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Every restaurant (fast food or Dine-in) including but not limited to Subway, McDonald's, Burger King, Gardunos, Olive Garden, TGI-Fridays... all use the same slicers, ovens, and sam oil to prepare all foods.
so a kosher meat, lets say beef, is cooked in the same oil that is previously used to cook pork ...which makes the beef non-kosher too. Is there a law that prevents that from happening or should there be a law against this?

2007-09-03 10:30:55 · 7 answers · asked by Farooq 3 in Food & Drink Other - Food & Drink

I am not talking about the food being blessed by a Rabii or a Mula...
Let me try to explain it a little bit more...
Jews & Muslims are not suppose to eat pork, pork products, or pork contaminated products, but they can eat beef, veal, or chicken. Lets say an already 'blessed' beef is cooked in the same oil with pork, that will CONTAMINATE the beef with pork ingredients (trust me, I am not splitting hair) It is the fact. Not all Muslims or Jews abide by that law, but most do.
And finally, for those people who think that it is foolish... it is not. its a belief system that is in the mind of billions of people and please be respectfull when answering my question.
Thank You

2007-09-03 11:54:54 · update #1

7 answers

None of the above named restaurant is kosher or claims to be.

2007-09-03 10:37:01 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Okay, none of those places is Kosher, nor do they claim to be. There are Kosher restaurants and they are advertised as such. Anyone who keeps Kosher would NOT be going to McDonalds or Fridays or Olive Garden. They just don't. If they order pizza, it's from a Kosher pizza place that is accepted in their community. Otherwise, if it wasn't prepared in a known Kosher establishment - including a home kitchen, they don't eat it. IF there were to be a Kosher franchise of any of these places, you'd better believe it would be advertised as such and the dietary laws would be adhered to. Meaning, you won't see cheeseburgers, or veal parm, or mozzarella sticks on a menu that serves chicken or beef, and you can forget about Friday's pulled pork or fried shrimp. Ain't gonna happen!

2007-09-03 17:43:13 · answer #2 · answered by zippythejessi 7 · 0 0

No, it's really not, and that's not even limited to the restaurants. Yoplait yogurt is marked Kosher, when it contains gelatin from animals. Kosher law prohibits mixing meat and milk, but some Rabbi decided it was ok to say that product was Kosher since the gelatin has been processed with chemicals. I, for one, do not buy that at all. There are lots of other things within Kosher law that get "overlooked." You really have to be careful if you are strict about it.

2007-09-03 17:44:06 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No more laws for food insanity or psychosis.
Unless you attend A Jewish resturant
accept it... is not Kosher...
I understand the holy muslims that did the 9/11... hung out in bars and ordrered pizza in ..hala???sure
So stuff that religious nonsense and foolishness.

2007-09-03 17:47:16 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

My son works in a place where they DRY foods. it is first done by taking all ingredients& mixing then added to specific amount of water,then run thru a drying process to make it powdered again. at certain times he has to wait for a Rabii to come & bless the drying pipes,etc. This is supposed to make it Koshered. I would bet,no one could tell the difference if he didn't do it!!!

2007-09-03 17:53:40 · answer #5 · answered by Tired Old Man 7 · 0 1

no.kosher foods have to be blessed buy a rabbi when gettin processed.if its not blessed and processed correctly then it cannot be kosher.

example: its like an all beef kosher hotdog can only be all beef and has to be blessed by a rabbi for it to be kosher.
then you have yourself a kosher hotdog.

2007-09-03 18:34:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Kosher is not a food. it is an opinion or something like that.

2007-09-03 17:41:17 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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