Ox tails CAN be kosher if the animal was slaughtered by a trained butcher called a shocet, using a special method called shechita which severs the jugular vein, the caroroiud artery, esophagus, and trachea in a single continuous cutting movement with an unserrated, sharp knife, avoiding unnecessary pain to the animal.
Then the animals would have to be checked for tumors or disease to make sure it is healthy and then all of the arteries and veins would have to be removed. For this reason, most of the hind quarters in most animals are thrown away (lots of veins and such) but it COULD be kosher.
I might be wrong though, so check with your rabbi first before eating such a thing.
Yes, but it is very hard to find - while generally the hindparts of Kosher animals are not eaten, the specific concern is absent when it comes to the tail region (it has no concern of prohibited fats/tendons, which are why the hindquarters are generally not eaten).
Ox-meat CAN be kosher if the animal was slaughtered by a trained butcher called a shocet, using a special method called shechita which severs the jugular vein, the caroroiud artery, esophagus, and trachea in a single continuous cutting movement with an unserrated, sharp knife, avoiding unnecessary pain to the animal.
Then the animals would have to be checked for tumors or disease to make sure it is healthy and then all of the arteries and veins would have to be removed. For this reason, most of the hind quarters in most animals are thrown away (lots of veins and such) but it COULD be kosher.
yes there is even a restaurant named halal ox
Oxtail is beef.
Yes oxtail can be brown.
Yes oxtail is brown
at the oxtail shop
Oxtail, as in oxtail soup.
There are about 42 calories in 1 oz of oxtail.
Is oxtail soup typically English or has it been adapted from another county?
Brown
Jamaica.
$16
Beef
oxtail soup