Yes. Just buy kosher foods.
Yes and no. There are many recipes that can be made kosher with kosher substitutes.
Kosher is the diet of Jews. Jews keep kosher. If you keep kosher you cannot eat: shellfish, pork, or dairy mixed with meat. The main land of Jews is Israel. So technically, the nationality of kosher is Israel.
Yes, basil is kosher.
Orthodox Jews keep a strictly kosher home.
A Jewish kitchen (Known as a Kosher Kitchen) is going to be slightly different from the average kitchen at your home. Most people have one sink, one set of silverware, dishes, utensils, ovens and sponges. Kosher kitchens usually have between two and three sets of the previously listed items.Why? Well, Part of Kosher is that you cannot have meat and milk together. This often includes anything used to prepare (serve, eat, or store) them. That means Bowls, plates, silverware, cooking and baking utensils, ovens, pots and pans, among others. Now that explains two sets, but what about the third? The answer to that is in essence that you can have something that that is neither milk or meat (like pasta). However, if you cook the pasta in a milk or meat pot (or oven), it is considered to be the pot's (or oven's) respective type of food, and cannot be eaten with the other type. Parve is that third type. It is neither milk nor meat, and can therefor be eaten with milk or meat.Kosher kitchens also only have Kosher ingredients in them
Kosher is not a person, so it can't eat anything. But the blood of mammals and birds is not kosher, so people who keep kosher can't eat it.
Kosher refers to food that is prepared according to the laws of kashrut. The people who keep kosher are Jews. Kosher is a classification, not a people. That being said, if the nachos and salsa are certified kosher, religious Jews who keep kosher can eat them.
More and more places are helping religious Jews keep kosher while on vacation. You need to call a Jewish travel agency, request kosher airline food, and stay at a place that keeps kosher.
Jews who keep kosher don't eat fish wihout scales (Deuteronomy ch.14).
There is no community out there with all kosher restaurants and you have to be very sure about if a place is kosher or not. These are just two of the millions of answers I could give you
No they do not. They don't keep kosher. However they do not meet pig meat either.
That depends on whether or not you keep kosher. One of the goals of kashrut, in regard to the slaughter of animals, is to make it as painless as possible for the animal. If you don't keep kosher though, you might want to look into local farms/meat producers that don't work on a mass basis.