water.[citation needed]

Ḥaliṭah is not required when roasting meat over a fire, as the fire constricts the blood.

Kosher utensils

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Kosher dairy dishes from the 19th century in the Jewish Museum, Berlin

Utensils used for non-kosher foods become non-kosher, and make even otherwise kosher food prepared with them non-kosher.

Some such utensils, depending on the material they are made from, can be made suitable for preparing kosher food again by immersion in boiling water or by the application of a blowtorch.

Food prepared in a manner that violates the Shabbat (Sabbath) may not be eaten; although in certain instances it is permitted after the Shabbat is over.[68]

Passover laws

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The label on a bottle of orange juice certifying that it is kosher for Passover

Passover has stricter dietary rules, the most important of which is the prohibition on eating leavened bread or derivatives of this, which are known as chametz. This prohibition is derived from Exodus 12:15.[69]

Utensils used in preparing and serving chametz are also forbidden on Passover unless they have been ritually cleansed (kashered).[70]

Observant Jews often keep separate sets of meat and dairy utensils for Passover use only. In addition, some groups follow various eating restrictions on Passover that go beyond the rules of kashrut, such as not eating kitniyot,[71] gebrochts[72] or garlic.[73]

Produce of the Land of Israel

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Biblical rules also control the use of agriculture produce, for example, with respect to their tithing, or when it is permitted to eat them or to harvest them, and what must be done to make them suitable for human consumption.[74]

For produce grown in the Land of Israel a modified version of the biblical tithes must be applied, including Terumat HaMaaser, Maaser Rishon, Maaser Sheni, and Maasar Ani (untithed produce is called tevel); the fruit of the first three years of a tree's growth or replanting are forbidden for eating or any other use as orlah;[75] produce grown in the Land of Israel on the seventh year obtains k'dushat shvi'it, and unless managed carefully is forbidden as a violation of the Shmita (Sabbatical Year).

Some rules of kashrut are subject to different rabbinical opinions. For example, many hold that the rule against eating chadash (new grain) before the 16th of the month Nisan does not apply outside the Land of Israel.[76]

Vegetables

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A cocoon found among barleycorns in a commercially available bag of barley. Foods such as seeds, nuts and vegetables need to be checked to avoid eating insects.

Although plants and minerals are nearly always kosher, vegetarian restaurants and producers of vegetarian foods are required to obtain a hechsher, certifying that a rabbinical organization has approved their products as being kosher, because the hechsher usually certifies that certain vegetables have been checked for insect infestation and steps have been taken to ensure that cooked food meets the requirements of bishul Yisrael.[77] Vegetables such as spinach and cauliflower must be checked for insect infestation. The proper procedure for inspecting and cleaning varies by species, growing conditions, and views of individual rabbis.[78]

Pareve foods

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A pareve food is one which is neither meat nor dairy. Fish fall into this category, as well as any food that is not animal-derived. Eggs are also considered pareve despite being an animal product.[79]

Some processes convert a meat- or dairy-derived product into a pareve one. For example, rennet is sometimes made from stomach linings, yet is acceptable for making kosher cheese.[80] Gelatins derived from kosher animal sources (which were ritually slaughtered) are also pareve.[81] Other gelatin-like products from non-animal sources such as agar agar and carrageenan are pareve by nature. Fish gelatin, like all kosher fish products, is pareve.

Jewish law generally requires that bread be kept pareve (i.e., not kneaded with meat or dairy products nor made on meat or dairy equipment).[82]

Kashrut has procedures by which equipment can be cleaned of its previous non-kosher or meat/dairy use, but those may be inadequate for vegetarians, those with allergies, or adherents to other religious laws.

For example, dairy manufacturing equipment can be cleaned well enough that the rabbis grant pareve status to products manufactured with it but someone with a strong allergic sensitivity to dairy products might still react to the dairy residue. This is why some products that are legitimately pareve carry "milk" warnings.[83]

Cannabis

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For cannabis grown in Israel, the plants must observe shmittah, but this does not apply to cannabis from elsewhere. At least one brand of cannabis edibles is certified to follow the laws of kashrut.[84]

Tobacco

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Although it is not a food product, some tobacco receives a year-long kosher for Passover certification. This year-long certification means that the tobacco is certified also for Passover where different restrictions may be in place. Tobacco may, for example, come into contact with some chametz grains that are strictly forbidden during Passover and the certification is a guarantee that it is free from this type of contamination.

In Israel, this certification is given by a private kashrut rabbinic group Beit Yosef, but the Chief Rabbinate has objected to granting of any certification by rabbis because of health risks from tobacco.[85]

Genetically modified foods

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With the advent of genetic engineering, scholars in both academia and Judaic faith have differing viewpoints on whether these new strains of foods are to be considered kosher or not. The first genetically modified animal approved by the FDA for human consumption is the AquAdvantage salmon and, while salmon is normally an acceptably kosher food, this modified organism has a gene from a non-kosher organism.

In 2015, the Committee on Jewish Law and Standards of the Rabbinical Assembly released a document regarding genetically modified organisms, stating that modification of gene sequences via the introduction of foreign DNA in order to convey a specific capability in the new organism is allowable, that entirely new species should not be intentionally created, and that the health implications of genetically modified foods must be considered on an individual basis.[86]

Some put forth that this intermixing of species is against the teachings of the Talmud and thus against Jewish Law and non-kosher. Others argue that the one in sixty parts law of kashrut is of significance, and that the foreign gene accounts for less than 1/60 of the animal and thus the modified salmon is kosher.[who?]

Supervision and marketing

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Hashgacha

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Certain foods must be prepared in whole or in part by Jews. This includes grape wine,[87] certain cooked foods (bishul akum),[88] cheese (g'vinat akum), and according to some also butter (chem'at akum),[89] dairy products (Hebrew: חלב ישראל chalav Yisrael "milk of Israel"),[89][90] and bread (Pas Yisroel).[91]

Product labeling standards

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The circled U means a product is certified as kosher by the Orthodox Union (OU). "Pareve" means no ingredients are derived from milk or meat.
Kosher labels on salt and sugar packages in Colombia.

Although reading the label of food products can identify obviously non-kosher ingredients, some countries allow manufacturers to omit identification of certain ingredients. Such "hidden" ingredients may include lubricants and flavorings, among other additives; in some cases, for instance, the use of natural flavorings, these ingredients are more likely to be derived from non-kosher substances.[92] Furthermore, certain products, such as fish, have a high rate of mislabeling, which may result in a non-kosher fish being sold in a package labeled as a species of kosher fish.[93]

Producers of foods and food additives can contact Jewish religious authorities to have their products certified as kosher: this involves a visit to the manufacturing facilities by an individual rabbi or a committee from a rabbinic organization, who will inspect the production methods and contents and, if everything is sufficiently kosher a certificate would be issued.[94]

OK Kosher Certification (circled K) symbol with a dairy designation on a bag of chocolate chips

Manufacturers sometimes identify the products that have received such certification by adding particular graphical symbols to the label. These symbols are known in Judaism as hechsherim.[95] Due to differences in kashrut standards held by different organizations, the hechsheirim of certain Jewish authorities may at times be considered invalid by other Jewish authorities.[96] The certification marks of the various rabbis and organisations are too numerous to list, but one of the most commonly used in the United States of America is that of the Union of Orthodox Congregations, who use a U inside a circle ("O-U"), symbolising the initials of Orthodox Union. In Britain, commonly used symbols are the "KLBD" logo of the London Beth Din and the "MK" logo of the Manchester Beth Din.[97] A single K is sometimes used as a symbol for kosher, but since many countries do not allow letters to be trademarked (the method by which other symbols are protected from misuse), it only indicates that the company producing the product claims that it is kosher.[98]

Stamp for identifying food as kosher. Collection of Auschwitz Jewish Centre

Many of the certification symbols are accompanied by additional letters or words to indicate the category of the product, according to Jewish law;[98] the categorization may conflict with legal classifications, especially in the case of food that Jewish law regards as dairy, but legal classification does not.

  • D: Dairy
  • DE: Dairy equipment
  • M: Meat, including poultry
  • Pareve: Food that is neither meat nor dairy
  • Fish
  • P: Passover-related (P is not used for Pareve)

In many cases constant supervision is required because, for various reasons such as changes in manufacturing processes, products that once were kosher may cease to be so. For example, a kosher lubricating oil may be replaced by one containing tallow, which many rabbinic authorities view as non-kosher. Such changes are often coordinated with the supervising rabbi or supervising organization to ensure that new packaging does not suggest any hechsher or kashrut. In some cases, however, existing stocks of pre-printed labels with the hechsher may continue to be used on the non-kosher product. An active grapevine among the Jewish community discusses which products are questionable, as well as products which have become kosher but whose labels have yet to carry the hechsher. Some newspapers and periodicals also discuss kashrut products.[99]

Products labeled kosher-style are non-kosher products that have characteristics of kosher foods, such as all-beef hot dogs,[100] or are flavored or prepared in a manner consistent with Ashkenazi practices, like dill pickles.[101] The designation usually refers to delicatessen items.

