T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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300.1 | It's who, not what | ROMNEY::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO3 | Fri Apr 17 1987 17:35 | 14 |
| It is not the vineyard, but who makes the wine that is at issue.
As I understand it, wine that is to be used for Kiddush (i.e. Kosher
wine) must not be made by "idolaters". Since it is not easy to tell
who is and isn't one, the common practice is to allow wine to be
made only by Jews. This conveniently gets around the question. For
this reason, kosher wine must be made by Jews. This is the traditional
opinion. However, I have seen discussions around the idea that wine
made in a monastary could be considered as acceptable, because clearly,
the monks are not idolaters and believe in G-D.
I hope this helps. Anyone out there, please correct me if I got
it a bit wrong. I am not an expert.
Jack
|
300.2 | Basically the same... | GRAMPS::LISS | ESD&P Shrewsbury | Fri Apr 17 1987 17:52 | 39 |
| I wrote this response much earlier in the day but couldn't post it
because our system went "out to lunch". My reply parallels what
Jack said in the previous reply. His question about wine made in
a Christian monastery is the same question that Miamonides dealt
with almost 1000 years ago.
Re .0
For a wine to be kosher the grapes are grown by a Jew, they are
crushed by a Jew, the juice is fermented by a Jew, and finally it
is bottled by a Jew. On top of that the whole process is
supervised by a mashgiach(sp). Since wine is used by idol
worshipers as well, we must be absolutely sure that there was not
even the slightest chance that anyone connected with producing the
wine had thoughts of idol worship while manufacturing the wine.
Miamonides (Moses ben Miamon) whose lesser known writings had to
do with transactions between Jews and non-Jews, declared that
Christians were not idol worshipers. However, this was not
sufficient to remove the ban on non kosher wine.
Feeling run very high about this subject. Many people that I know
take an extra precaution and will not drink Manashewitz(sp) wine.
They appear to go through all the steps but do not watch the
process closely enough to insure that the wine is kosher. The
Union Of Orthodox Rabbis has withdrawn their endorsement on some
of their factories. I've noticed that on some of their products
they no longer have a "U-O". Its been replaced by a K. A "K" by
itself is not owned by any organization and means absolutely
nothing.
My own preference for a Kidush wine is Kedem, Kesser, or Seven
Seventy. These brands are safe and locally available. From my
selections you can tell I'm not a wine mavin. I only drink wine
for Kidush and Passover.
Fred
|
300.3 | Thanks | NONODE::CHERSON | | Sun Apr 19 1987 15:54 | 7 |
| Jack & Fred,
Thanks a lot for the answers, I kind of thought that the "idol
worshipers" clause was what made a wine kosher or not. I can see
that this won't go over too well with Marion.
David
|
300.4 | Must all wine be Kosher? | CURIE::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO3 | Tue Apr 21 1987 14:16 | 15 |
| Fred, perhaps you could help me with a related question (or anyone
else who may know the answer).
Does wine have to be Kosher for use as a beverage, rather than for use
during Kiddush? In other words, if I am at dinner, can I have a good
bottle of California or French wine with my meal, as a beverage, or
must it be Kosher?
I would assume that anything we eat must be Kosher, but we can drink
fruit juices, from which wine is made, and which fall under very
different rules than those for Kosher wine.
Any of you out there who can help with this, please do.
Jack
|
300.5 | Kosher is Kosher, but it can be good | YOUNG::YOUNG | | Tue Apr 21 1987 17:58 | 20 |
| The answer is that the wine must be kosher. There is no difference
between food and drink (other than wine) with respect to kashruth.
Many people consider items like orange juice to be OK because it
only contains oranges, which are kosher, just as people buy oranges
at the store and consider them to be kosher.
Wine is a special case, because to be kosher it must be made by
non-idolators.
You can get good kosher wines these days. At the Butcherie in
Brookline, for example, you can get several good kosher wines,
including several Bordeaux wines, the Yarden israeli imports, Asti
Spumonti, and more. Gordons in Waltham also has some kosher imports.
And Shapiros in New York City has a bunch of interesting wines - I
got a couple bottles of 1982 Red Bordeaux last time I was there,
and they told me they were arranging to import Perrier Joet Champagne!
Paul
|
300.6 | Two more California Kosher wines | CURIE::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO3 | Tue Apr 21 1987 21:30 | 11 |
| Thanks Paul. And here are two more to add to your list;
Gan Eden and Hagafen Cellars. Both are Rabbi certified Kosher,
including for Pesach.
Both of these vineyards are in California (Napa, I think). They
make the typical varietal California wines. I have tried the Hagafen
wines, and they are pretty good. They are also available at the
Butcherie.
