No, traditional mayonnaise has eggs as an ingredient.
These brands of mayonnaise are vegan:
Dixie Diners Club - Low Fat Mayo
Follow your Heart Natural Foods - Veganaise
Nasoya - Nayonaise
Spectrum Organics - Light Canola Mayo
For vegan mayonnaise recipes, click on the related links below -
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.
Mayonaise, which is made from egg yolk, oil, and either lemon juice or vinegar, is classified as 'pareve'. Pareve foods contain neither meat or dairy and can be combined with either. So yes, combining mayo with meat is perfectly fine according to the laws of kashrut (Jewish dietary laws).
== == * The ingredients would stay the same, but the kosher mayonnaise would have been produced in a kosher factory under rabbinical supervision. As in, the rabbi visits every so often to make sure that no treif or "unkosher" ingredients are being used in the factory or that no milk or meat products were sharing the same utensils (Jews aren't allowed to EVER mix milk and meat, in addition to not eating shellfish, birds of prey, etc.) Kosher food is not blessed, it's just supervised by knowledgeable authority figures. * Kosher foods are foods that conform to the rules of the Jewish religion (kashrut, Jewish dietary laws.) Example: Slaughtered animals under 'Kashrut' are by Jewish dietary laws. Non-kosher include ingredient derived from non-kosher animals or from kosher animals that were not properly slaughtered. This applies to other foods in the Jewish dietary laws.
No, mayonnaise is a condiment.
No, mayonnaise is not a gas. Mayonnaise is a semi-solid or thick liquid.
It depends on the mayonnaise. You can even get egg-free mayonnaise which is equivalent to an infinite amount of mayonnaise for each egg.
mayonnaise
Mayonnaise is a noun.
Possibly...
Usually they are about the same.
No. There are hair products that that use the word "mayonnaise" in them but it is not the mayonnaise you eat.
It is kosher so long as it is certified kosher.