History of kosher supervision and marketing

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Kosher McDonald's in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Food producers often look to expand their markets or marketing potential, and offering kosher food has become a way to do that. The uniqueness of kosher food was advertised as early as 1849.[102] In 1911 Procter & Gamble became the first company to advertise one of their products, Crisco, as kosher.[103] Over the next two decades, companies such as Lender's Bagels, Maxwell House, Manischewitz, and Empire evolved and gave the kosher market more shelf-space. In the 1960s, Hebrew National hotdogs launched a "we answer to a higher authority" campaign to appeal to Jews and non-Jews alike. From that point on, "kosher" became a symbol for both quality and value. The kosher market quickly expanded, and with it more opportunities for kosher products. Menachem Lubinsky, founder of the Kosherfest trade fair, estimates as many as 14 million kosher consumers and $40 billion in sales of kosher products in the U.S.[104]

In 2014 the Israeli Defense Forces decided to allow female kosher supervisors to work in its kitchens on military bases, and the first women kosher inspectors were certified in Israel.[105][106]

[edit]

Advertising standards laws in many[quantify] jurisdictions prohibit the use of the phrase kosher in a product's labeling unless the producer can show that the product conforms to Jewish dietary laws; however, different jurisdictions often define the legal qualifications for conforming to Jewish dietary laws differently. For example, in some places the law may require that a rabbi certify the kashrut nature, in others the rules of kosher are fully defined in law, and in others still it is sufficient that the manufacturer only believes that the product complies with Jewish dietary regulations. In several cases, laws restricting the use of the term kosher have later been determined to be illegal religious interference.[107]

Costs

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In the United States, the cost of certification for mass-produced items is typically minuscule[108][109] and is usually more than offset by the advantages of being certified.[109] In 1975 The New York Times estimated the cost per item for obtaining kosher certification at 6.5 millionths of a cent ($0.000000065) per item for a General Foods frozen-food item.[110] According to a 2005 report by Burns & McDonnell, most U.S. national certifying agencies are non-profit, only charging for supervision and on-site work, for which the on-site supervisor "typically makes less per visit than an auto mechanic does per hour". However, re-engineering an existing manufacturing process can be costly.[111] Certification usually leads to increased revenues by opening up additional markets to Jews who keep kosher, Muslims who keep halal, Seventh-day Adventists who keep the main laws of Kosher Diet, vegetarians, and the lactose-intolerant who wish to avoid dairy products (products that are reliably certified as pareve meet this criterion).[110][112][113][114] The Orthodox Union, one of the largest kashrut organizations in the United States, claims that "when positioned next to a competing non-kosher brand, a kosher product will do better by 20%".[115]

In some European Jewish communities, kosher supervision of meat includes a "tax" used to fund Jewish education in the community, which makes kosher meat more expensive than the cost of supervision alone would imply.[116]

Society and culture

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Adherence

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Many Jews partially observe kashrut, by abstaining from pork or shellfish or by not drinking milk with meat dishes. Some keep kosher at home but eat in non-kosher restaurants. In 2012, one analysis of the specialty food market in North America estimated that only 15% of kosher consumers were Jewish.[117] Kosher meat is regularly consumed by Muslims when halal is not available.[118] Muslims, Hindus, and people with allergies to dairy foods often consider the kosher-pareve designation as an assurance that a food contains no animal-derived ingredients, including milk and all of its derivatives.[119] However, since kosher-pareve foods may contain honey, eggs, or fish, vegans cannot rely on the certification.[120][121]

About a sixth of American Jews or 0.3% of the American population fully keep kosher, and many more of them do not strictly follow all of the rules but still abstain from some prohibited foods, especially pork. The Seventh-day Adventist Church, a Christian denomination, preaches a health message which expects adherence to the kosher dietary laws.[122][123]

Surveys conducted in 2013 and 2020 found that 22% of American Jews by religion claimed to keep kosher in their homes.[124][125] Pork consumption in particular seems to be a bigger taboo than other non-Kosher eating practices among Jews, with 41% claiming to at least abstain from eating pork.[126] American Jews are generally less strict about Kosher laws when compared to Israeli Jews. Nearly three times as many Israeli Jews reported that they commit to keeping kosher in their homes and 84% do not eat pork.[127]

Differentiations in practice

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"Kosher style" allows for variation in adherence to kashrut, reflecting different practices within the Jewish community. For some, kosher style implies abstinence from non-kosher animals, like pork and shellfish, and the avoidance of mixing meat and dairy in meals. These individuals may consume meat from animals that are kosher but not necessarily slaughtered according to kashrut standards.

The notion of "kosher style" serves individuals and communities navigating between strict religious observance and cultural identification with Jewish culinary traditions. Hasia Diner, a professor of American Jewish history at New York University, suggests that "kosher-style" represents a balancing act between tradition and assimilation, providing a sense of Jewish identity through food without strict adherence to kashrut.[128]

This flexible practice emerged in the 1920s amongst Jews assimilating into American society, who sought connection to their heritage without fully observing dietary laws. The term is broad and encompasses foods that could be kosher, like chicken noodle soup or pareve meals (neither meat nor dairy), even if they don't meet halakhic standards. Diner points out the term is "oxymoronic," creating an illusion of kashrut where the true emphasis is on a style of cuisine rather than compliance with religious dietary laws.[128]

Over time, the meaning of "kosher style" has evolved and expanded, reflecting changes within Jewish communities and broader society. In contemporary practice, "kosher style" is often encountered at social events and gatherings, where meals might exclude certain non-kosher items but not adhere strictly to kashrut. The exact definition may vary between communities and individuals, reflecting diverse interpretations and practices related to Jewish dietary laws. The term also relates to products marketed as "kosher style," prompting some regions to establish legislation to clarify labeling and prevent consumer misunderstanding. For instance, kosher-style pickles might be produced without kosher certification or supervision but are associated with Jewish culinary tradition.[128]

Linguistics

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Etymology

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Kosher shop in Warsaw, using the Polish spelling of "kosher"

In Ancient Hebrew the word kosher (Hebrew: כשר) means be advantageous, proper, suitable, or succeed,[129] according to the Brown–Driver–Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon. In Modern Hebrew it generally refers to kashrut but it can also sometimes mean "proper". For example, the Babylonian Talmud uses kosher in the sense of "virtuous" when referring to Darius I as a "kosher king"; Darius, a Persian king (reigned 522–486 BCE), fostered the building of the Second Temple.[130] In colloquial English, kosher often means "legitimate", "acceptable", "permissible", "genuine", or "authentic".[131][132] The word kosher can also form part of some common product names.

Kosher salt

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Sometimes kosher is used as an abbreviation of koshering, meaning the process for making something kosher; for example, kosher salt is a form of salt with irregularly shaped crystals, making it particularly suitable for preparing meat according to the rules of kashrut, because the increased surface area of the crystals absorbs blood more effectively.[133] In this case the type of salt refers to kosher style salt. Salt may also be kosher certified salt, or both. Certified kosher salt follows kashrut guidelines.[134] Sometimes the term "coarse kosher salt" is used to designate salt that is both kosher style and kosher certified.[135] The term "fine kosher salt" is sometimes used for salt that is certified kosher but not kosher style.[136]

Pickles

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Kosher can occur as a synonym for Jewish tradition; for example, a kosher dill pickle is simply a pickle made in the traditional manner of Jewish New York City pickle-makers, using a generous addition of garlic to the brine, and is not necessarily compliant with the traditional Jewish food laws.[137]

Strictness degrees

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Mehadrin

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Mehadrin is a term most commonly used with the meaning of enhanced or stricter kashrut rules.[138] Its etymology is still debated,[139] but its initial halachic use related specifically to lighting candles on Hanukkah.[140] Later it became widely used in regard to dietary laws,[138] and ended up loosely covering almost every aspect of Jewish observance[141] (see mehadrin bus lines).

