Michael,

I first want to apologize for my ignorance so that I can ask the second 
part.  What makes food kosher? and what is it's meaning in Judaism?  I 
know that's not a question that can be easily answered, but the down and 
dirty would be fine.  It's one of those things that I have always heard 
of, but never asked anyone what it means.  

Michael Corrigan
Programmer
Endora Digital Solutions
1900 Highland Avenue, Suite 200
Lombard, IL 60148
630-627-5055 ext.-136
630/627-5255 Fax
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Michael Dinowitz 
  To: CF-Community 
  Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2002 3:31 PM
  Subject: Re: McKosher's?


  I've actually read 3 different articles on this and it came off to me 
as 
  a compromise and/or suggestion than a forced issue. The issue was that 

  they didn't want to have both non-Kosher and Kosher stores of the same 

  name in the city. If all the McDonalds in the city were Kosher then 
  there wouldn't be an issue. The suggested name difference was just to 
  have a noticeable difference between the two types. 

  > Michael, I think Howie and I are complaining about the _way_ they 
are
  > trying to 'authenticate' the restaurant - ie, forcing them to change
  > their name. No one disagrees with the need for kosher food, or even 
an
  > official government marking as such. Again, I think it's the name 
  thing
  > that we are having an issue with.
  > 
  > Howie, slap me around if I misspoke for you. ;)
  > 
  > -rc
  > 
  >  
  > > No disrespect, but I don't know any religious Jew who would 
  > > eat at such 
  > > a place. I've never even seen such a place in existence. Lets put 
it 

  > > this way, your trusting your spiritual being to another when you 
eat 

  > > out. Your trusting that they will not feed you food that will 
  > > spiritually pollute you. If you were allergic to fish and there 
was 
  a 
  > > store with a fish counter and a meat counter, would you really 
trust 

  > > them to never mix the two? To never have fish dishes mixed 
  > > with the meat 
  > > ones? silverware, serving utensils, work area, anything? No 
  religious 
  > > Jew I know would trust it. A meat restaurant is a meat one, a 
  > > milk one 
  > > is a milk one and a non-Kosher one is a non-Kosher one. You 
  > > don't (and 
  > > can't) mix them in any way.
  > > 
  > > 
  > > > I have to agree.  When delis server both Kosher and non-Kosher 
  food 
  > > they plainly label the cases where the Kosher food is, keep it
  > > > separate from the non-Kosher and have separate utensils and 
  slicers 
  > > just for the Kosher food.
  > > > 
  > > > I think a sign saying Kosher and another saying non-Kosher in 
each 

  > > respective restaurant would work.
  > > > 
  > > > Howie
  > > > 
  > > > ----- Original Message -----
  > > > From: "Raymond Camden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  > > > To: "CF-Community" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  > > > Sent: Tuesday, February 19, 2002 3:50 PM
  > > > Subject: RE: McKosher's?
  > > > 
  > > > 
  > > > > While this seems very important - I think it's pretty 
ridiculous 

  > > that
  > > > > they are trying to force them to change their name. As 
  > > you say - a 
  > > name
  > > > > is very important. McDonalds has spent a _lot_ of money for 
one 
  > > purpose
  > > > > - to spread its name. I may be crazy, but  what's wrong 
  > > with simply
  > > > > hanging a sign outside "We are Kosher" or "We are not 
  > > Koasher." Any
  > > > > adult with reasonable intelligence could simply check for 
  > > that sign.
  > > > > McKosher sounds more like a joke then a solution.
  > > > >
  > > > > -rc
  > > > >
  > > > 
  > > 
  > 
  
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