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{{data|5 August 2022}}
[[File:{{#setmainimage:Stempel koszerności.jpg}}|thumb|upright|Mirror-flipped picture of a kosher certification stamp from interwar Poland, with the Hebrew word כשר ("kosher").<br>{{small|Oświęcim (Auschwitz) Jewish Museum}}]]
I've I’ve been asked by one of the Readers to try and explain what it means that something is or isn't isn’t kosher. On this blog, I've I’ve been focusing mostly on the history of Polish cuisine, but Jewish cuisine used to develop right next to the Polish one for ages, so naturally there's there’s been a &nbsp;lot of overlap and recipë sharing between the two. Which means that if you want to know more about Polish cuisine, then it's it’s a &nbsp;good idea to also learn something about Jewish foodways – and how the Jews' Jews’ own religion has shaped what they do or do not eat. Prior to the Holocaust, most of the world's world’s Jews and Poles lived in the same country, but Gentile Poles, even back then, had seldom more than only a &nbsp;very superficial idea about the religious rules followed by their Jewish neighbours (and ''vice versa''). Nowadays, this level of familiarity is surely even lower.
I won't won’t be writing here anything you wouldn't wouldn’t find in a &nbsp;plethora of already existing sources, but these sources may be difficult to understand for people with little prior knowledge of Judaism. So I will do my best to elucidate the topic as clearly as I can, while keeping the number of Hebrew and Yiddish terms to a &nbsp;minimum.
But first, a &nbsp;few notes. Firstly, I'm I’m not a &nbsp;follower of Judaism myself, so this will be an outsider's outsider’s view of this religion. Secondly, the rules I'll I’ll be writing about are quite complex, so this will be only a &nbsp;brief and simplified overview of the principal points. Thirdly, Jews aren't aren’t all equally pious, so not all of them respect religious dietary laws and, among those who do, some respect them more strictly than others. Henceforth, when writing about "Jews", I will mean only those Jews who really take these laws seriously. And fourthly, Jews have been dispersed across many countries for centuries and developed different ways of interpreting and obeying their laws depending on where they happened to live. Unless I note otherwise, I will be focusing on culinary habits of Ashkenazi Jews, that is, those of Central and Eastern Europe.
== What is the Jewish Religion About? ==
[[File:Talmud.jpg|thumb|Complementing the Scripture, Jewish oral tradition was only written down in the early centuries of the Common Era in a book known as the Talmud. In this Warsaw edition published in 1877 you can see the distinctive text layout where an initial thought is surrounded by a later commentary, which in turn is surrounded by a commentary to the commentary, etc.<br>{{small|Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw}}]]
First of all, Judaism is a &nbsp;religion which is very big on obeying commandments. Jews believe in a &nbsp;God who doesn't doesn’t really care whether someone believes in him. What he's he’s interested in is whether the Jews, a &nbsp;nation whose ancestors he made a &nbsp;special covenant with, respect the law he gave them as part of that deal. What you believe in doesn't doesn’t matter as much as what you do. The chief source of that law is the Torah, also known as the Pentateuch, that is, the first five books of the Bible (Old Testament). It's It’s not just the famous Ten Commandments chiselled onto stone tablets, but all of the various commands and prohibitions the Torah is filled with. Long time ago someone determined there's there’s 613 of them altogether and this is the number that has stuck, even though, when other people later did the counting, they got different results.
Biblical commandments are often quite specific and pertain to various spheres of everyday human life. The problem is that it's it’s a &nbsp;sin to break any of them even inadvertently (of course, sins committed on purpose are even worse). That's That’s why generations of rabbis, or experts in Jewish religious law, came up with extended or additional commandments you have to follow in order to prevent breaking any of the Biblical laws even by accident. Eventually, this broad interpretation was bloated to such an extent that it made regular life almost impossible. And so, in the subsequent stage, the rabbis devised a &nbsp;collection of loopholes to bypass these additional commandments, allowing the Jews to lead relatively normal lives while keeping God happy at the same time. I suppose it explains why the Jews are such a &nbsp;creative people. In any case, we will be seeing here, time and again, the same cycle of: simple Biblical commandment → broad rabbinical interpretation → inventive ways of circumventing it.