Badatz

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Badatz is the Hebrew acronym of Beth Din Tsedek and is used as a name for organisations which supervise the production of kosher foods. They typically only certify mehadrin-level products, but are not the only agencies specialised in applying enhanced mehadrin rules, since there are non-badatz agencies also doing so.[138]

Suriname

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A treef (Surinamese Dutch, derived from Sranan Tongo trefu) is a food taboo. In Suriname certain groups of people have long adhered to belief in treef, especially among people of African descent. The consumption of certain foods is prohibited, in the belief that it could cause major diseases, particularly leprosy.[142] These prohibitions can vary individually, but it is inextricably related to conditions in the family. A treef is inherited from the father's side, but it can be revealed in a dream, often by a woman. In addition, a woman must take into account special food taboos during pregnancy. There is great importance attached to the treef; if a child observes the treef of his father, and yet experiences a skin condition, this is seen as a strong indication that the child was begotten by the woman with another man. Finally treef also be acquired later in life by wearing certain charms that compel you to abstain from certain foods.[143]

The word is derived from Hebrew, due to influence of Sephardi Jews who came to Suriname in the 17th century. This is also the source of Sranan kaseri 'ritually clean, kosher'.[144]

Other uses

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Although the term kosher relates mainly to food, it sometimes occurs in other contexts. Some Orthodox retailers sell kosher cell phones—stripped-down devices with limited features.[145][146]

See also

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Kashrut, derived from the Hebrew root meaning "fit" or "proper," encompasses the biblical and rabbinic laws governing the types of foods Jews are permitted to eat and the required methods of their preparation and consumption. These regulations originate in the Torah, particularly Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14, which outline criteria for permissible land animals—those that both chew their cud and have fully cloven hooves, such as cattle and sheep—while prohibiting others like pigs and camels. Fish must possess both fins and scales to qualify, excluding shellfish and other aquatic creatures, and only specific birds are allowed, generally excluding raptors and scavengers. Additional prohibitions ban the ingestion of blood, which must be thoroughly drained from slaughtered animals, and certain fats (chelev), alongside a strict separation of meat and dairy products to prevent their mixture in cooking, eating, or even residue on utensils. Mammals and birds designated for consumption require ritual slaughter (shechita) performed by a trained individual using a precise incision to minimize suffering and ensure blood removal, followed by inspection for defects. Fruits, vegetables, and grains are inherently permissible but subject to checks for infestation and, during Passover, additional restrictions against leavened products (chametz). Observance of kashrut functions as a perpetual act of obedience to divine commandments, embedding holiness into mundane eating habits and distinguishing Jewish practice from surrounding cultures through disciplined restraint rather than ascribed health or ethical rationales beyond scriptural fiat. Evolving through Talmudic interpretation and medieval codes like the Shulchan Aruch, these laws have sustained Jewish communal cohesion across millennia, with modern certification symbols from rabbinical authorities verifying compliance in processed foods amid industrialized food production. While not universally mandated for all Jews—Reform denominations often view them as optional—orthodox adherence remains rigorous, influencing global kosher markets valued in billions due to the stringent standards appealing beyond Jewish consumers for perceived purity.

Historical and Scriptural Foundations

Biblical Origins

The dietary laws of kashrut originate in the Torah, with the core prohibitions and permissions enumerated primarily in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14, texts attributed to divine revelation to Moses during the Israelites' exodus from Egypt around the 13th century BCE. These chapters classify animals into clean (permitted) and unclean (prohibited) categories based on observable physical traits, without explicit rationale beyond obedience to God's command to distinguish the holy from the profane. For terrestrial mammals, permission is granted only to those that both ruminate (chew the cud) and possess fully cloven hooves, including species such as cattle, deer, and sheep; conversely, animals like pigs (lacking rumination) and camels (with padded rather than cloven hooves) are forbidden. Aquatic creatures require both fins and scales to be edible, excluding shellfish, eels, and sharks, while flying insects are generally prohibited except for specific locust varieties with articulated legs for leaping. Birds are addressed through a prohibitive list rather than affirmative criteria, barring species known for predatory or scavenging habits, such as eagles, vultures, and owls, with domesticated fowl like chickens implied as permissible by tradition rooted in biblical practice. Additional restrictions target internal animal parts: Leviticus 3:17 and 7:23-27 eternally prohibit consuming suet fat from the entrails or blood, the latter deemed the carrier of life force and thus reserved for altar atonement, mandating that blood be drained from slaughtered animals. Genesis 32:33 extends a specific ban on the sciatic nerve (gid ha-nasheh), commemorating Jacob's wrestling injury, applying universally to permitted quadrupeds. A distinct commandment against mixing animal products appears in Exodus 23:19, 34:26, and Deuteronomy 14:21: "You shall not boil a kid in its mother's milk," interpreted literally as prohibiting the cooking of young goats in maternal milk but forming the scriptural basis for broader separations in later observance. These laws collectively emphasize ritual purity, with violations incurring excision from the community or death, underscoring their role in covenantal identity formation among the Israelites.

Rabbinic Expansions

The Oral Torah, transmitted alongside the Written Torah according to traditional Jewish belief, elucidates and extends the biblical dietary laws through interpretive principles and preventive enactments, as compiled in the Mishnah around 200 CE and elaborated in the Babylonian Talmud completed circa 500 CE. For instance, the Torah's verse "Do not cook a kid in its mother's milk" (Exodus 23:19) is interpreted rabbinically to prohibit not only the cooking but also the consumption and benefit from any mixture of meat and milk, extending to poultry despite the verse specifying only "kid" (young goat). This expansion includes mandatory waiting periods—typically three to six hours after meat before dairy, and varying shorter intervals after dairy—along with separate utensils and dishes to prevent inadvertent mixing. Rabbinic authorities instituted gezerot (decrees) as fences around the Torah to avert potential violations, such as prohibiting food cooked by non-Jews (bishul akum) unless a Jew participates minimally, to discourage intermarriage and improper influences; similarly, gentile-handled wine (stam yeinam) and bread baked primarily by non-Jews (pas akum) were banned from the Talmudic era onward. These enactments, absent from the Pentateuch, address post-biblical contexts like diaspora interactions, with the Talmud in tractate Avodah Zarah detailing exemptions for medicinal or denatured wine. Permitted birds, undefined by biblical signs, rely on unbroken tradition listing species like chicken and duck, while reptiles and insects remain broadly prohibited with rabbinic emphasis on meticulous produce inspection for vermin. Procedural details for koshering meat, including soaking and salting within 72 minutes of slaughter to extract blood—a biblical imperative expanded to cover even permitted fats distinguishable from sacrificial chelev—originate in rabbinic analysis, as does the requirement for precise shechita knives free of nicks to ensure swift death. The gid hanosheh (sciatic nerve) prohibition, biblically mandated for Jacob's descendants after Genesis 32:33, was practically extended to all hindquarters in Ashkenazic practice due to extraction difficulties, though Sephardic custom permits it after removal. These expansions, justified in Talmudic debates as preserving sanctity amid changing circumstances, form the basis of observed kashrut beyond scriptural literals.

Core Dietary Rules

Permitted and Prohibited Animals

The Torah specifies criteria for permitted land animals in Leviticus 11:3 and Deuteronomy 14:6, requiring that they both chew their cud and have completely split hooves. Animals meeting both conditions, such as cattle, sheep, goats, deer, and bison, are considered kosher if slaughtered according to shechita. Prohibited examples include pigs, which have split hooves but do not chew cud; camels, hares, and hyraxes, which chew cud but lack fully split hooves; and horses, donkeys, and dogs, which satisfy neither criterion. For aquatic creatures, Leviticus 11:9-12 and Deuteronomy 14:9-10 permit only those with both fins and scales, such as salmon, tuna, and cod. Shellfish like shrimp, lobster, crabs, and oysters are prohibited due to lacking scales, as are eels and catfish. Whale and dolphin meat is also forbidden under these rules. Birds lack a general positive criterion in the Torah; instead, Leviticus 11:13-19 and Deuteronomy 14:11-18 list prohibited species, primarily birds of prey and scavengers such as eagles, vultures, owls, hawks, ostriches, and ravens. Kosher birds, identified through rabbinic tradition, include chicken, turkey, duck, and goose, which are not predatory and have a crop, gizzard, and extra toe. Insects and other flying creeping things are generally prohibited per Leviticus 11:20-23, 41-43, with exceptions for specific locust species mentioned in Leviticus 11:22, though their identification and consumption are rare in contemporary practice. All other insects, including those on produce, must be avoided.

