Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Jewcat kanz not haz cheezburgah!Elessarina wrote:Good grief - that's just barbaric!statichaos wrote:
Not only are you not supposed to have meat and dairy on the same plate, you are not allowed to have them in the same meal.


Xamonas Chegwé wrote:Jewcat kanz not haz cheezburgah!Elessarina wrote:Good grief - that's just barbaric!statichaos wrote:
Not only are you not supposed to have meat and dairy on the same plate, you are not allowed to have them in the same meal.
Are you an ex-muslim?Blitzkrebs wrote:As far as Sunni Islam goes, shellfish are forbidden only by the Hanafi school of Islamic law (fiqh in Arabic). Malikis, Shafi'is and Hanbalis have no issue with seafood of any kind.BlackDog wrote: In Islam Fish is ok to eat, without halal slaughter, not all types of fish though, I think once with scales are not.
Some say shrimps are ok to eat but crabs or lobsters. Not sure the reasoning of this. Shark and so one are not ok to eat because they are carnivores. Yet in a passage in the Quran you can read all the animals of the sea are ok to eat, that would include sharks, since they eat anything that is already permissible.
Basically it's not even consistent, the rules are arbitrary.
I used to work for a company owned by orthodox Jews, as there were a couple of them in the office. It was a little strange that they wouldn't shake hands with women, and tried to avoid eye contact with the female employees and things like that, but I got used to it. But when we would have potluck lunches we'd have to make sure that we had a few dishes that the guys could eat - the separate meat/dairy dishes, utencils, etc... it was a pain. They were nice folks but still, I could never help thinking how ridiculous it all was.statichaos wrote:My girlfriend (a former ultra-Orthodox Jew who went through a New Age/Occult phase, and has now settled into an agnostic atheism that provides a nice counterpoint to my agnostic theism. She mentioned to me that Muslims near her old neighborhood would occasionally shop at kosher markets since the dietary laws are so similar, but that Orthodox Jews would never shop at halal markets due to the fact that they didn't consider them strict enough.
I'm reasonably familiar with kosher dietary practices through her.
Not only are you not supposed to have meat and dairy on the same plate, you are not allowed to have them in the same meal. Additionally, any plate that has ever been used for meat cannot be used for dairy, and vice versa. The same goes for cooking equipment.
They won't touch women they don't know because menstruating women are considered unclean and they can't know if you're on your period or not. For many Orthodox Jews, it goes beyond just different plates. They will almost always have different cupboards and often different dishwashers for meat and dairy plates. It's insane!Bella Fortuna wrote: I used to work for a company owned by orthodox Jews, as there were a couple of them in the office. It was a little strange that they wouldn't shake hands with women, and tried to avoid eye contact with the female employees and things like that, but I got used to it. But when we would have potluck lunches we'd have to make sure that we had a few dishes that the guys could eat - the separate meat/dairy dishes, utencils, etc... it was a pain. They were nice folks but still, I could never help thinking how ridiculous it all was.(not to mention the distinct lack of yummy piggy!
)
Bella Fortuna wrote:I used to work for a company owned by orthodox Jews, as there were a couple of them in the office. It was a little strange that they wouldn't shake hands with women, and tried to avoid eye contact with the female employees and things like that, but I got used to it. But when we would have potluck lunches we'd have to make sure that we had a few dishes that the guys could eat - the separate meat/dairy dishes, utencils, etc... it was a pain. They were nice folks but still, I could never help thinking how ridiculous it all was.statichaos wrote:My girlfriend (a former ultra-Orthodox Jew who went through a New Age/Occult phase, and has now settled into an agnostic atheism that provides a nice counterpoint to my agnostic theism. She mentioned to me that Muslims near her old neighborhood would occasionally shop at kosher markets since the dietary laws are so similar, but that Orthodox Jews would never shop at halal markets due to the fact that they didn't consider them strict enough.
I'm reasonably familiar with kosher dietary practices through her.
Not only are you not supposed to have meat and dairy on the same plate, you are not allowed to have them in the same meal. Additionally, any plate that has ever been used for meat cannot be used for dairy, and vice versa. The same goes for cooking equipment.(not to mention the distinct lack of yummy piggy!
)
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