== Animals, Clean and Unclean ==
Anyone who knows anything about Jewish dietary laws is most likely aware that Jews are not allowed to eat pork. But the matter is a &nbsp;tad more complex. ''Kashrut'', or the set of Jewish food-related religious regulations, is primarily concerned with determining what is "clean", or kosher (and thus edible), and what is "unclean", or treif. The distinction applies mostly to animal species.
=== Quadrupeds ===
Let's Let’s start with four-legged land animals and see what the Bible has to say about their "cleanness".
{{ Cytat
[[File:Czworonogi EN.png|400px|left|Quadrupeds are kosher, if they have cloven hooves and chew their cud.]]
So, for a &nbsp;land-dwelling mammal to be kosher, it must meet two conditions at the same time: it must chew its cud (which means swallowing its food, partly digesting it in one of its stomachs, regurgitating it back to its mouth, then chewing it well, swallowing again and completing the digestion in the remaining stomachs) and have cloven, that is even-numbered, hooves.
[[File:Gazelle rumination - zoom.webm|thumb|right|An impala, a perfectly kosher South African antelope, chewing its cud (look closely at its food pipe).]]
And so, for example, a &nbsp;pig has cloven hooves, but doesn't doesn’t chew its cud, which is precisely why it's it’s not kosher. A &nbsp;camel, on the other hand, does chew its cud and it does have two toes on each foot, but the toes end with toenails rather than hooves, which makes the camel treif as well. A &nbsp;rabbit also passes its food twice through its digestive system, but obviously has no hooves, so it's it’s out. The only animals which do meet both criteria belong to the suborder ''Ruminantia'', to use modern taxonomic terminology. Apart from the species listed in the Biblical passage above, ruminants also include such creatures as: water buffalo, mouse-deer, bison, moose, wapiti and giraffe. But if we only count those ruminants which are traditionally raised for meat in Europe, then we're we’re left with nothing but cattle, sheep and goats.
I should note here that the notion of ritual cleanness has nothing to do with whether a &nbsp;particular animal is physically clean or dirty. Ritual cleanness isn't isn’t a &nbsp;moral category either, so it's it’s not like "clean" animals are good and the "unclean" ones are evil. All animals, as God's God’s creations, deserve the same kind of respect from humans. The only difference is that some of them are considered fit for Jewish consumption, while others are seen as kind of… gross.
=== Water Creatures ===
[[File:Zwierzęta wodne EN.png|400px|right|Water animals are kosher, if they have fins and scales.]]
Again, there are two conditions that must be met at the same time: a &nbsp;water animal ought to have both fins and scales to be kosher. This means that Jews can enjoy many popular fish species, such as herring, salmon, cod, tuna or pike. One should be careful with carp, as some varieties have no or very few scales. Some rabbis have specified that a &nbsp;fish must have at least three scales to be kosher, although most agree that one scale is enough as long as one is certain that the scale actually belongs to the fish and didn't didn’t just stick to its skin after detaching from a &nbsp;fish of a &nbsp;different species.<ref>{{Cyt
| nazwisko = Blech
| imię = Zushe Yosef
| rok = 2008
| strony = 124
}}</ref> What's What’s more, the scales must be visible with a &nbsp;naked eye and easily removable without tearing the skin, which makes such fish as eel, sturgeon and shark unkosher. And anything that lives in water, but is not a &nbsp;fish, that is, all kinds of non-fish seafood, isn't isn’t kosher either.
Now, have you ever heard of a &nbsp;traditional delicacy, still popular in Poland, known as "Jewish caviar"? Is Jewish caviar even possible? Anything that comes from an unclean animal – meat, milk, eggs, etc. – is unclean. So don't don’t be fooled: if the sturgeon isn't isn’t kosher, then neither is sturgeon roe. Jewish "caviar" is nothing more than fried goose liver that has been chopped so finely it kind of resembles caviar – in the way it looks, at least, because it certainly doesn't doesn’t taste the same.
=== Birds ===
While we're we’re talking about geese, let's let’s take a &nbsp;look at winged animals in general. This is what the Scripture says about flying vertebrates, that is, birds and bats:
{{ Cytat
[[File:Zwierzęta latające EN.png|400px|left|Winged vertebrates are kosher as long as they're not carnivorous and don't belong to any other forbidden species.]]