Shechita and Meat Preparation

Shechita refers to the ritual slaughter of mammals and birds permissible for kosher consumption, performed exclusively by a trained shochet, a pious and knowledgeable Jew proficient in the laws of shechita. The shochet undergoes rigorous training, including study of the relevant halachic texts (hilchot shechita), knife-sharpening techniques, and hands-on practice, often culminating in certification after demonstrating expertise through examinations and supervised slaughters. Prior to slaughter, the animal must be examined for signs of illness or injury; only healthy specimens are eligible. The slaughter employs a chalaf, a specialized knife with a razor-sharp, flawless blade—free of nicks or irregularities—whose length corresponds to the animal's size and which is meticulously inspected before and after each use. The shochet delivers a single, swift, uninterrupted transverse cut to the throat, precisely severing the trachea, esophagus, and major blood vessels (carotid arteries and jugular veins) while avoiding damage to the spinal cord or surrounding tissues. This method facilitates rapid exsanguination, minimizing suffering, and prohibits any form of pre-slaughter stunning, as it may render the animal treif (non-kosher). Following shechita, a thorough internal examination, known as bedikah, is conducted, primarily of the lungs, to detect adhesions, punctures, or other defects classified as treifot that disqualify the animal. Certain anatomical parts are inherently prohibited, including chelev (specific fats surrounding vital organs like the kidneys and stomach), the gid hanasheh (sciatic nerve and its associated blood vessels), and blood vessels in the lungs; these must be precisely removed by trained personnel. To render the meat kosher, residual blood—prohibited by biblical law—must be extracted through a process called kashering, typically involving soaking the meat in cold water for at least 30 minutes, draining it, applying coarse kosher salt liberally to all surfaces for about one hour to draw out blood via osmosis, and then rinsing thoroughly. This salting must occur within 72 hours of slaughter to ensure efficacy, and the meat is placed on a perforated or inclined surface to allow drainage. For liver, which cannot be fully desanguinated by salting due to its vascularity, broiling over an open flame is required instead. Only meat processed under rabbinic supervision meets kosher standards.

Separation of Meat and Dairy

The prohibition against mixing meat and dairy in kashrut derives from three verses in the Torah: Exodus 23:19, Exodus 34:26, and Deuteronomy 14:21, which state, "You shall not boil a kid in its mother's milk." Rabbinic tradition interprets this literal commandment—prohibiting the cooking of a young goat in its own mother's milk—as a broader gezerah (preventive measure) extending to all kosher meats from mammals or birds and all dairy from kosher animals, forbidding not only cooking but also eating or deriving benefit from such mixtures. This separation manifests in multiple halakhic restrictions. Meat and dairy may not be cooked together, served on the same plate, or consumed in the same meal. Even indirect contact, such as a drop of dairy falling into a meat dish, renders the mixture forbidden (basar bechalav), requiring disposal and potential koshering of utensils. Poultry is classified as meat for these purposes, despite biological differences from mammals. Observant Jews maintain separate meals with designated waiting periods to ensure digestion and prevent residual flavors. After consuming meat, the standard halakhic requirement is a six-hour wait before dairy, based on the Talmudic view that meat residues persist in the mouth and digestive system for that duration; this applies from the time the last solid piece of meat is swallowed, not merely from the end of the meal blessing. After dairy, no biblical or strict rabbinic waiting is mandated, but Ashkenazi custom requires rinsing the mouth, eating a solid neutral food like bread, and waiting 30 to 60 minutes before meat to cleanse the palate. Sephardi and some other communities may wait one hour after dairy or adhere strictly to six hours post-meat without variation for cheese hardness. Utensils and cookware must be segregated into meat, dairy, or pareve (neutral) categories, with separate sinks, dishwashers, and storage often used in households to avoid cross-contamination. If a vessel absorbs forbidden mixtures, it undergoes kashering—such as boiling (hagalah) for metal or glass—after 24 hours of non-use to expel residues, though porous items like earthenware cannot be koshered and must be discarded. Many families employ color-coded or labeled sets, and commercial kosher kitchens maintain parallel equipment under rabbinic supervision.

Utensils, Koshering, and Pareve Foods

In observance of kashrut, separate sets of utensils, dishes, and cookware are maintained for meat (fleishig), dairy (milchig), and pareve items to prevent the transfer of prohibited substances or flavors through absorption. This separation extends to sinks, countertops, and even dish towels in strict practice, ensuring no cross-contamination between meat and dairy categories. Utensils used for pareve foods may often be shared with either category if they have not absorbed hot meat or dairy residues, though many households designate separate pareve implements for added caution. Koshering, or kashering, refers to the ritual purification of utensils to remove non-kosher absorptions, applicable primarily to metal vessels as specified in biblical law for materials like gold, silver, copper, iron, tin, and lead. Common methods include hagalah, immersing the utensil in boiling water after a 24-hour waiting period to allow absorptions to emerge, suitable for pots and cutlery previously used with non-kosher food. For items like knives or those used over direct flame, libun (intense heating, such as with a blowtorch) is required to burn out residues, while irui kli rishon involves pouring boiling water directly from a kosher kettle over the surface. Glass and porcelain are generally not kashered by these methods due to inability to fully expel absorptions, often requiring replacement or reliance on their non-porous nature after thorough cleaning. Pareve foods, termed neutral in kashrut, encompass items neither derived from nor containing meat or dairy, including fruits, vegetables, grains, eggs, fish (without fins and scales prohibition), and certain unprocessed juices. These may be consumed alongside either meat or dairy meals without violating the prohibition on mixing, provided they have not been processed or cooked with forbidden ingredients; certification is essential for packaged pareve products to verify absence of meat or dairy derivatives like gelatin or enzymes. Fish, while pareve, requires separate utensils in some customs due to potential flavor transfer concerns, though halachically permissible with meat.

Special and Agricultural Laws

Passover Restrictions

The primary restriction during Passover, known as Pesach in Hebrew, is the prohibition of chametz, defined in Jewish law as any food product derived from one of five specific grains—wheat, barley, spelt, rye, or oats—that has been allowed to ferment and leaven after contact with water for more than eighteen minutes without intervention to prevent rising. This biblical mandate, rooted in Exodus 12:15 and 12:19, requires Jews to abstain from consuming, owning, or deriving benefit from chametz throughout the holiday, which lasts seven days in Israel and eight days in the diaspora due to historical uncertainties in ancient calendar calculations. Preparation for the chametz ban involves meticulous practices to eliminate it from one's possession. On the evening before Passover eve (14 Nisan), observant Jews perform bedikat chametz, a formal search of the home using a candle, feather, wooden spoon, and bag to locate and collect any remnants, often placing ten pieces of chametz in advance to ensure the mitzvah is fulfilled. The following morning, collected chametz is burned in a ritual known as biur chametz, accompanied by a formal nullification declaration. Remaining chametz not suitable for personal disposal is sold to a non-Jew through a rabbi acting as agent, with legal transfer documented to avoid ownership during the holiday; this chametz is stored inaccessible until after Passover. In addition to chametz, Ashkenazi Jews observe a rabbinic custom prohibiting kitniyot—rice, corn, millet, legumes, and similar seeds or grains that can be ground into flour or resemble chametz—though these are not biblically forbidden and are permitted by Sephardi and Mizrahi traditions. All foods consumed must be verified free of chametz contact, often requiring separate kosher-for-Passover certification from rabbinic authorities, which entails factory inspections and dedicated production lines stricter than year-round kashrut. Post-Passover, any chametz owned by a Jew during the holiday remains prohibited for that individual's consumption until the following day, as a rabbinic penalty to enforce observance (chametz she'avar alav haPesach).

Produce, Insects, and Land of Israel Rules

Fruits and vegetables are inherently kosher, provided they are free of insects and other prohibitions, as the Torah permits plant-based foods without the restrictions applied to animals. However, the consumption of produce requires meticulous inspection to ensure no insects are present, since even a single insect renders the food non-kosher. The biblical prohibition against insects stems from Leviticus 11:41-47, which declares all creeping and swarming creatures detestable and forbids their consumption, with the severity equated to or exceeding that of other non-kosher meats in rabbinic rulings. Certain produce, such as leafy greens (e.g., lettuce, broccoli), berries, and grains, is prone to infestation by tiny insects like thrips or aphids, necessitating methods like washing under strong water pressure, soaking in soapy solutions, and visual examination under light. Rabbinic authorities emphasize that insects cannot be nullified in mixtures regardless of quantity, making pre-consumption checking obligatory rather than reliant on processing. While some communities permit blended or processed produce if bugs are unlikely to survive intact, stricter observance mandates certification or home verification to avoid accidental ingestion. In the Land of Israel, additional biblical and rabbinic laws govern produce to ensure sanctity and proper allocation: orlah prohibits eating fruit from trees during their first three years of growth, as mandated in Leviticus 19:23-25, with such fruit forbidden entirely and fourth-year produce historically dedicated to the Temple. Terumah and ma'aserot require separating portions of harvested produce—terumah for priests and various tithes for Levites, the poor, and second tithe consumption in Jerusalem—rendering untithed Israeli produce (tevel) biblically inedible. Shmita, the sabbatical year observed every seventh year (e.g., 5782 corresponding to 2021-2022), mandates leaving the land fallow, prohibiting Jewish sowing, pruning, or commercial harvesting, while granting grown produce special holiness (kedushat shvi'it) that restricts sale and requires prompt consumption or disposal to prevent waste. These rules apply exclusively within Israel's biblical boundaries, prompting kosher certifications for exported produce to verify compliance, as non-observance violates core agricultural mitzvot.

