More People Choosing Kosher for Health

Is kosher food healthier food?Librado Romero/The New York Times Is kosher food safer and healthier food?

An ancient diet has become one of the hottest new food trends.

A growing number of supermarket shoppers are going kosher — not for religious reasons, but because they are convinced the foods are safer and better for health.

Kosher foods, which must meet a number of dietary and processing rules to comply with traditional Jewish law, are the fastest growing ethnic cuisine, reports the market research firm Mintel. Sales of kosher foods reached $12.5 billion in 2008, an increase of 64 percent since 2003.

Reflecting the growing interest, Manischewitz, a major kosher food company, held a kosher cook off last month in Manhattan. It featured five chefs from around the country who prepared dishes with the most traditional of kosher-recipe ingredients: chicken broth.

Four of the chefs do not keep kosher but look for certain kosher products in the supermarket. One of those is Julie DeMatteo, a 68-year-old grandmother from Clementon, N.J., who is not Jewish but regularly shops for kosher foods. She believes they are more closely monitored during their processing and “more consistent in taste,” she said.

According to the market research survey, 62 percent of people who buy kosher foods do so for quality reasons, while 51 percent say they buy kosher for its “general healthfulness.” About one-third say they buy kosher because they think food safety standards are better than with traditional supermarket foods. Only 15 percent of respondents say they buy kosher food because of religious rules.

“We see consumers looking for a convergence of ethics, supervision and quality to general health and wellness,” said David Yale, chief executive of Manischewitz.

Joe Regenstein, a professor of food science at Cornell University who specializes in kosher laws, notes that kosher food restrictions were created for religious reasons, not to produce healthier or safer food. Although some of the kosher laws related to ingredients and preparation may have potential health advantages, there’s no evidence to show that kosher food products are healthier or safer than those from traditional food companies, he said.

But the strict rules for producing and certifying kosher food products may result in closer scrutiny of food safety issues. For instance, independent organizations such as the Orthodox Union are paid by food companies to send trained personnel to factories to ensure that all of the restrictions of kosher laws are met. The extra monitoring typically means that kosher products are produced more slowly than other foods.

In general, kosher food has to be carefully watched throughout its processing and preparation. Grains, packaged vegetables, fruits and similar products are thoroughly inspected for any trace of non-kosher substances like insects. Because kosher laws prohibit the mixing of meat and dairy, all kosher dairy products are processed separately from any meat product. No shellfish is allowed, and all fish, like anything that is kosher, must be processed with utensils that have not been in contact with anything non-kosher.

“The extra eyes and slower speeds probably allow the government inspectors to do a better job,” Dr. Regenstein said. “The fact that a kosher company is meeting a lot of rules and subjected to random inspections is something of real value. Although most consumers don’t really understand it in that detail.”

Certifying a meat as kosher is even more complicated. First, only certain animals are allowed to be eaten: no pigs, rodents or birds of prey, for example. Additionally, every cow, chicken or other animal that is certified as kosher has to be killed and butchered in a particular way.

During this process, called “shechting,” each animal is killed quickly by a trained individual. Some believe this form of butchering is more humane and less painful than traditional slaughterhouse practices. Every butchered animal is closely inspected for signs of disease, and any animal that may have been sick is not used.

Certain non-kosher animal parts, like the tail, the sciatic nerve and some fats generally found in the hindquarters, are separated and sold to non-kosher meat-processing companies. And because all kosher meats are thoroughly salted, they may be less likely to carry E. coli and salmonella, experts say, though no studies have been done to confirm this speculation.

A kosher symbol on a food can also be particularly helpful for those with strict dietary requirements or allergies to a certain food. Kosher foods are a good option for consumers with allergies to shellfish, for example. A vegetarian can buy a kosher product labeled “pareve” and be certain that it contains no trace of milk or meat. Muslims and Seventh Day Adventists, who also follow strict diets, also are regular buyers of kosher foods.

Ultimately, the best part of buying kosher products is that it may help you know what is — and more importantly, what’s not — in your food.

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The sentence beginning with “some believe this form of butchering is more humane and less painful” reminds me of sentences beginning with “they say”. Who says? Shechting is cruel. Cattle are slashed in the throat while raised by their hind legs and fully conscious. The wound often closes from gravity, reviving the animal. Absolutely horrible, which is why this form of slaughter is not permitted in Norway. Normally, animals are shot in the brain with a rubber bullet, which renders them unconscious before slaughtering. Is there really a valid comparison here – death while conscious or unconscious? Why not buy organic meat instead? These animals are raised under optimal conditions, fed vegetable fodder and slaughtered in the most humane way. And the meat is not thoroughly salted either, which can’t be healthy for anyone.

How does Kosher rate cruelty-wise?