No more clear-cut criteria here. Instead, we've we’ve got a &nbsp;short list of bird species which are definitely not kosher. It would seem the matter is simple enough: if these few birds are not kosher, then all other kinds of birds must be good to eat, right? The trouble is that there's there’s no certainty whether all of the bird species enumerated in the original Hebrew text have been correctly translated and identified. Rabbis, therefore, took it upon themselves to come up with their own criteria allowing to classify each bird as either kosher or treif.
They had no doubt about all birds of prey being unclean. When it came to other birds, they were looking at such traits as the presence of a &nbsp;backward-pointing toe, a &nbsp;kind of pouch in the gullet and a &nbsp;special sort of stomach lining. But in the end they decided that if Jews had always been consuming a &nbsp;particular species of bird, then this bird must have been kosher, and if they hadn'thadn’t, then it wasn'twasn’t. In practice, those birds which are commonly raised as poultry, such as chickens, ducks, geese, pigeons, etc., are all kosher. Turkey, which comes from North America, is a &nbsp;special case, because Jews only learned about its existence once the Spaniards discovered the New World, so there was no long-standing tradition of its consumption to speak of. But the rabbis figured the turkey was similar enough to well-known species of poultry that it's it’s okay to eat it as well.
=== Creeping Things ===
What remains are all the little critters the Bible refers to generically as "creeping things". This term seems to include all invertebrates, as well as amphibians, reptiles and small mammals. The matter of their ritual cleanness is simple enough: they're they’re all unkosher.
{{ Cytat
[[File:Owady EN.png|400px|right|Insects are all unkosher with the exception of a few species of locust.]]
Again, it's it’s hard to tell which species exactly Biblical authors had in mind, so there's there’s no other choice then falling back on tradition. But when it comes to tradition of locust consumption, it turns out it's it’s only been preserved among Yemenite Jews. They're They’re the only ones who can still tell which species of these insects are kosher. As for European Jews, just like Europeans in general, they're they’re happy not to include any kinds of bugs in their menu.
Sometimes, however, you may consume some invertebrate-derived ingredients without knowing it. You may not think about it on an everyday basis, but black pasta owes its colour to sepia, which is extracted from a &nbsp;cuttlefish ink sac, while some strawberry milkshakes are red, because they contain cochineal, a &nbsp;crimson dye obtained from parasitic scale bugs feeding off cactuses. That's That’s why there are special Jewish organizations issuing kosher certifications. It's It’s their job to verify that all ingredients of a &nbsp;given food item are ritually clean and the entire production process is in line with Jewish dietary laws.
And what about honey? It can't can’t possibly be kosher, it would seem. But there's there’s good news here: in the past, people thought honey was produced by flowers and all that bees were doing was collecting and storing it. From Jewish perspective, honey is a &nbsp;perfectly vegan food rather than an detestable insect secretion. Except honeydew honey, that is; in this case it was impossible not to notice that bees collected it not from flowers, but from aphids' aphids’ butts.
== Blood and Other Tissues ==
An animal may be ritually clean, but that's that’s not the end. It still needs to be properly killed and dressed for it to be kosher. This is mostly related to one of the most important commandements in Jewish law, wich is the prohibition against consumption of blood.
=== Blood ===
}}
Blood symbolizes life, and the giver of all life is God. That's That’s why blood is sacred and, in a &nbsp;way, reserved for God alone. Back when the Temple in Jerusalem still stood (ultimately demolished by the Romans in 70&nbsp;{{small|CE}}), the Temple's Temple’s altar was regularly sprinkled with calf or lamb blood as a &nbsp;sacrifice of atonement. And since the blood was meant as a &nbsp;gift for God, it was off-limits to humans. Hence, the strict and oft-repeated Biblical ban on drinking blood. When broken, it was punishable by God himself setting his face against the perpetrator: I see you, see what you did, and won't won’t forget it.
[[File:A. Szyk, Kazimierz Wielki potwierdza Statut Kaliski.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Casimir the Great confirming the Statute of Calisia in 1334.<br>{{small|By Artur Szyk (1927)}}]]
Considering how strong the taboo against blood consumption in Judaism is, it's it’s hard to understand how it was possible for Christians throughout Europe and over many centuries to believe an absolutely dumb and vicious gossip about Jews using Christian children's children’s blood for making matzah. In Poland, some monarchs attempted to suppress it. As early as in 1264, Duke Boleslav the Pious of Greater Poland issued a &nbsp;famous charter of Jewish privileges, known as the Statute of Calisia (Kalisz), whose article 30 explicitly forbade anyone from spreading the spiteful rumour. Seventy years later, King Casimir the Great extended the law from the province of Greater Poland to the entire Kingdom of Poland. But despite these efforts, the canard continued to serve as an excuse for anti-Jewish pogroms for centuries, including the particularly shameful post-Holocaust Kielce Pogrom of 1946.