Vegetable Preparation and Inspection

Vegetables in kashrut must be inspected for insects, as all creeping insects are biblically prohibited for consumption according to Leviticus 11:41. This requirement applies particularly to produce prone to infestation, such as leafy greens, broccoli, cauliflower, and strawberries, where a 10% or greater likelihood of insect presence mandates checking prior to use. Microscopic insects below visible detection thresholds are generally not a concern, and partial insect fragments may be nullified under certain conditions, but whole visible insects render the produce forbidden if knowingly consumed. Preparation typically begins with washing under running water to dislodge surface contaminants, followed by targeted inspection. For leafy vegetables like lettuce or cabbage, leaves are separated individually, soaked in a solution of water with dish soap or vinegar to agitate hidden insects (such as thrips or aphids), then rinsed thoroughly and examined against a light source or thrip cloth for translucent pests. Broccoli and cauliflower florets require disassembly, soaking, vigorous agitation, and re-inspection of each segment, as insects often cluster in the buds; if three or more insects are found in initial checks, the entire batch demands further washing and verification. Stringent observers use specialized tools like light boxes to enhance visibility of tiny insects. Certain vegetables, such as root crops like potatoes or carrots, generally require only peeling and washing unless visible infestation is evident, while smooth-skinned fruits like apples need no routine checking absent certification concerns. Guidelines from kosher authorities like the Orthodox Union and Star-K emphasize that inspection is a home responsibility, with detailed charts outlining species-specific methods to ensure compliance; for instance, asparagus tips are trimmed, split lengthwise, and checked for embedded worms. Produce grown in controlled environments or certified insect-free may reduce but not eliminate the need for personal verification, as halachic obligation persists for common infestation risks.

Rationales and Justifications

Theological and Philosophical Bases

The laws of kashrut originate in explicit divine commandments recorded in the Torah, primarily in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14, which delineate permitted and prohibited animals, preparation methods, and mixtures without providing rational explanations for the distinctions. These injunctions command the Israelites to abstain from certain foods, such as pigs, shellfish, and birds of prey, while permitting others like ruminants with split hooves and fish with fins and scales, framing observance as a direct response to God's directive: "You shall be holy, for I am holy." Traditional Jewish exegesis classifies kashrut among the chukim, a category of statutes whose underlying reasons elude human comprehension, intended primarily to foster unwavering obedience to divine will and distinguish the Jewish people from surrounding nations. This classification underscores that kashrut serves as a test of faith, training adherents in self-restraint and submission to authority beyond empirical utility. Theologically, kashrut reinforces themes of sanctity and separation, embedding reminders of the Exodus from Egypt and the covenant at Sinai through daily ritual acts that symbolize mastery over base instincts. Observance cultivates discipline, curbing gluttony and promoting ethical mindfulness, as articulated in rabbinic literature where prohibited foods are linked to ancient idolatrous practices or moral impurities. In mystical traditions, such as Kabbalah, the laws address spiritual refinement, with separations like meat from dairy representing cosmic dualities of life and death, thereby elevating mundane eating into an act of cosmic repair (tikkun). These interpretations, while influential, remain secondary to the foundational imperative of divine fiat, as questioning chukim risks undermining their purpose as markers of transcendent loyalty. Philosophically, medieval rationalists like Maimonides sought naturalistic explanations, positing that kashrut safeguards physical health by excluding "unwholesome" foods prone to disease or nutritional imbalance, while instilling moderation and averting cruelty through regulated slaughter. In his Guide for the Perplexed (3:48), Maimonides argues the prohibitions target substances that "corrupt the body" or foster undesirable traits, aligning Torah with Aristotelian principles of hygiene and temperance, though he acknowledges not all details yield clear utility. Counterviews, such as those of Nachmanides, integrate mysticism, suggesting the laws deter pagan associations and purify the soul, rejecting purely utilitarian reductions. Modern assessments critique these rationales as speculative, noting that empirical health benefits, like reduced trichinosis risk from pork avoidance, postdate the laws and do not encompass all prohibitions, reaffirming kashrut's essence as suprarational obedience rather than derivable from first principles alone.

Health, Hygiene, and Scientific Assessments

Scientific assessments indicate that kashrut laws, originating over 3,000 years ago, were not empirically derived from modern understandings of nutrition or microbiology, and no rigorous studies demonstrate that adherence systematically improves health outcomes compared to non-kosher diets balanced for calories and macronutrients. Observational data from kosher-keeping populations show variable health metrics, influenced more by cultural factors like portion control or avoidance of processed foods than the laws themselves, with no causal links established in controlled trials. Hygiene benefits arise incidentally from practices like animal inspection and produce checking. Permitted animals (ruminants with split hooves and fish with fins and scales) exclude scavengers such as pigs, which historically carried parasites like Trichinella spiralis in uncooked meat, though cooking and modern farming have reduced incidence to near zero in regulated systems (e.g., U.S. cases dropped 99% from 1940s peaks due to inspection, not dietary laws). Shellfish prohibitions may align with ancient risks of bacterial contamination (Vibrio spp.) or toxins in filter-feeders, exacerbated by rapid spoilage in warm climates without refrigeration, but empirical evidence for this as a primary rationale is circumstantial, as similar risks affected permitted fish. Shechita, requiring a razor-sharp, nick-free blade for swift severance of major vessels, facilitates rapid exsanguination, minimizing anaerobic conditions conducive to bacterial proliferation post-mortem; subsequent salting and soaking further reduce surface pathogens like Salmonella. Comparative studies on beef hygiene found no significant microbial differences between shechita and conventional methods when stunning is absent, though kosher processing's emphasis on lung inspection excludes diseased animals, potentially lowering pathogen loads. Blood drainage may also limit iron overload risks in high-meat diets, but salting increases sodium content, countering any cardiovascular claims. The meat-dairy separation lacks substantiated health basis; proposed digestive incompatibilities (e.g., curdling in stomach) stem from anecdotal reports without clinical validation, and no peer-reviewed evidence links mixing to adverse outcomes beyond general overconsumption risks. It may indirectly moderate saturated fat intake by discouraging cheeseburgers, aligning with dietary guidelines, but this is behavioral, not inherent. Insect inspection protocols for leafy greens and berries, involving washing, visual scrutiny under light, and sometimes mesh straining, remove visible contaminants that could harbor bacteria or parasites, promoting basic food safety akin to modern washing recommendations; however, kosher standards exceed USDA guidelines in stringency for certain produce, though efficacy against microscopic pathogens relies on subsequent cooking. Overall, while kashrut enforces hygiene discipline, benefits are not uniquely superior to evidence-based practices like pasteurization or HACCP systems, and claims of inherent superiority often lack empirical rigor.

Certification and Supervision

Hashgacha Practices and Authorities

Hashgacha, or rabbinic supervision, ensures compliance with kashrut laws through oversight of food production, ingredients, equipment, and processes by trained mashgichim (kosher supervisors). This involves verifying that all components are kosher, preventing cross-contamination between meat and dairy, and confirming proper slaughter and preparation methods where applicable. Supervision methods vary by risk level: constant on-site presence for high-risk activities like meat processing or grape handling, and periodic inspections or seals for lower-risk items such as certain baked goods. In food service settings, hashgacha includes inspecting incoming deliveries for kosher certification, checking vegetables for insects, and monitoring staff to avoid non-kosher substitutions or equipment misuse. Agencies conduct initial facility audits, ongoing visits, and laboratory testing for additives or shared equipment kashering. Certification requires a contractual agreement outlining supervision protocols, with mashgichim documenting compliance and issuing hechsherim (kosher seals) upon approval. Prominent authorities include the Orthodox Union (OU), which certifies over 1,300,000 products globally and maintains rigorous standards through rabbinic expertise. Other major U.S.-based agencies are OK Kosher Certification, Star-K Kosher Certification, and the Chicago Rabbinical Council (cRc), each employing distinct rabbinic guidelines that may influence acceptability in specific communities. Differences arise in stringency, such as interpretations of kitniyot on Passover or reliance on non-Jewish overseers, leading Orthodox consumers to prefer agencies aligned with their customs. In Israel, the Chief Rabbinate oversees official kosher certification, while private bodies like Badatz Eda Haredit provide stricter, community-specific hashgacha often favored by ultra-Orthodox groups. Reliability assessments by bodies like the cRc categorize agencies as recommended based on factors including rabbinic credentials, supervision frequency, and transparency, excluding those with inconsistent practices.

