Religiously observant Jews will only eat kosher food.
Orthodox Jews keep a strictly kosher home.
No, it is just an adjective, so in the middle of a sentence, you'd just write kosher in lower case.
Kosher refers to the dietary restrictions of the Jewish faith. Here are some sentences.That meat is not kosher, so I can't eat it.My family ran a kosher restaurant.How do you know if that food is kosher or not?Kosher can also be slang for something legitimate. I don't think that business is quite kosher.
The meat in the kosher butcher-store is under strict rabbinical supervision.
It is kosher so long as it is certified kosher.
Fox meat is not kosher. See:More about what is and isn't kosher
It needs to be cooked in a kosher vessel and have kosher ingredients. If purchased, it (or the bakery) should have kosher-certification.
Yes and no. There are many recipes that can be made kosher with kosher substitutes.
Delicatessen places serve kosher food. And if you are talking about 'deli' food, it is usually kosher. _______ Delis are only kosher if they're kosher certified. Most delis aren't kosher.
Yes! You don't need a kosher cookbook. Just remove the non-kosher ingredients.
They can eat a kosher diet, and be slaughtered the kosher way.
It would be kosher if it came from a kosher animal.