What does the prohibition against blood consumption mean in practice? Well, the animal must be butchered in such a &nbsp;way that lets it bleed out as quickly and as amply as possible, and then the carcass must be dressed in a &nbsp;way that will remove almost all of the remaining blood. This so-called Jewish ritual slaughter is practised by specially trained butchers who are required to cut the animal's animal’s throat with a &nbsp;single pull of a &nbsp;long, very sharp, unserrated knife, severing the wind pipe, the food pipe and major blood vessels in the neck at the same time. Next, the carcass is quartered, larger blood vessels are removed, the meat is soaked in water, buried in salt and rinsed with water again, so as to get rid of the last drops of blood. The liver, which is especially well supplied with blood, must be additionally grilled.
[[File:Kosher salt.jpg|thumb|Coarse uniodized salt which is used for kashering (making kosher) meat is known as "kosher salt" in American English.]]
The prohibition also applies to that little red spot you may occasionally find inside an egg. It's It’s usually a &nbsp;tiny blood clot, which may result from a &nbsp;small rupture of a &nbsp;blood vessel in the hen's hen’s oviduct. And if it's it’s blood, then it's it’s unkosher. That's That’s why each egg must be cracked into a &nbsp;glass and checked for such clots before use. If a &nbsp;blood spot is found, it must be removed (some Jews discard the entire egg). Okay, but what about a &nbsp;boiled egg? You can't can’t see the blood spot when the white is already thickened, so it would seem that a &nbsp;boiled egg can't can’t be kosher. But here's here’s a &nbsp;surprise: if you can't can’t see it, then it's it’s fine, so soft or hard-boiled eggs are good to eat. Of course, if you do find a &nbsp;blood spot inside a &nbsp;boiled egg, then you have to remove it (or even throw away the whole egg).
Knowing what you already know about kosher cookery, you may be surprised to know that there is such a &nbsp;thing as a &nbsp;Jewish ''kishke''. Especially, if you know what its ancestor, the Polish ''kiszka'', is: a &nbsp;thick sausage made of pork offal mixed with buckwheat and pork blood, and stuffed into a &nbsp;pork intestine (''"kiszka"'' literally means "bowel" in Polish). You'd You’d be hard pressed to find anything less kosher than that! And yet, Polish Jews have been able to invent their own kosher version of this delicacy. They've They’ve done this by replacing the blood with goose fat, the buckwheat with flour, seasoning the mixture generously with onions and packing it all inside a &nbsp;beef intestine.
=== Ritual Slaughter Controversy ===
Let me return to the question of ritual slaughter, as it's it’s a &nbsp;topic capable of arousing quite strong passions. In Poland (and not only), it's it’s been raised from time to time since before World War 2. Two viewpoints are at loggerheads here: on the one side, the right of the Jews to practice their religion; on the other, the right of animals to a &nbsp;humane death. And also the right of farmers and the meat-processing industry to make loads of money (about 30% of the beef exported from Poland is either kosher or halal; Muslim ritual slaughter is quite similar to the Jewish one). That makes three viewpoints actually. Animal rights advocates maintain that an animal subjected to ritual slaughter without prior stunning may agonize for up to several minutes before it finally dies. What's What’s more, in some Jewish butcheries, animals are turned upside down before they are killed; while it makes the death quicker, it also increases the level of stress prior to death. On the other hand, for meat to be kosher, the slaughtered animal must be in good health (no major injuries and no defects in internal organs; lungs are particularly closely examined after the slaughter) and conscious. And this rules out stunning.