Product Labeling and Marketing

Kosher-certified products display a hechsher, a symbol issued by rabbinic authorities or certification agencies indicating compliance with kashrut laws. These symbols vary by certifying body; for instance, the Orthodox Union's "OU" in a circle signifies general kosher status, while "OU-D" denotes dairy products and a plain "OU" or "OU-Pareve" indicates neutral (pareve) items free of meat or dairy derivatives. Similarly, the OK Kosher Certification uses a circled "K" for kosher products, often accompanied by "Pareve" for non-dairy/meat items. Dozens of such symbols exist worldwide, each tied to specific oversight organizations, allowing consumers to verify authenticity based on their community's standards. Labeling requirements are enforced by certifying agencies rather than uniform government regulations in most jurisdictions, though some U.S. states mandate disclosure of the supervising rabbi or group in advertisements for kosher claims. Agencies like the OU stipulate that symbols appear only on approved products listed in contractual schedules, with variations for dairy, meat, or Passover observance to prevent cross-contamination implications. Misuse of symbols can lead to revocation of certification, as agencies conduct audits to ensure symbols reflect ongoing supervision. In marketing, kosher certification serves as a key differentiator, enabling manufacturers to target observant Jewish consumers while appealing to broader audiences valuing perceived purity and quality controls. Certified firms promote hechshers through updated packaging, vendor emails, blog posts, and co-branded materials provided by agencies like the OU or OK, emphasizing expanded market access. The global kosher food market, valued at approximately $21.13 billion in 2024, drives this strategy, with projections to $21.93 billion in 2025, fueled by demand beyond religious observance for certified products in categories like beverages and private labels. Certification thus functions as a "silent salesman," signaling trustworthiness and enabling premium pricing in niche segments. Observing kashrut imposes significant economic costs on individuals and businesses. Kosher-certified products typically command a price premium ranging from 20% to nearly double that of non-kosher equivalents, attributable to factors such as separate production facilities to avoid cross-contamination, rigorous inspections for insects and purity, and the need for specialized rabbinical supervision during processing. In Israel, the aggregate annual cost of kashrut certification across the economy—excluding fresh produce—was estimated at 3 billion shekels (approximately $770 million) as of 2016, reflecting supervisory fees, compliance infrastructure, and opportunity costs from restricted production methods. For households, the premium can escalate substantially; a 2016 analysis in the United Kingdom pegged the additional yearly expenditure for a family adhering to kashrut at £12,700, encompassing higher grocery bills, restaurant surcharges (up to 70% more in certain areas), and separate utensils or kitchen setups. Businesses face certification expenses that vary by product complexity, facility oversight requirements, and certifying agency, often involving annual fees, site visits, and contractual audits. For instance, small-scale producers might incur $3,000 annually for up to five stock-keeping units (SKUs) under certain agencies, while larger operations scale costs with volume, ingredient scrutiny, and travel reimbursements for rabbis—potentially reaching tens of thousands for multinational firms but offset by market access to the global kosher sector, valued at $22.3 billion in 2024. These outlays stem from halakhic mandates like shechita (ritual slaughter) protocols and equipment kashering, which necessitate downtime and waste management, though certification can enable premium pricing in niche markets. Legally, kashrut observance intersects with regulations on food labeling, religious accommodation, and animal welfare. In the United States, statutes combating "kosher fraud"—such as New York's 2004 Kosher Law Protection Act, which mandates disclosure of certification standards—have faced Establishment Clause challenges; while some provisions were upheld for their secular purpose of consumer protection without advancing religion, others, like detailed orthodox-compliant rules in New Jersey, were struck down in 1992 for impermissibly entangling state enforcement with religious doctrine. Federal courts have affirmed prisoners' rights to kosher diets under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, as in a 2013 Florida settlement mandating provision for Jewish inmates after a U.S. Department of Justice lawsuit highlighted discriminatory denials. Shechita, requiring rapid throat incision without prior stunning to ensure humane dispatch per Jewish law, has provoked animal welfare-based restrictions in Europe, where mandatory pre-stunning under EU directives effectively bans non-stunned ritual slaughter in countries like Belgium (fully by 2019, including poultry) and Poland, prompting claims of religious freedom violations under the European Convention on Human Rights. In Israel, the Chief Rabbinate's statutory monopoly on kashrut certification under the 1983 Prohibition of Deceit Law grants it authority to issue certificates and enforce standards, though this has led to High Court interventions limiting overreach into private disputes while upholding core halakhic application. These tensions underscore causal trade-offs between empirical welfare concerns—debated in veterinary studies showing minimal pain if shechita is precise—and constitutional protections for ritual practice, with no U.S. federal ban but ongoing state-level scrutiny of slaughterhouse compliance.

Observance Variations

Levels of Strictness

Observance of kashrut involves varying levels of strictness, primarily through the adoption of chumrot (stringencies) that exceed the baseline halachic requirements derived from the Torah and rabbinic interpretations. Standard kosher certification ensures compliance with core prohibitions, such as permissible animals slaughtered via shechita and separation of meat and dairy, but many communities impose additional safeguards against potential violations. These levels are not uniform but reflect communal norms, rabbinic guidance, and individual piety, with stricter practices often signaled by specific certifications or hechsherim. In meat preparation, a common stringency is glatt kosher, which mandates rigorous inspection of the animal's lungs for adhesions or blemishes post-slaughter, beyond the allowances for minor defects in non-glatt kosher meat. While non-glatt meat remains permissible under halacha in certain cases, glatt standards have become prevalent among Orthodox Jews since the 20th century, comprising over 95% of kosher meat in the United States by the 1990s due to widespread acceptance as a higher purity measure. For dairy, cholov Yisrael requires Jewish supervision during milking to preclude admixture with non-kosher milk, a practice obligatory in some haredi communities but viewed as a stringency elsewhere, where government-regulated milk (cholov stam) suffices under rabbinic leniencies established by figures like Rabbi Moshe Feinstein in the mid-20th century. Bakery products may require pas Yisrael, baked wholly or substantially by a Jew, to address concerns over non-Jewish involvement potentially invalidating sanctity, though mechanical ovens reduce this issue in modern practice. Mehadrin represents the highest tier, incorporating multiple stringencies such as glatt meat, cholov Yisrael, pas Yisrael, and stricter rabbinic opinions on ingredients, often under enhanced supervision like that of a Badatz (strict rabbinic court). In Israel, mehadrin products follow halachic rulings prioritizing minority strict views, distinguishing them from standard Chief Rabbinate certification, and are prevalent in haredi enclaves where baseline kosher is deemed insufficient for spiritual elevation. Modern Orthodox observers may adhere to standard certifications from bodies like the Orthodox Union, balancing halachic fidelity with practicality, while haredi standards frequently mandate mehadrin or equivalent to mitigate perceived risks in mass production.

Denominational and Regional Differences

Orthodox Judaism requires strict adherence to kashrut laws as codified in the Torah and expanded in the Talmud and later rabbinic literature, including separation of meat and dairy products, prohibition of non-kosher species, ritual slaughter (shechita), and reliance on rabbinic certification (hechsher) for processed foods to ensure compliance. Observant Orthodox Jews maintain distinct utensils, dishware, and kitchen zones for meat and dairy, with waiting periods between consumption—typically three to six hours after meat and one hour after dairy, varying by custom. Conservative Judaism approaches kashrut as a binding but adaptable mitzvah, permitting rabbinic innovations while upholding core biblical prohibitions; however, surveys indicate that only about 20-30% of Conservative Jews maintain full home observance, with many forgoing strict separation or certification for convenience, though synagogue events often feature kosher food. This flexibility reflects the movement's emphasis on historical development of halakha over unchanging literalism, leading to practices like accepting certain non-Orthodox certifications or allowing meat-dairy mixing in non-home settings by some rabbis. Reform and Reconstructionist Judaism view kashrut primarily as an ethical guide rather than obligatory ritual law, with observance left to individual conscience; Reform platforms since 1999 have de-emphasized mandatory kashrut, citing its non-universal application in Jewish history, and most adherents do not keep kosher homes or diets, focusing instead on humane animal treatment or vegetarianism as modern equivalents. Reconstructionist synagogues may offer kosher options symbolically but do not enforce them, aligning with the denomination's cultural-evolutionary perspective on Judaism.
DenominationTypical Kashrut Observance Level
OrthodoxFull: Certified foods, strict separation, ritual slaughter required.
ConservativePartial to variable: Core prohibitions encouraged, but certification and separation often lax.
Reform/ReconstructionistMinimal/optional: Ethical focus over ritual; rare full observance.
Regional variations in kashrut primarily manifest within Orthodox and Conservative communities, distinguishing Ashkenazi (from Central/Eastern Europe) and Sephardi/Mizrahi (from Iberian, Mediterranean, and Middle Eastern regions) customs, often rooted in medieval rabbinic responses to local agriculture and minhag (custom). Ashkenazim prohibit kitniyot—legumes, rice, corn, and similar grains resembling chametz (leavened products)—during Passover, a 13th-century custom by rabbis like Jacob ben Meir to prevent confusion with forbidden grains, affecting an estimated 80-90% of American Jews of Ashkenazi descent. Sephardim, following authorities like Maimonides, permit kitniyot on Passover if free of actual chametz, allowing rice, beans, and lentils as staples, which broadens dietary options and reflects warmer climates' crop reliance; this distinction persists, with some modern Ashkenazi rabbis challenging the kitniyot ban as non-halakhic but minority views. Sephardic customs also include more lenient insect checks for certain vegetables due to differing talmudic interpretations, and variations in kashering utensils, such as libun (torching) for Sephardim versus hagalah (boiling) preferred by some Ashkenazim for Passover preparation. These differences underscore kashrut's adaptability to geography while maintaining biblical foundations, with intermarriage increasingly blending practices in diaspora communities.

