It is considered parve (neutral) and can be eaten with dairy (such as cream cheese and lox). However, some groups do not customarily combine fish with dairy, despite there being no prohibition in the letter of the law.
There is, however, a law against combining fish with meat. The two can be had consecutively.
Yes, fish is considered 'pareve' which means neutral, so it can be combined with dairy. However, some Sephardi groups have the minhag (tradition) of not combining fish and dairy.
According to their website:Kashi* granolas are Kosher Dairy. All other Kashi* cereals are certified Kosher. Kashi*TLC* crackers and Chewy Granola bars are Kosher Dairy.
Kosher D - kosher dairy: Kosher means that a food is "suitable" according to the Jewish religious rules. Dairy means it is treated as dairy product so religious observant Jews won't eat it together with meat.
Whey is a dairy product, made from milk and can be kosher. As this is a processed food product, it would require kosher certification to be considered kosher.
Yes.....but if dairy products are used, it may not be kosher. _______ Chicken is considered meat so it cannot be combined with dairy products when making a kosher dish.
A kosher restaurant is laid out the same way as a non-kosher restaurant. The key difference (aside from being kosher) is that kosher restaurants serve either meat OR dairy, never both.
Provided the granola contains no animal products it is parve - that is, neutral, neither kosher nor treif (not kosher) and as such can be eaten by Jews. _______ The above answer is not clear. Any commercial food item must be certified kosher by a recognised organisation to be considered kosher. If the granola product is certified kosher, it is a kosher product. There are four categories of food according to kashrut: meat, dairy, pareve, and treif. Pareve refers to any food item that does not contain meat or dairy but may contain eggs and/or fish. Treif refers to any food that is not kosher.
OUD means the food is kosher and dairy. This is the designation for the Union of Orthodox Judaism.
Dairy and meat cannot be combined according to the laws of kashrut.
KD means that the food is kosher and either contains dairy or was made on the same equipment used for dairy items.K= KosherD= Dairy
A vegan kosher menu.
No compound that includes a dairy-derived component and a meat-derived component can be kosher.
Yes, if it has kosher ingredients and was prepared with kosher utensils. It should be borne in mind that the laws of kosher food require us to make sure that there are no insects in the lettuce-leaves or similar ingredients. Second, since most Greek salad has feta cheese in it, a salad with dairy cannot be served prior to a meat-containing main course.