[[File:Noże do szechity.jpg|thumb|A set of knives for ritual slaughter, coming in various sizes: for poultry, for sheep and goats, and for cattle.<br>{{small|Polin Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw}}]]
Ritual slaughter advocates respond that the requirement for the animal to be healthy and uninjured makes it necessary to treat it humanely on the farm, in transport and at the abattoir. They also claim that a &nbsp;creature slaughtered by an appropriately trained ritual butcher dies in a &nbsp;matter of seconds and practically without pain (keep in mind, though, that this said by people who subject their own newborn sons to genital mutilation without anaesthesia). Ritual slaughter, the argument goes, is at least as humane as slaughter with prior stunning (which may be painful in and of itself), to say nothing of such practices as hunting or carrying live carp in a &nbsp;plastic bag without water (which are legal and common in Poland). The debate is complicated by the fact that any attempts at limiting the practice of ritual slaughter are met with knee-jerk accusations of anti-Semitism (before World War 2, this was indeed one of the ways to deliberately annoy the Jews).
The most recent rounds of the conflict around ritual slaughter in Poland took place within the 21st century. According to the Polish Animal Welfare Act of 1997, "a vertebrate animal may be slaughtered in an abattoir only after prior deprivation of consciousness".<ref>''Ustawa z&nbsp;dnia 21 sierpnia 1997&nbsp;r. o&nbsp;ochronie zwierząt'' [Animal Welfare Act of 21 August 1997] ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU19971110724/U/D19970724Lj.pdf Dz.U. 1997 Nr 111 poz. 724]), article 34, point 1</ref> The same law originally contained a &nbsp;special provision, excepting those animals which were subjected to "specific methods of slaughter prescribed by religious rites".<ref>''Ustawa z&nbsp;dnia 21 sierpnia 1997&nbsp;r. o&nbsp;ochronie zwierząt'' [Animal Welfare Act of 21 August 1997] ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU19971110724/O/D19970724.pdf Dz.U. 1997 Nr 111 poz. 724]), article 34, point 5 (nullified)</ref> This exemption, however, was cancelled by parliament in 2002,<ref>''Ustawa z&nbsp;dnia 6 czerwca 2002&nbsp;r. o&nbsp;zmianie ustawy o&nbsp;ochronie zwierząt'' [Animal Welfare Amendment Act of 6 June 2002] ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU20021351141/O/D20021141.pdf Dz.U. 2002 nr 135 poz. 1141]), article 1, point 27 (b)</ref> ostensibly to bring Polish legislation in line with European Union law (even though the EU allows individual member states to make their own rules regarding ritual slaughter). Two years later, in an attempt to save lucrative Polish kosher and halal meat exports, the agriculture minister issued an ordinance which brought the exemption back,<ref>''Rozporządzenie Ministra Rolnictwa i&nbsp;Rozwoju Wsi z&nbsp;dnia 9 września 2004&nbsp;r. w&nbsp;sprawie kwalifikacji osób uprawnionych do zawodowego uboju oraz warunków i&nbsp;metod uboju i&nbsp;uśmiercania zwierząt'' [Ordinance of the Minister of Agriculture and Rural Development of 9 September 2004 on the qualifications of persons authorised to conduct professional animal slaughter and on conditions and methods of killing animals] ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU20042052102/O/D20042102.pdf Dz.U. 2004 nr 205 poz. 2102]), paragraph 8, point 2</ref> but in 2012, the Constitutional Tribunal struck it down. This prompted foreign Jewish press to raise an alarm: a &nbsp;Polish court has ruled ritual slaughter unconstitutional! Mr. Michael Schudrich, Chief Rabbi of Poland, himself a &nbsp;vegetarian, expressed a &nbsp;more nuanced view, saying there's there’s no point fighting over which way of killing is better.<ref>Michael Schudrich, quoted in: {{Cyt
| tytuł = Krytyka Polityczna
| nazwisko r = Pacewicz
| adres rozdziału = https://krytykapolityczna.pl/kraj/schudrich-nie-licytujmy-sie-jaki-sposob-zabijania-jest-najlepszy/
| data = 18 July 2013