Cultural and Social Dimensions

Adherence Patterns

Adherence to kashrut differs markedly by Jewish denomination, geographic location, and degree of religious observance. In the United States, a 2021 Pew Research Center survey of Jewish Americans found that 95% of Orthodox Jews report keeping kosher in their homes, defined as avoiding non-kosher meat and separating meat and dairy. In contrast, only 24% of Conservative Jews and 5% of Reform Jews maintain such practices. Overall, 17% of U.S. Jews keep kosher at home, with an additional subset avoiding pork or shellfish without full observance. In Israel, where the Jewish population constitutes about half of the global total of approximately 15 million, adherence is higher, with roughly 60% of Israeli Jews reporting they keep kosher in their homes as of 2016. This includes near-universal compliance among Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) and Dati (religious) Jews, 59% among Masortim (traditional Jews), and 19% among Hilonim (secular Jews). Israel's centralized religious infrastructure and cultural norms contribute to elevated rates compared to diaspora communities.
Denomination/ GroupU.S. Kosher Home Observance (%)Israel Kosher Home Observance (%)
Orthodox/Haredi95~100
Conservative/Dati24~100
Reform/Masorti559
Secular/HiloniLow (included in overall 17)19
Overall1760
Data compiled from Pew Research Center surveys (U.S.: 2021; Israel: 2016). Percentages reflect self-reported keeping kosher at home, which typically entails certified kosher food and separation of meat and dairy. Outside major centers like the U.S. and Israel, patterns follow similar denominational lines, with Orthodox communities maintaining strict adherence while non-Orthodox rates remain low; however, global surveys are sparse, and urbanization and assimilation have correlated with declining observance in secularizing diaspora populations since the 20th century. Partial practices, such as avoiding pork, are more widespread than full kashrut, even among nominal adherents.

Linguistic and Culinary Influences

The terminology of kashrut has permeated English and other languages, particularly through loanwords from Hebrew and Yiddish that extend beyond religious contexts. The term "kosher," derived from the Hebrew root k-sh-r (כָּשֵׁר) meaning "fit," "proper," or "correct," specifically denotes food compliant with Jewish dietary laws but has evolved in secular usage since the late 19th century to signify legitimacy, authenticity, or adherence to standards, as in "kosher deal" or "kosher accounting." Likewise, "treif" (or "tref," from Hebrew terefah, טְרֵפָה, meaning "torn" or "mauled," referring to animals unfit for consumption due to improper slaughter or disease) labels non-kosher items and has entered colloquial English to denote something forbidden, improper, or contaminated. Additional terms like "pareve" (or "parve," from Yiddish, indicating neutral foods neither meat nor dairy) and "chametz" (leavened grains prohibited during Passover) appear in product labeling and multicultural discussions of food restrictions, reflecting kashrut's role in shaping diaspora vocabularies. Culinary practices under kashrut have molded Jewish food traditions across regions, enforcing separations that spur adaptive innovations while limiting ingredients and methods. The biblical-derived prohibition on mixing meat and milk (Exodus 23:19, 34:26; Deuteronomy 14:21) requires distinct utensils, cookware, and post-meal waiting periods—typically three to six hours after meat—fostering pareve alternatives like fish-based entrees or vegetable stews that serve as versatile accompaniments. This duality influences dish design, evident in Ashkenazi staples such as gefilte fish (ground fish balls to ensure no blood remnants, per slaughter rules) or cholent (slow-simmered bean-meat stew for Sabbath observance without active cooking). Sephardic and Mizrahi cuisines adapt similarly, incorporating local spices and produce—e.g., eggplant or legumes in North African tagines—while excluding non-kosher elements like shellfish or blood, yielding flavor profiles reliant on pareve oils over animal fats forbidden in certain contexts. These constraints have indirectly broadened global culinary exchanges by necessitating resourceful substitutions, such as schmaltz (rendered poultry fat) in Eastern European recipes to replace pork lard, or dairy-free desserts during meat meals, which parallel modern allergen-aware cooking. In turn, kashrut has prompted food industry adaptations, like certified pareve margarines developed in the 20th century to mimic butter without dairy, influencing vegetarian and vegan product lines. Regional variations highlight causal ties to environment and law: Eastern European poverty and cold climates favored hearty, preserved kosher foods like pickled herring, while Mediterranean Jewish communities emphasized olive oil-based dishes compliant with fat restrictions.

Impact on Jewish Identity and Society

Kashrut observance functions as a primary delineator of Jewish identity, embedding religious distinctiveness into everyday routines and distinguishing adherents from non-Jewish societies. By prohibiting certain foods and mandating specific preparation methods, these laws compel conscious separation, serving as a perpetual reminder of covenantal obligations and historical continuity. This practice historically mitigated assimilation pressures, as evidenced by its role in sustaining communal boundaries during diaspora periods, where shared dietary exclusions reinforced group solidarity amid external influences. Within Jewish communities, kashrut cultivates social cohesion through ritualized meals that emphasize collective participation, particularly in family and synagogue settings. It structures interpersonal relations by limiting commensality with non-observant individuals, thereby prioritizing intra-communal ties and ethical discipline derived from Torah mandates. Empirical studies, such as those in the Windsor-Essex Jewish community, reveal that adherence levels correlate with social networks; strict observers report heightened communal involvement, while partial or non-observance can lead to isolation from orthodox subgroups, underscoring kashrut's function in maintaining hierarchical social norms. Even among secular or Reform Jews, kashrut symbols persist as cultural touchstones of identity, evoking heritage without full halachic compliance—for instance, aversion to pork remains prevalent as a marker of Jewishness irrespective of ritual observance. This enduring association highlights kashrut's causal role in identity preservation, extending beyond orthodoxy to influence broader societal perceptions of Jewishness, though it occasionally strains inter-denominational relations due to varying stringency. In Israel, secular adherence to kosher laws among non-religious Jews further illustrates its societal embedding, often as a collective identifier rather than personal piety.

Controversies and Criticisms

Internal Rabbinic Debates

Rabbinic authorities have long debated the precise application of the biblical prohibition against cooking a kid in its mother's milk (Exodus 23:19, 34:26; Deuteronomy 14:21), extending it to broader separations between meat and dairy products as rabbinic safeguards. While the Torah law strictly forbids cooking, eating, or deriving benefit from such mixtures, the Sages instituted additional stringencies, including separate utensils and waiting periods between meals to prevent inadvertent violation. The required waiting time after consuming meat before dairy varies: Sephardic custom follows three to four hours based on the Rosh and Rambam, who emphasized digestion to avoid residue mixing in the mouth, whereas Ashkenazic practice mandates six hours per the Rema, reflecting concerns over thorough separation. After dairy, most authorities permit immediate meat consumption or require a shorter interval of about an hour to cleanse the palate, though some, like the Pri Chadash, advocate leniency for hard cheeses. A key dispute concerns poultry's inclusion in the meat-dairy prohibition, as birds do not produce milk and thus fall outside the literal Torah verse. The Talmud (Chullin 104b) records early ambivalence, but the consensus of Rishonim, including Rashi and Tosafot, extended the ban rabbinically to poultry due to its culinary similarity to red meat and to prevent confusion with true basar (mammalian flesh). Dissenting views, such as that of Rav Yitzchak Alfasi, initially questioned this extension but were overruled in practice, leading to universal observance today. This rabbinic enactment underscores the principle of gezerah (preventive decree) to safeguard core mitzvot. Debates over gentile-produced cheese (gvinas nokhri) center on the use of non-kosher rennet from calves' stomachs, prohibited by Torah law if from a non-shechted animal. The Rambam (Hilchot Ma'achalot Asurot 3:13) rules all such cheese forbidden due to presumptive rennet use, while the Rashba and others permit hard, aged cheeses where rennet's role is minimal or vegetal alternatives suffice, provided no idolatrous intent. This leniency gained traction in medieval Spain but was rejected by Ashkenazic authorities like the Maharshal, who insisted on kosher rennet; contemporary certifications often require supervised production to resolve these tensions, reflecting ongoing weighing of biblical imperatives against practical accommodation. In shechita (ritual slaughter), internal disputes focus on technical halachic details, such as knife sharpness (chalad) and incision placement to ensure instantaneous death and blood drainage per Deuteronomy 12:21. The Shulchan Aruch (Yoreh De'ah 1-18) codifies requirements, but poskim debate edge cases like partial invalid cuts or animal positioning; for instance, if slaughter begins in a non-standard neck area but completes validly, some, following the Taz, deem it kosher if intent was proper, while stricter views invalidate entirely to avoid chatzi shechita risks. These rulings, derived from Talmudic analysis in Chullin, prioritize humane dispatch without stunning, which most reject as it may render the animal a treifah (forbidden carcass) beforehand.

