Actions

  Print Article
  BookMark Article

Categories    Category List

  Advice
Arts
Business
Cars And Trucks
Computers
Cooking
Current Affairs
Education
Entertainment
Finances
Gardening
Healthy Living
Holidays
Home
Internet
  Legal
Medical
Men Only
Motorcyles
Outdoors
Pets And Animals
Relationships
Religion
Self Improvement
Society
Software
Sports
Staying Fit
Technology
Travel
Web Design
Weddings
Women Only
Writing

Online Now    Online Now

Guests Online (4)

Googlebot/2.1 (2)

Author Login    Author Login

Welcome Guest! Please login or create an account.

Username:

Password:



If you do not have an account yet, you can register ( Here ), or you may retrieve a lost user/pass ( Here ).

Sponsors    Our Sponsors

Navigation    Navigation

Author Highlights    Featured Author

Jose L
Renton

"Jose L Riesco worked at Microsoft for 18 years. He owned an Italian restaurant in Bellevue,..."

View My Bio & Articles


Sal Bonavita
Adelaide

View My Bio & Articles


Lydia Hernandez
San Antonio

"Lydia is a Licensed Massage Therapist and Neuromuscular Therapist in San Antonio, Texas...."

View My Bio & Articles


Kosher Food: Key To Jewish Faith And Culture

Author : Lanbo Jiang

Submitted : 2012-02-06    Word Count : 4    Popularity:   Not Rated

Tags:   kosher food, Jewish food, tips for kosher food,

Author RSS Feed   Author RSS Feed

Along with holidays and music, kosher food represents a key to Jewish faith and culture. Like the food practices of Hindus and Muslims, kosher food for Jews stems from their religious beliefs. "Keeping kosher" is not merely a cultural food practice; it is a way of life that symbolizes the Jews' devotion to God.

Virtually any large European and American city has kosher food stores. These stores can be specific such as butcher stores and fish markets, or they can be all encompassing, including kosher grocery stores and delicatessens offering take-out food.

Religious Jewish women, who do most of the cooking for their families, know that shopping for kosher food means more than buying foodstuffs in certain markets. It also means checking all the foods for a sign known as a rabbinic seal. This mark indicates that the food has been prepared under the supervision of a rabbi. The rabbi will have inspected the food, but also the workers, their equipment and their methods of preparation to ensure that everything has followed all the religious laws of Kosher. Each country has a rabbinic association that supervises Kashrut, or the certification of foods as having followed the Jewish laws.

Many degrees of Kashrut are also available, since Jews have different theological schools and religious traditions. As a result kosher food shops usually offer a great variety of products, and sometimes even the same product in different packages at varied prices, with only the kosher stamp different.

For those who aren't practicing Jews, the matter of food can be confused by the expression "kosher style." Those who don't adhere as strictly to the Jewish food laws often eat kosher style food. However, even kosher-style foods must conform to certain basics, such as not including the meat of forbidden animals and not mixing dairy with meat.

Jewish Holy Scripture, the Torah, forbids Jews from eating non-kosher food. Special attention is given to kosher meat, which can come only from certain animals and prepared only in a certain way called the "shechitah keshera." The shochet, or Jewish butcher, is a key person in the community's ability to keep kosher. (Remember Lazar Wolf, the butcher, from the musical "Fiddler on the Roof"?). According to Torah law, any Jew can perform a butcher's tasks according to the prescribed ritual. In reality, however, the custom has become that only a man who has been approved by a supervising rabbi is considered a kosher butcher. What's more, a kosher meat shop is only kosher if the butcher is an observant Jew. Non-Jews, also known as Gentiles, cannot qualify as kosher butchers.

These laws are specified in great detail in the Torah and subsequently were interpreted by rabbis down through the centuries. Many religious historians think the Kashrut laws were handed down out of necessity in a time when food was uncertain and preservation almost non-existent. However, the practical necessities of "keeping kosher" also have a strong basis in the religious belief that since God wants good health for people, eating properly represents a spiritual discipline as much as a health practice.

Author's Resource Box

Michelle is an accomplished season article writer with regards to home cooking. The lady actually loves sharing her good ideas and tips about making slow cooker recipes or possibly pot roast crock pot recipes.

Article Source:
My Article Dashboard

 

  Report Article
Badly Written Offensive Content Spam
Bad Author Links Mis-spellings Bad Formatting
Bad Author Photo Good Article!