Jack
|
300.7 | Here's what I like | FSLENG::CHERSON | portraits in redundancy | Wed Apr 22 1987 09:17 | 16 |
| I have been drinking the "gourmet" kosher wines for several years
now and have to report that I have been pleased with the wines that
Kedem has been importing. You may also want to notice the greater
variety of wines from Carmel that have come into this country, quite
an improvement over what used to be available (you know the adom
atic, the kind of wine you have on a kibbutz dining room table on
Friday nights).
I would also recommend the Gamla wines from Israel, pretty good
selection. I also sampled a great Cabernet Sauvignon from the Rav
Herzog's vineyard and bottled under his name.
If we keep this up we could start a kosher wine notesfile :-.
David
|
300.8 | keeping kosher wine kosher | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Apr 23 1987 14:02 | 7 |
| Forgive my ignorance on this subject, but:
I thought I read somewhere once that in order for kosher wine to
remain "kosher" when the unopened (!) bottle is handled by shippers
who may not be Jewish, the wine has to be "cooked" before bottling
(meaning, apparently, heated to some high temperature). That might
explain why a lot of it tastes somewhat cooked (especially some
of the Kedem kiddush wines).
|
300.9 | M'vushal | CURIE::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Thu Apr 23 1987 23:47 | 39 |
| reply to < Note 300.8 by CADSYS::RICHARDSON >
>> -< keeping kosher wine kosher >-
>>
>> Forgive my ignorance on this subject, but:
>> I thought I read somewhere once that in order for kosher wine to
>> remain "kosher" when the unopened (!) bottle is handled by shippers
>> who may not be Jewish, the wine has to be "cooked" before bottling
>> (meaning, apparently, heated to some high temperature).
That's largely right.
You will see, on some (most) bottles of kosher wine -- and usually in
small print, in Hebrew -- "yayin m'vushal", lit. "cooked" or
"boiled" wine.
It's not just non-Jewish handlers, by the way. For many,
the difference is between observant (i. e., Shomer Shabbat, etc.)
Jews and anyone else. They will often use
non-m'vushal wine for themselves, but, for example, if they're
having guests, and there's any question of observance (particularly
like at a Seder where there may be many guests of varying Jewish
backgrounds, i. e., observance levels), m'vushal is the rule. Shulchan
Aruch deals with this at some length, by the way. This sort of
custom is not just limited to wine, but also reaches into some other
foods as well, in somewhat different forms. If you want to get the
whole story, I strongly recommend that you read the original
source material rather than my 25-words-or-less raving.
>>> That might
>>> explain why a lot of it tastes somewhat cooked (especially some
>>> of the Kedem kiddush wines).
I don't know, properly. I keep both kinds around, for reasons
noted above. I find, I think, greater bottle-to-bottle differences
just due to "other" factors [i. e., "Great vintage, this! What year
was it? Oh! Last Thursday afternoon?" :-) ] rather than m'vushal/
non-m'vushal.
/don feinberg
|
300.10 | More kosher than kosher | TAVMTS::JUAN | | Thu Apr 30 1987 07:18 | 13 |
| There is more to kosher than meets the eye, at least according to
the explicit certificates of the Rabanut given here. There is the
requisite that they haven't beeen made out of grapes collected during
a "Shemita" year (7th year, when the fields were supposed not to be
worked upon), "Orlah" - I don't know what it means in this context
- etc.
One more thought about Yayin Mevushal, boiled or pasteurized wine:
it seems that this is not considered any longer to be wine, not
only by Jews, but also by our cousins, the moslems. In moslem law
it is forbidden to have wine or alcoholic beverages, but I read
somewhere that cooked wine is permitted (I don't know if by all
different moslem variations).
|
300.11 | And what about milk wine? | EAGLE1::LEONARD | VAX Architecture Management | Thu Apr 30 1987 17:45 | 5 |
| There's a Japanese wine called Calpis (or something close to that) made
from fermented milk. (I don't remember the exact name because we
always called it by I thought they'd said -- Cow-Piss.) The milk is
presumably pasturized. I'm glad I'm not going to have to make a ruling
about what kind of kosher it could be.
|
300.12 | it comes in fruit flavors, too | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | This Spot Intentionally Mel Blanc | Fri May 01 1987 15:14 | 10 |
| re:-.1
Calpis is not a wine product, it is no more alcoholic than Grape
Nehi. It is a milk ferment which is mixed about 3:1 with water
to produce a beverage.
Since the Japanese language does not really have our "L" sound, the
name is not what it looks like. It is sold in America as Calpico
(changed for obvious reasons). I've seen it at Yahinoya in Cambridge.
I'm pretty sure it's milchig, like yoghurt or kefir (also milk
ferments).
|