Jews have to have separate kitchens in their homes
Answer:Only the very wealthy would have two kitchens. In reality, a Jewish kitchen looks just like anyone else's. We just have two sets of pots and pans, cutlery, cooking utensils, etc.
Jews keep milk and meat separate because the Torah says: do not cook a kid (baby goat) in its mother's milk.
So that we don't accidentally break this or appear to break it, we do not combine meat and milk at all.
They do not. As a Rabbi, I've seen hundreds of Jewish homes, and none had more than one kitchen. Rather, we have two sets of dishes and utensils (for meat and dairy), plus separate ones for Passover. Two sinks are preferable, but not strictly required.
Because they dont like to mix their dairy and meat products together. :)
most dont but some do just to be extra sure that milk dairy and meat are not mixed
No.
Jewish people do not have separate kitchens for meat and milk - who could afford that? At most, they use different kitchen equipment for meat and milk, such as knives and chopping boards, and they wash the dishes separately. I'm not Jewish but I think they might keep a third set for other foods, or just use the 'milk' set for other foods - all that really matters is that the meat and milk foods do not mix, it doesn't matter about other foods. Answer: Some Jewish people do actually have two kitchens, but only those who can afford it. There are three categories when it comes to food: milk, meat, and pareve (neutral). Kosher kitchens will in fact have utensils that are specifically pareve items for preparing food that is to be kept strictly pareve. Usually though, you'll only find that in commercial kitchens. In the home, you normally just use the utensils suitable for what the item will be eaten with. In other words, if the meal is going to contain meat, you would use the meat equipment.
Meat and dairy.
Jewish people spend money on the same things non-Jewish people do: food, cars, ipads, houses, vacations, etc.
Houses or apartments, like everyone else.
In the suburbs and the country people live in houses made of stucco. The houses are different shapes and sizes but most of them have a front yard with a gate. Inside is a foyer to change shoes. German houses have kitchens, dining rooms, living rooms, bedrooms, and bathrooms.
Jewish spouses are normally buried next to each other in separate graves.
soup kitchens
To hold Jewish people separate from the rest of the population for work, experimentation, and extermination.
yes
Modern suburban houses are usually single storied, as seen from the front. But, also have a cellar underneath. (It's much like an attic, in e.g. houses of the USA.) So, a lot of times double-storied, as seen from the back. The houses have central heating, with double glazed windows. The lounge, for instance, doesn't have overhead lights. But, has lights on the walls. Kitchens are separate rooms. Toilets are in small rooms, much like stalls in public toilets. That's separate to the bath, shower, wash bowl. And so on. Many people in urban areas live in apartments (flats), which come in all kinds of shapes and sizes.
the frequency is hard to determine, but almost all of them were invaded and taken over.