Once again, someone is pulling your chain, and you fell for it. First of all, hell is not
even a Jewish concept. And neither is the idea that you better watch what you do
in this life or else you'll suffer for it later. The most tragic consequence guaranteed
to the Jew who knows what Judaism expects of him and willfully decides that he
wants no part of it is this: He forfeits the opportunity to enjoy the spiritual benefits
of the life lived Jewishly, both in this life and in the "world to come". And in Judaism,
that's saying a lot.
Jews are only able to eat kosher food because it is against their religion to eat non kosher food.
Jews who eat kosher will not eat snails since snails are not kosher. However, not all Jews eat according to the laws of kashrut, so some Jews do eat snails.
Religious Jews eat only kosher foods. Gluten is an ingredient in food.
Orthodox Jews are only allowed to eat kosher foods.
Anything that's kosher.
Yes, but Ashkenazi Jews are stricter than Sephardi Jews.
The food has to be kosher.
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.
Religiously observant Jews will only eat kosher food.
When it comes to meats, Kosher is not synonymous with Halal, so no, we cannot eat Kosher Gelatin. Gelatin is considered kosher by many Jews regardless of its source of origin. For Muslims, if gelatin is prepared from swine or cows that are not dhabeeha, it is haraam.
The Torah states that Jews should eat kosher food.
Religiously observant Jews will only eat foods that are kosher.