Jews eat kosher to obey dietary laws. The laws were not a response by man to unhealthy foods, such as spoiled pork. If you are an observant Jew, you follow the law. (I stand to be corrected, I’m no expert) The article is full of nods and winks suggesting that eating kosher is more healthy. Is there not a strong feeling that stories like this one only add to food mythology and shed absolutely no light onto the subject?

I agree with #1, this piece has be carefully worsmithed to make sure there’s pausible deniabilty while making the largest possible claim.

The Healthy Librarian April 13, 2010 · 4:30 pm

As I always understood it–the highest goal in keeping Kosher would be to eat a vegetarian diet. When that isn’t possible–the concession is for strict guidelines for animal health & slaughter.

“The core of kashrut is the idea of limiting oneself, that not everything that we can consume should be consumed.”

And the newest Kosher food movement is concerned with encouraging humane, ethical, sustainable & non-toxic farming practices.

For the Kosher vegetarians/vegans out there who would like a “Sausage Pizza”–here’s a recipe for you:

“My Scrumptious Vegan Kosher Real Food Sausage Basil “Cheese” Pizza”

//www.happyhealthylonglife.com/happy_healthy_long_life/2009/02/vegan-pizza.html

Kosher slaughter, known as “shechita” is, arguably, more humane than non-kosher slaughter.

Kosher slaughter, shechita, involves cutting the trachea and esophagus with a sharp, flawless knife. At the same time, the carotid arteries, which are the primary supplier of blood to the brain, are severed. The profound loss of blood and the massive drop in blood pressure render the animal insensate almost immediately. Studies done by Dr. H. H. Dukes at the Cornell University School of Veterinary Medicine indicate that the animal is unconscious within seconds of the incision.

It should be kept in mind that in a non-kosher plant, when the animal is killed by a shot with a captive bolt to the brain, it often has to be re-shot, sometimes up to six times, before the animal collapses. The USDA permits up to a five percent initial failure rate.

“Normally, animals are shot in the brain with a rubber bullet, which renders them unconscious before slaughtering.”

Normally? Sure, those animals are ALWAYS killed like that, a rubber bullet to the brain! These animals are ALWAYS unconscious! Guess what- those animals are regularly subject to excruciating pain.

I love your naive outlook on life. Tell me how you do it. I bet you get great sleep at night.

Actually, Melody, if the wound re-closes, the animal is not considered kosher. A lot more attention is paid to making sure that the animal is killed with one wound (for instance, the knife is inspected for nicks between each animal), unlike the shooting method, which usually takes at least five shots to actually render the animal unconscious.

Marge: It depends entirely on the animal and the country where the animal is being slaughtered. Animal behaviorists have said that ritual slaughter (both kosher and hallal) has the potential to be the most humane form of slaughter (upright pens are preferable to inverted pens, or, G-d forbid, the raise and shackle method). In practice, kosher slaughter tends to be more humane for smaller animals, like poultry or mutton, than for larger animals, such as beef. Kosher slaughter in the US is more humane (and labor-friendly) than kosher slaughter in Latin America.

Of course, none of this addresses issues of how the animals are fed and housed while they are alive, and both kosher and non-kosher slaughterhouses usually get their meat from the same farms.

There is a movement back towards small-farm raising and slaughtering of kosher animals. You may want to check out https://www.kolfoods.com/ for an example.

#1 If you seriously care about animal suffering, why buy meat at all?

Organic meat is not raised under “optimal conditions,” the animals are raised under organic conditions. It is a statement about human wellbeing and means nothing for the animals. Also, I was unaware that organic certification for meat conveyed anything about humane slaughter conditions.

There is one way to ensure that your dietary choices don’t contribute to unnecessary animal suffering. Hint: it has nothing to do with organic farming.

Sorry, but the enhancements provided by its “benefits” are so debatable that it almost sound like an advertisement, but for what?

“All kosher meats are thoroughly salted”???? Says who??

Melody Favish,

Shackle-and-hoist is not the only method of restraint used in Kosher slaughter. There are also Kosher slaughterhouses that use restraints designed by Temple Grandon, Ph.D., which are much more humane. When done properly, the sudden drop in blood volume from shechting should cause immediate unconsciousness.

Here is more information:
//www.grandin.com/ritual/rec.ritual.slaughter.html

In case you missed it, the print version of the NYT published a different article on the same topic this past January: //www.nytimes.com/2010/01/13/dining/13kosh.html

Any special reason this came up again?

Beyond the kosher community that consumes such foods for religious purposes, kosher is just another term incorrectly used for marketing purposes.

There is this ridiculous myth that rabbis bless kosher foods when in production and that this food is somehow cleaner. Both FALSE.

I associate kosher with less cleanliness.

For some reason the kosher restaurants I have come across n NYC tend to be sloppy and often dirty.

