T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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537.1 | Treif | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Dick (Gavriel ben Avraham) Schoeller | Tue Sep 06 1988 12:25 | 7 |
| Shalom Linda,
Both are treif for the same reason, no scales. In order to be kosher,
a fish must have both fins and scales. This eliminates all shellfish
and many of the scavenger and predator fish (sharks, eels, catfish...)
Gavriel
|
537.2 | Scavenger = Gefilte Fish | SAGE::PERLMAN | Eli B. Perlman | Tue Sep 06 1988 14:17 | 11 |
| Your first sentence may be faulty. The rest is accurate. Swordfish
do have scales and fins during most of its life. When this was
pointed out to many Rabbanim who do not know this, they rule that
the fish may be considered Kosher. The Conservative Rabbis consider
it Kosher. A strict interpritation would be that it is traif.
Catfish never have scales, and are traif.
Only scales and fins are to be considered. If the fish is a scavenger,
it is irrelevant. Consider the carp, the mainstay of gefilte fish.
It is a scavenger.
|
537.3 | Clear as mud... | IAGO::SCHOELLER | Dick (Gavriel ben Avraham) Schoeller | Tue Sep 06 1988 14:42 | 11 |
| Shalom Eli,
The point was that many (not all) of the commonly known scavenger fish
do not have scales. Sorry if my observation made my note unclear.
Swordfish do not have scales at the point during their life at which
they are normally caught for food. That is why many Rabbanim still
consider them treif. There is also some question whether they ever
have "true" scales but I am not too clear on that point.
Gavriel
|
537.4 | clear as nothin | COGMK::FRANCUS | In Xanadu did Kubla Khan | Wed Sep 07 1988 12:01 | 9 |
| There was a debate in the 19th century over whether or not swrdfish
was kosher. Legend has it that the Rabbi who thought it was kosher
had more of a following than the other Rabbi; however after the
rabbi who ruled it kosher died rumors spread that he changed his
mind. So traditionally swordfish has been considered treif but it
really isn't very clear that thats really the case.
yoseff
|
537.5 | fishy psak | VAXWRK::ZAITCHIK | Existence is NOT a predicate | Fri Sep 09 1988 00:13 | 15 |
| ad .4
>> There was a debate in the 19th century over whether or not swrdfish <<
>> was kosher. <<
19th century?
I know that this was hotly debated right here in Boston a mere
20 years ago, with Rabbi Savitsky at that time holding that swordfish
is kosher. Later he changed his mind for the reasons pointed out
in .3, viz. that the scales are not present at the time the fish
are taken out of the water. (I think the scales dry up or something
when the fish leaves the water.)
If I am not mistaken Rabbi Tendler (who is also a biologist) held
that the swordfish have no true scales and are therefore treif.
(Rabbi Tendler is the son-in-law of Rabbi Feinstein z"l.)
|
537.6 | Baby swordfish have scales, adults don't | DECSIM::GROSS | I brake for A.K.s | Fri Sep 09 1988 15:36 | 17 |
| I happened to be interviewing another Bagels noter over a year ago,
(Don Feinberg, remember me Don?) and since we had been discussing this very
same question at my temple I asked Don about it. He said that the requirements
for a kosher fish is that it have "fins and scales in the water". This means
that a fish whose scales dry up and fall off in the air is still kosher.
The swordfish starts out life with scales but loses them when the fish matures.
I suppose if you caught a young swordfish that still had scales it would be
kosher, but the adult fish is not kosher. Knowing the way questions like this
seem to be decided, an observant person would not eat the young swordfish
anyway, either because an observer couldn't tell whether the fish was young
enough when caught or because it isn't "glatt" (i.e. if you had to ask whether
it's kosher, then it ain't kosher regardless of the answer 8^). I mean, as long
as there is a question whether the swordfish's scales are "true" scales, it
would not be considered "glatt" by anybody.
Dave
|
537.7 | No glatt fish, please | TAVIS::SID | | Wed Sep 14 1988 05:53 | 15 |
| Note 537.6
>>> glatt ... fish
I don't mean to be picky, but I have to correct an oh-so-common misuse
of the word "glatt". Glatt (which means smooth) describes a situation in
which the lung of an animal is free of lesions (hence smooth). An
animal which has such lesions (which may be indicative of a disease which
would render the animal unkosher) can generally be considered kosher if
there are no other signs of disease. However, some people who want to
be extra-sure, won't eat this kind of meat (i.e., non-Glatt meat).
Therefore "glatt" has sometimes been used to mean "super-kosher", but
this is not correct. In any case, there is no way that fish or cheese
can be glatt kosher. Fish do not have lungs (they have gills) and as
far as I know cheese doesn't either.
|
537.8 | | COGMK::FRANCUS | In Xanadu did Kubla Khan | Wed Sep 14 1988 17:20 | 10 |
| re: .5
I believe it was the Noda BeYhuda and someone else who debated it,
with the Noda BeYehuda apparently ruling ti was kosher.
Incidentally he might have lived in the 18th not the 19th century,
I'm really not sure about the date.
yoseff
|
537.9 | Re Swordfish: DEC 1, IBM 0 | SUBWAY::MENDES | AI is better than no I at all | Fri Aug 18 1989 16:35 | 19 |
| A friend of mine who works at IBM called this morning. As it happens, I
was working at home and my wife was out. Apparently, somebody in his
office is planning a wedding, and wanted to know if swordfish is
kosher. Ruth is the expert, and I decidedly am not, although I recalled
some discussion that suggested the answer was "No", or at best,
"Maybe".
I said I'd get back to him if I could get an answer, then dialed into
this conference, did a DIR/ALL/TITLE=SWORDFISH and located this note
and 15. Blew him away when I called back a few minutes later with the
answers ("Depends on who you ask. At a wedding, play it safe and serve
something else.").
Talk about your cultural differences ... wait'll I tell him how people
at Digital get the answers to this kind of question!
:-)
- Richard
|