}}</ref> In reality, the Tribunal's Tribunal’s ruling was only based on procedural grounds: a &nbsp;ministerial ordinance must not contradict an act of parliament.<ref>''Wyrok Trybunału Konstytucyjnego z&nbsp;dnia 27 listopada 2012&nbsp;r.'' [Constitutional Tribunal Ruling of 27 November 2012], file no. U&nbsp;4/12 ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU20120001365/O/D20121365.pdf Dz.U. 2012 poz. 1365])</ref> A &nbsp;new act of parliament would have been enough to legalize ritual slaughter again, but a &nbsp;bill to that effect was voted down in parliament in 2013. Eventually, the case was brought back before the Constitutional Tribunal in 2014; this time around, the Tribunal analysed the Animal Welfare Act itself and ruled that a &nbsp;complete ban on ritual slaughter was incompatible with constitutional guarantees of religious freedom.<ref>''Wyrok Trybunału Konstytucyjnego z&nbsp;dnia 10 grudnia 2014&nbsp;r.'' [Constitutional Tribunal Ruling of 10 December 2014], file no. K 52/13 ([https://isap.sejm.gov.pl/isap.nsf/download.xsp/WDU20140001794/O/D20141794.pdf Dz.U. 2014 poz. 1794])</ref> Polish Jews breathed a &nbsp;sigh of relief and Polish meat lobby probably breathed an even bigger one. In 2020, Chairman Jarosław Kaczyński tried once more to limit the scale of ritual slaughter, so that it would be only legal when performed for the needs of local (and rather small) Jewish and Muslim communities, but not for export.<ref>''Poselski projekt ustawy o&nbsp;zmianie ustawy o&nbsp;ochronie zwierząt oraz niektórych innych ustaw'' [Animal Welfare Amendment Bill] ([http://orka.sejm.gov.pl/opinie9.nsf/nazwa/378_u/$file/378_u.pdf Druk nr 597]), article 34, point 13 (a)</ref> But even Poland's Poland’s virtual dictator was defeated by Poland's Poland’s Big Meat in the end.
=== Adipose Tissue and the Sciatic Nerve ===
The blood prohibition applies to all land animals (fish blood is kosher, which doesn't doesn’t mean Jews drink it by the glassful). However, when it comes to farm mammals (cattle, sheep and goats), there are still some more limitations. Firstly, eating their suet, or fat covering certain internal organs, is forbidden. Just like blood, it used to be reserved for the sacrifices offered in the Temple. Jews believed that God found the stench of burning animal fat particularly pleasant.
{{ Cytat
The above passage is only about bovine suet, but sheep and goat fat is covered by similar regulations.
And then there's there’s probably the weirdest prohibition of them all: Jews are not allowed to eat a &nbsp;string that goes down all along the thigh and if it's it’s damaged, then you can't can’t move your hind limb. This commandment is linked to a &nbsp;Biblical story about an injury suffered by Jacob Israel while sparring with some mysterious figure when there was no one else around (kind of like Brad Pitt's Pitt’s character in ''Fight Club''). The key word in the passage below has been translated as "sinew", but what it's it’s really about is the sciatic nerve.
{{ Cytat
}}
This legend was obviously composed in ancient times for the purpose of explaining an even older and already obscure taboo. What was the original rationale for not eating the sciatic nerve? Nobody knows. What is known is that removing the nerve along with the fat, which tends to grow into the muscle tissue especially in the hind half of the animal, is possible, if done by a &nbsp;skilled butcher, but it's it’s time-consuming and unprofitable on a &nbsp;larger scale. Which is why Jews, traditionally, eat meat solely from the front half of the animal. Their Gentile neighbours have been taking advantage of this tradition for centuries, buying the appetizingly marbled hind meat from Jewish butchers at half price, as related by one 19th-century Polish cookbook writer:
{{Cytat
}}, own translation }}
Bird fat is kosher, which is why well-fattened geese have been so important in traditional Jewish cuisine. Schmaltz, or rendered goose fat, has long been the primary Jewish substitute for pork lard and beef suet, especially that Jews are not allowed to fry their meat in butter (I will explain in a &nbsp;moment). Hence, geese were generally seen as a &nbsp;typically Jewish kind of poultry. Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition! Yet anyone who got caught eating goose meat in 17th-century Spain may have expected the Spanish Inquisition to charge them with the crime of secretly being a &nbsp;Jew.
