For a chicken to be considered kosher, it must be slaughtered by a shochet, a ritual slaughterer. The point of a kosher slaughter is to cause the animal as little trauma as possible. So the chicken has to be cut across the neck in the right spot with an extremely sharp knife. If this process is carried out successfully, the meat of the chicken needs to have its blood drawn out by means of salt. This chicken would be kosher.
Yes, if the chicken is kosher and has been cooked with kosher ingredients in a kosher pot, and with nothing dairy added. "Kosher chicken" is chicken that has been purchased from a kosher butcher and has accordingly been slaughtered following the laws of kashrut.
Chicken is a kosher species, but it needs to be slaughtered and prepared according to halakha (Torah law).
Only if kosher ingredients are used, including the chicken parts, and cooked in and with a pot and utensils only used for kosher meat cooking.
As long as it is Kosher chicken ... check with your butcher. Also it must be cooked in and with a Kosher kitchen/utencils, pans, utencils, etc. with Kosher ingredients.
yes
Yes.
Those Jews who like chicken soup eat chicken soup. Religiously observant Jews would require that the chicken soup be kosher.
There are a few branches of KFC in Israel that are Kosher, however, in general, the rest of the branches in Israel and around the world are not Kosher.
No, unless the chicken itself, and the cooking vessels, are kosher.
I have no idea what fa lays are, but string is kosher.
Yes, Jews can eat chicken. Religiously observant Jews would require that the chicken be kosher.
No.