External Challenges and Critiques

External critiques of kashrut primarily focus on the practice of shechita, the ritual slaughter method requiring a swift cut to the throat without prior stunning, which animal welfare advocates argue inflicts undue suffering on animals. Organizations such as the Humane Society International and the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) contend that the absence of stunning prolongs consciousness and pain compared to methods involving electrical or mechanical stunning, citing studies showing potential for distress during the bleed-out phase. However, empirical assessments, including electroencephalogram (EEG) data from some veterinary studies, indicate rapid loss of brain function post-cut, challenging claims of prolonged agony when performed by trained shochtim adhering to halachic standards. Legal restrictions on shechita exemplify governmental challenges to kashrut observance, with several European countries imposing bans or requiring pre-stunning, viewed by critics of religious exemptions as prioritizing animal welfare over minority rights. For instance, Belgium's Flanders and Wallonia regions prohibited non-stunned slaughter in 2019, while the Netherlands attempted similar restrictions in 2013, prompting accusations of indirect discrimination against Jewish and Muslim communities. In the United States, kosher certification and labeling have faced constitutional scrutiny under the Establishment Clause, as state-level kosher food laws regulating fraud have been challenged for entangling government with religious standards, though courts have upheld many as neutral consumer protections. Environmental concerns highlight that kosher meat production, reliant on centralized certification and often sourced from intensive factory farming, contributes to high greenhouse gas emissions without inherent sustainability advantages over conventional meat. Analyses estimate that global livestock production, including kosher segments, accounts for approximately 18% of anthropogenic greenhouse gases, with kosher supply chains exacerbating waste through specialized processing like salting and separate facilities for meat and dairy. Reports from advocacy groups note that nearly all commercial kosher products derive from confined animal feeding operations, raising ethical questions about alignment with broader welfare and ecological goals despite certification labels. Health-related critiques are less prominent but include observations that kosher processing can elevate sodium levels in poultry and meat due to salting, potentially increasing cardiovascular risks, while rigorous insect inspection of produce may lead to higher pesticide residues on non-organic vegetables. Secular nutrition experts emphasize that kashrut imposes no systematic nutritional superiority, as exclusions like pork or shellfish eliminate risks from certain pathogens but permit high-fat processed foods, underscoring that dietary health derives more from caloric balance than ritual compliance.

Modern Developments

Genetically Modified and Novel Foods

Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are generally deemed kosher by major Orthodox certification bodies, as the process of gene splicing does not implant non-kosher genes into edible parts of kosher species nor violate biblical prohibitions such as kilayim (hybridization), which apply to specific agricultural practices rather than microscopic genetic alterations. The Orthodox Union (OU), a leading kashrut authority, has ruled that GM foods retain kosher status provided processing avoids non-kosher additives, emphasizing that kashrut certification addresses ritual purity, not health or environmental impacts of GM technology. Rabbi Gershon Belsky, former OU posek, affirmed this by distinguishing gene insertion from Torah-prohibited crossbreeding methods. Israel's Chief Rabbinate similarly approved genetically grafted produce in rulings post-2000, as the introduced gene cannot independently propagate, sidestepping grafting bans. Novel foods, including cell-cultured meat and alternative proteins, present more halakhic complexity due to their departure from traditional animal derivation. Cultivated meat from kosher animal cells—grown via biotechnology without slaughter—has been certified kosher by the OU for specific strains as of September 2023, contingent on using kosher growth media, removing animal serum early, and ensuring no non-kosher contaminants. Israel's Chief Sephardic Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef ruled in January 2023 that such beef is kosher if cells originate from a kosher species and undergo ritual inspection analogous to conventional meat, bypassing shechita requirements since no live animal is harmed. However, some authorities, including OU leadership, caution against broad acceptance without verifying the entire production chain, citing Talmudic debates on non-animal-derived "meat" and potential basar b'chalav (meat-milk) issues if media includes dairy elements. Insect-based novel foods face stricter scrutiny, as most insects are biblically non-kosher (sheretz), with only specific locust species permitted under traditional leniencies rarely applied today. Certification requires verifying kosher species origins and processing free of contaminants, though no major body has broadly approved engineered insect proteins for kashrut absent case-by-case review. Algae and microalgae derivatives, often novel in food applications, are typically pareve if plant-like and processed without animal additives, but demand supervision for fermentation media and purity, aligning with general rules for non-animal extracts. These rulings underscore kashrut's focus on verifiable production integrity over innovation type, with certifying agencies like OU and OK adapting protocols for scalability.

Global Market Growth and Adaptations

The global kosher food market, encompassing certified products adhering to Jewish dietary laws, was valued at approximately USD 22.1 billion in 2024, with projections estimating growth to USD 29.6 billion by 2033 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 2.95%. Other analyses report higher figures, such as USD 44.4 billion in 2025 expanding to USD 82.55 billion by 2035 at a CAGR of 6.8%, driven by rising demand in both Jewish and non-Jewish segments. This expansion reflects broader consumer interest beyond the estimated 15 million observant Jews worldwide, with non-Jewish purchasers—motivated by perceptions of kosher oversight ensuring purity, absence of pork derivatives, and stringent quality controls—accounting for up to 80% of sales in some markets like the United States, where 35 million non-Jews reportedly consume kosher products annually. Key drivers of market growth include urbanization in emerging economies, increasing diaspora populations in Asia and Latin America, and the "health halo" effect associating kosher certification with ethical sourcing and allergen management, though empirical studies on superior nutritional outcomes remain limited. In regions like the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), the kosher segment reached USD 424 million in 2024 and is forecasted to hit USD 615 million by 2033 at a 4.2% CAGR, spurred by expatriate communities and halal-kosher overlaps. Globally, over 100,000 products bear kosher symbols from agencies like the Orthodox Union, which certifies items for export to 100+ countries, enabling scalability through standardized hechsher (certification marks). Adaptations to diverse markets involve innovations such as plant-based kosher alternatives to meet vegetarian trends and expanded certifications for processed goods like beverages and snacks, which comprised 37.4% of distribution via supermarkets in recent assessments. In non-traditional locales, kosher production facilities have proliferated; for example, Argentina hosts kosher-adapted fast-food outlets, including McDonald's branches supervised by local rabbinic authorities since the early 2000s to serve sizable Jewish communities. Supply chain adjustments, including remote electronic monitoring for shechita (ritual slaughter) compliance, have facilitated entry into high-growth areas like Southeast Asia, where certifications from bodies like KLBD (Kashrut Division of the London Beth Din) support exports amid rising wellness-focused consumerism. These evolutions prioritize verifiable compliance over unproven health claims, with market analysts noting that certification costs—often 1-2% of production expenses—yield premiums of 10-20% in retail pricing.

Kosher Travel and Global Mobility

The growth of the global kosher market has facilitated kashrut observance during travel, giving rise to a dedicated kosher-travel ecosystem. Key modern adaptations include:
Digital tools: Apps such as Kosher Near Me, Is It Kosher?, and GoDaven provide real-time restaurant/minyan maps and barcode hechsher verification.
Airline meals: Most major carriers (Delta, United, El Al, Emirates, etc.) offer sealed, glatt kosher meals certified by OU, OK, or KF when ordered 48–72 h in advance.
Hotels: Many chains now stock disposable utensils, mini-fridges, and hot-water urns upon request; kashering protocols for microwaves and coffee makers are widely published by Star-K and cRc.
Kosher vacation rentals: A rapidly expanding niche that solves the biggest pain point for families and longer stays. These properties feature fully separate meat/dairy kitchens, tovelled utensils, Shabbat timers/plates, urns, and sometimes even on-site blechs and hot plates. Popular platforms (2025) include:
Kvation.com (kosher rentals in US, Israel, Europe; mehadrin standard)
ReserveKosher.com (paid listings for villas, and kosher apt)
GoKosher.com (free classified site for kosher rentals)

References

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