it is labeled as pareve, for meat and milk foods.
It means that the onion rings are pareve and can be eaten with either meat or milk foods, but it is a strange way to word it. It seems at first glance that it is kosher when eating meat and milk.
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It is also redundant - that is what "Parve" means.
ReplyDeleteIs it possible that Parve means it doesn't include fish?.
ReplyDeleteSephardim don't eat fish with milk.
Ashkanazim don't eat fish with meat.
perhaps. I didnt think of that. I would think though that if it was specifically excluding fish it would make it more explicit and actually say no fish included. anyways, who uses fish in the ingredients of frozen onion rings?
DeleteI have been noticing that wording for over thirty years on various (but not too many) Parve products.
ReplyDeleteIt is a somewhat strange way to word it; it almost sounds like it is saying: If you are already eating meat and milk together, you can eat this too! :-)
I think that a better phraseology would be:
כשר למאכלי בשר ולמאכלי חלב
or:
כשר למאכלי בשר או חלב
Catriel Lev
Ramat Bet Shemesh-Alef
or even just "pareve"
DeleteThe impression that I have gotten from seeing this type of phraseology over the years in Israel is that they are trying to use a phrase which is actually Hebrew (the IDF uses "Stami", from the root "Stam" meaning "unspecified"), since Pareve/Parve is Yiddish.
ReplyDeleteSo, if a Hebrew expression is desired I suggested two which would be clearer, I think.
Bivrachah,
Catriel Lev
About thirty years ago, an Israeli Rabbi I know told me that a non-religious woman asked him in a grocery store what FUR (the meaning of the Hebrew word "Parva") has to do with Kashrut, and he had to explain to her that it was actually the Yiddish word "Parve" and what it means.
ReplyDeleteMaybe a Hebrew expression as suggested above would avoid at least that small bit of confusion!
Bivrachah,
Catriel Lev, RBS-Alef