== Meat and Dairy ==
}}
Note that the word "kid" in the English translation is used in its original sense of "young goat". Of course, one shouldn't shouldn’t take this literally anyway. It's It’s not just about young goats, but any kind of meat in general (including poultry). And it isn't isn’t just about the animal's animal’s own mother's mother’s milk, but any sort of milk. And not just seething (boiling), but any method of food preparation. Just in case, one should never eat any kind of meat together with any kind of dairy products. What do they mean by "together", though? Certainly not as part of the same meal. But what if a &nbsp;piece of meat is stuck between someone teeth after the meal? You never know, so just in case, you must wait six hours after eating meat before you can have anything dairy. And if you'd you’d been having cheese, then you have to wait six hours until you can enjoy meat again.
[[File:Mięsne, mleczne, neutralne.png|400px|right|]]
Before eating or drinking anything, a &nbsp;Jew must first establish which of the following three categories of food that thing belongs to: meat, dairy or neutral. Neutral foods are those that you can eat together with either meat or dairy (but not with both at the same time, obviously). These include all plant-based products (including honey), as well is inorganic aliments, like water and salt. Eggs and fish are neutral as well, although rabbis advise against eating fish together with meat anyway. Bread, as a &nbsp;basic staple, must always be neutral, so kosher bread should never contain milk or butter.
Some rabbis have classified certain animal-based foodstuffs, such as gelatin or rennet, as neutral, although it must have required some impressive mental acrobatics on their part. Gelatin is made from skin and bones, that is, these body parts which are not normally considered fit for human consumption. And the rules of ''kashrut'' are only concerned with food, so they don't don’t apply to anything that's that’s inedible. Same thing with rennet, an enzyme obtained from a calf's &nbsp;calf’s stomach and used in the production of most yellow cheeses. Pure dried rennet doesn't doesn’t resemble meat in any way and no one in their right mind would eat it. So it seems we're we’re good. But on the other hand, gelatin and rennet are added to food, which means they are edible after all. But then, you only add very small amounts, and very small amounts of things unkosher are sometimes permissible when mixed with large amounts of kosher stuff. But on the fourth hand, this rule only applies, if the small amount of the unkosher additive doesn't doesn’t affect the overall characteristics of the whole product; and the whole point of using gelatin or rennet is that we want them to affect the overall characteristics of the whole product… And so on, and so forth. In the end, the more liberal Jews will probably partake of rennet-set cheese or jelly cheesecake (provided, of course, that the rennet or the gelatin comes from kosher animals butchered in a &nbsp;kosher way). Those more strict will rather look for plant-based or microbiological equivalents.
[[File:Koszerna kuchnia.jpg|thumb|left|Example of a kosher kitchen with two sets of everything]]
What's What’s more, meat products should never even touch the dairy ones. Not even indirectly. A &nbsp;vessel that has been "stained" with milk fat can no longer be used for meat – and ''vice versa''. That's That’s why a &nbsp;typical kosher kitchen is really two or even three kitchens rolled into one: separate sets of milk, dairy and neutral dishes, separate sets of utensils, pots, pan, kitchen tools, towels, separate cupboards, worktops, fridges, stoves, microwave ovens, sinks and dishwashers. Preferably with some kind of colour coding, so that nobody ever chops an onion that is meant for a &nbsp;dairy dish on a &nbsp;meat cutting board by mistake.
You can see how important this separation of meat and dairy in Judaism is by how the Jews observe the Feast of Weeks (Shavuot), when they remember how God (through Moses) gave them a &nbsp;new law. According to tradition, all of the law was revealed at once, which means that Jews had to adapt to a &nbsp;completely new way of life overnight. Until then, they had used the same pots for both meat and dairy, just like everyone else. Now they had to kasher their pots (by rinsing with boiling water) and decide whether they would use them for meat or for dairy moving forward. On the first day of the new law they didn't didn’t have any kosher-slaughtered meat yet anyway, so they chose to use all of their old pots as dairy pots and later make new vessels for cooking meat. And so, on the first day, they could only eat dairy, but no meat. In memory of that, Jews celebrate the Feast of Weeks by having their favourite dairy-based dishes, such as ''milchik borscht'' (vegetarian red-beet soup whitened with cream) and ''blintzes'' (crêpes filled with sweetened farmer cheese and sautéed until golden).
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That's That’s all for now, but it's it’s not the end of the topic. Stay tuned for my [[Eat Bread with Joy, Drink Wine with a Merry Heart|next post]], where I will delve into, among other things, which religious commandments gave rise to such Jewish classics as cholent, gefilte fish and matzah balls.
{{ Przypisy }}

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