I should also note that a kosher label tells you almost nothing about how an animal was raised or fed. When you see it, all you really know is that the animal was fully conscious when it was slaughtered, and that it was exempted from a host of federal humane slaughter act requirements.

Melody,

You neglected to inform us why a bullet to the brain is more humane that slicing both carotids, which in effect will reduce the blood supply to the brain to nearly zero.

The brain is the most oxygen greedy organ in the body ( in humans at least, and i can’t think of any reason why cows are different). A tiny drop in O2 can result in loss of consciousness.

A bullet to the brain may severely injure or kill the cow, but it doesnt disrupt the blood supply to all areas of the brain like Shechita does. And don’t you think they feel a rubber bullet to the head?? That sounds a lot more painful than a knife so sharp you won’t feel the blade before you;re unconscious.

I have no idea what you mean about wounds closing from gravity. if the artery is severed, the blood will spill out , plain and simple.

“Humane Slaughter”? that’s a funny phrase, and its also funny how you think that your preferred method of ending an animal’s life so you can eat it is more humane than someone else’s method

The article specifically mentioned that salting is done to reduce the prevalence of certain organisms, but you don’t approve of this becaus you think salting it will give you hypertension. I think they wash the salt out after the process is over, so you can stop worrying.

Like the article says, kosher meat has a well deserved reputation of being of very high quality. I think your priorities are misplaced. You seem to be worrying more about the cow’s pain and suffering than you do about possible pathogens being passed to humans via contaminated meat.

At the time the laws regarding the slaughter of animals were developed, perhaps the method was more humane than the methods more commonly in use, but that is not the case now. If kindness were the true criterion, the rules would be revised accordingly. Don’t hold your breath waiting for this to happen. The rabbis who would make such a decision will act about when the Catholic church will take responsibility for the sexual abuse of the children in its care. Such are the morals of the “religious.”

This is an interesting post, but I think it’s important to sort out what kosher food is and is not. As someone who does keep kosher, I regularly buy food that isn’t specifically targeted to the kosher-keeping community. Many “every day” products are kosher, and those buying them may well be unaware of it.

Also, to be clear for vegetarians: the post states “A strict vegetarian can buy a kosher product labeled ‘pareve’ and be certain that it contains no trace of milk or meat.” However, pareve foods may contain fish, which kosher laws do not consider to be either meat or dairy, even though many vegetarians consider fish to be meat.

My father-in-law was a butcher in the meatpacking district in NYC for decades. He warned us time and again not to buy kosher meats because of the terrible sanitary conditions in the slaughter houses and packaging plants. Has this situation improved?

Why not simply avoid eating meat altogether?

I dont know much about kosher foods. However, I was findings “clumps” in my Dannon Yogurt for the last 2 weeks which I had not experienced before. On enquiry, I was told that they added something extra for kosher/passover and they do this each year during the holidays.
It was a mess. Even after transferring the yogurt into a blender and blast it at high speed, the clumps were still there.

“kosher food restrictions were created for religious reasons, not to produce healthier or safer food.”

Really? When I was a kid, people still died from triconosis, a disease found in pork. Shell fish is often contaminated and can give you hepatitis. Mad cow disease is spread thru the spinal cord and brain.

Using knifes that have not touched non kosher meat helps avoid contamination. Salted meats do not go bad as quickly.

Sounds like a lot of these rules are pretty healthy to this goy!

To each is own, but keep in mind that up until it’s closing, 60% of the kosher beef in the U.S. was produced by AgriProcessors, the rogue meat packer who employed illegal aliens, some underage; underpaid them; made them work long hours; and maintained a filthy plant, based on the PETA film that also showed the barbaric method of kosher slaughter. I remain to be convinced about the sanitation of kosher food processing operations of all kinds, and would never by anything so marked.

FROM KAREN BARROW – The AgriProcessors story is terrible, and it reflects the corners that some meat-processing plants – both kosher and non-kosher – are willing to cut. This story is about more than just kosher slaughterhouses, however. Vegans and vegetarians can also benefit from kosher labeling.

After the 2008 scandal at Agriprocessors – the world’s largest glatt kosher slaughterhouse – it should be clear that the psychological “halo” around kosher meat is irrational. This enormous kosher slaughterhouse was proved to be shocking and mutilating fully conscious animals, as well as killing them in a way that has allowed many to stand and attempt to flee, even minutes after their throats had been slit. The way that kosher meat is produced is often more cruel than the already horrendous practices at ordinary factory farms.

Dr. Temple Grandin, a well known scientist who studies animal behavior, has also studied kosher slaughter. Kosher slaughter is not always “humane” (neither is conventional slaughter). She has suggestions on her website about how to minimize pain for the animals during the Kosher slaughter practice here.
//www.grandin.com/