Yes. Poultry can be cooked in many ways that are indistinguishable from beef or other kosher meats, therefore to prevent someone from thinking that they are eating chicken with dairy, when actually having beef and dairy chicken is treated as meat.
A kosher restaurant is laid out the same way as a non-kosher restaurant. The key difference (aside from being kosher) is that kosher restaurants serve either meat OR dairy, never both.
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.
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.
A kosher hamburger (beef, chicken, turkey, lamb, etc burger) is a burger that is made from kosher meat. A hamburger is kosher provided the meat used for the burger is from a kosher species of animal and has been raised and slaughtered according to the laws of kashrut (Jewish dietary laws).
The chicken flavored Nissin Cup of Noodles does not contain any actual pieces of chicken. There is not meat or poultry in the soup.
Yes.....but if dairy products are used, it may not be kosher. _______ Chicken is considered meat so it cannot be combined with dairy products when making a kosher dish.
Honey, in kosher law, mixing dairy with meat is a big no-no. Mayonnaise usually contains eggs, which are considered dairy in kosher rules. So, technically speaking, mixing mayonnaise with meat would be breaking kosher law. But hey, you do you, just don't expect Rabbi Goldstein to give you a high-five for it.
No ______ Kosher deli meat still has nitrates.
Fox meat is not kosher. See:More about what is and isn't kosher
Yes, Kosher meat is halal for Muslims to eat
According to the Torah, it is technically allowed. But thousands of years ago the Rabbis made a decree that chicken is considered like meat in all aspects. Therefore, you are not allowed to cook chicken and cheese together. If you do cook them together, it is not kosher and Jews are not allowed to eat it.
A kosher butcher will only sell kosher meat. Regular butchers don't sell kosher meat.