The Bible states thrice: Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother's milk. * Exodus 23:19 * Exodus 34:26 * Deuteronomy 14:21 Once to forbid eating milk and meat together, once to forbid cooking them together and once to forbid benefiting from them being cooked together; you can't even feed it to your animals. Jewish law renders this to mean that any meat (animal & fowl) may not be cooked in any animal milk (cow, goat, etc.). Fish and some grasshoppers are Kosher but not considered as meat. Fish and meat are never eaten together but can can be served at the same meal on separate plates and using separate cutlery. Eggs are not considered as meat and could be used with meat or milk. Milk includes any milk products including milk, butter and cheese. After eating meat, Jews will wait one, 3 or 6 hours before eating milk (depending on their family custom). After eating milk, Jews will rinse their mouth before eating meat. Meat and milk are never served at the same meal. After eating hard cheese Jews will wait one, 3 or 6 hours before eating meat. Meat and milk are not cooked in the same pots and not eaten with the same dishes. A Kosher home will have 2 sets of cooking utensils and 2 sets of dishes, cutlery, tableware and even salt cellars; one for meat and one for milk.
Yes. You wouldn't eat rotten meat or moldy cheese, would you?
Powdered milk is a mixture.Milk is not a compound,as it is not joined together chemically by elements.Powdered milk is just a dried version of milk,so it is a mixture,not a compound.
You can raise cattle, sheep, goats, camels and/or yaks for milk, skin, meat and wool.
Very likely sell the cattle to be slaughtered for meat.
the meat in a "quarter pounder" after it's cooked
The Torah (Pentateuch) forbids "cooking a kid in its mother's milk." According to ancient tradition this means that milk and meat may not be cooked nor eaten together.
No. Islamic dietary is like a kosher diet you cannot eat milk with meat.
meat and milk products
Assuming you are not allergic to either, yes. If you are asking from the perspective of Orthodox Judaism, check out the web link -- not all fish qualify. By the way, Jewish law prohibits eating fish with meat. I would assume it's therefore considered dairy.
This is indeed the case and stems from the Biblical prohibition against boiling a calf in its mother's milk. The amount of time that should be left between consuming meat and dairy varies with different Jewish communities having different traditions. Around six hours if perhaps commonest, but among some communities (such as the Dutch) it is as little as one hour.
Jewish law prohibits eating milk and meat together.
no
yes we can but they have no match(no synchronization) so we can
egg, fish, meat, milk, nut e.t.c.
Yes, there's no prohibition against drinking cow's milk in Judaism. The only time we don't drink milk of any kind is when we are eating meat or within 6 hours of eating meat.
Not together, but consecutively. Genesis ch.18.
There is no medical reason why milk and yogurt (two dairy products) should not be eaten together. However, there may be a religious dietary law that prohibits this - you would need to ask your religious authority about this.