T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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700.1 | | ULTRA::ELLIS | David Ellis | Fri May 19 1989 10:26 | 23 |
| Re: .0:
> Why is kosher food soooooo expensive. After all, a chicken is a chicken
> and a vegetable is a vegetable. Maybe the Kosher inspectors in past lives
> had jobs with the Commonwealth of Mass.
For meat to be kosher, the animal must pass inspection before it is
slaughtered. Many animals are rejected for small bruises, lesions and the
like. The slaughtering must be done according to exacting standards, and
there are precious few "specialists" around who know how to do it just right.
Only certain cuts of meat from the animal are permissible; the entire hind
quarter section is not allowed for kosher meat. The kosher meat must not
come in contact with any dairy or with any nonkosher food products, vessels or
containers. Kosher meat must be specially soaked and salted to remove any
traces of blood. Finally, all of the above must be under official
supervision and certification.
I buy and eat only kosher meat, and it really hurts in the pocket. It's my
choice, and I accept the consequences. I don't think that there's much
unnecessary waste, corruption or abuse in this area. A 10% overhead for
assuring that meat is kosher may be unreasonably thin to expect.
Regarding Ruth's Kitchen, their Chinese cuisine is nothing special. But do
give their Korean specialties a try. You might find them out of the ordinary.
|
700.2 | | AKO455::SHEPRO | Service Before Protocol | Fri May 19 1989 11:02 | 36 |
| RE: .1
>> The slaughtering must be done according to exacting standards, and
there are precious few "specialists" around who know how to do it just right.
Please explain in detail just what the exacting standards are and how they
differ from FDA, USDA, etc. standards.
>>Only certain cuts of meat from the animal are permissible; the entire hind
quarter section is not allowed for kosher meat.
If this portion of the animal is not permissible, why should high prices
prevail for the rest of the cow?
>> The kosher meat must not come in contact with any dairy or with any
nonkosher food products, vessels or containers.
If a dairy-free environment is used to prepare and package the meat much in
the way other meats are prepared for shipping, this too should not add
to the price.
>> Kosher meat must be specially soaked and salted to remove any
traces of blood.
When I cook up a juicy steak, Kosher of course, what's the red, juciy stuff
that comes bubbling up? Besides, how much more does the salt and water cost?
Probably a lot if the water is provided by the MWRA!! Also salt is salt,
sodium-cloride, NaCl. What must be done to make salt Kosher to justify its
higher price over the non-kosher brands?
>> Finally, all of the above must be under official supervision and
certification.
Here, I believe is the Higher price of Kosher Food.
|
700.3 | it's justified | SETH::CHERSON | are you interfacing or talking? | Fri May 19 1989 13:33 | 14 |
| re: .0
This reminds me of how people would ask me why my father's prices
were higher than that of the Stop & Shop's, etc. First of all my
reply was that the treif prices were slowly but surely approaching
kosher prices. Secondly, I think David Ellis gave a very good
explanation of why extra overhead is necessary in the koshering process
(maybe we should pass that by the executive committee :-:-8^).
Thirdly, Yes not 100% of the blood is salted out from the meat at
the butcher's. I may be wrong but I think that the meat only has
to be salted for a specified amount of time (I'll check back with
the experts in the mishpachah).
David
|
700.4 | I concur with your assessment | FDCV08::CUSNER | | Fri May 19 1989 13:41 | 11 |
| I have to concur with you about the quality of the food at Ruth's. It's
truly unimpressive. We had purchased some of their prepared foods
from their Worcester location in the past and I bought take out dinner
in their Brookline location one night and have concluded that one can
prepare a much tastier meal at home.
As for their price I don'think that they are alone in extorting
funds from the "kosher" or frumm community. However, I have no base
for comparison with similiar non-kosher establishments.
|
700.5 | J. BILDNER'S | AKO455::SHEPRO | Service Before Protocol | Fri May 19 1989 15:16 | 16 |
| Ruth's is about 10 to 15% higher than J. Bildner's in Coolige Corner and almost
20 to 25% higher than the former Jaffe's Pick-a-Chick where the now VideoSmith
stands on Harvard St.
Jaffe's has been gone now for about 2.5 years but even inflation hasn't gone
up that much.
Other things to remember are the higher prices at Cafe Shalom and Rubins. Even
Kupels and Egarman's are reasonalbly priced compared to other bakeries,
Kosher or not.
As .1 stated, keeping Kosher is one's personal choice and the cost goes along
with that choice. It's a good thing that the Butchurie (sp) is directly accross
from Schafom's (sp) keeping each other in check.
Oh well
|
700.6 | See TAV02::KOSHER_RESTAURANTS 17.1 | IND::STEINBERG | | Fri May 19 1989 15:41 | 2 |
|
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700.7 | free range chicken at Stop & Shop | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Omphaloskepsis Society | Mon May 22 1989 22:33 | 9 |
| While I am admittedly a big fan of the LKG cafeteria,k whose meat
is not exactly V-H approved (:-)), I definitely prefer kosher chicken
over that other stuff. Empire explains that standard chicken farm
approaches (4-5 birds to a tiny cage, forever) are too cruel to
the animals to be allowed, so their kosher chickens are "free running"
which makes them tastier! Worth the price, and competitive with
other free-range chickens.
f red
|
700.8 | Mass referendum question #4
| AKO455::SHEPRO | Service Before Protocol | Tue May 23 1989 08:33 | 7 |
| This issue appeared as Question #4 on the Mass ballot last November.
Proponants argued the cruelty to animals bit, even though these animals were
destined to be slaughtered, while opponants said this will make no
difference in the overall quality of animals but it will definitly drive
up the price.
Alan
|
700.9 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue May 23 1989 11:46 | 12 |
| I remember reading about a study of the costs of kosher chicken. It
found that the cost to the consumer was in line with the extra
processing costs. However, it was looking at NYC prices -- Boston
prices are higher because of lack of competition and extra
transportation costs.
Also keep in mind that Ruth's is not exactly in a low-rent location.
As for implications that the mashgiach is making a killing, Rabbi
Moskovitz does not exactly live a life of luxury. Nobody goes into
the rabbinate to make money -- they go into the computer business
for that.
|
700.10 | Kosher Poultry -- a special breed of bird... | TAVENG::CHAIM | A matzah ball a day..... | Wed May 24 1989 08:23 | 27 |
| There is another reason why EMPIRE poultry is superior to other poultry, and
this has to do with the type of food these poultry are receiving. In fact
EMPIRE has done much R&D in the area of poultry breeding and has developed
special breeds, which no other poultry company (kosher or non-kosher) uses
because of the cost involved in raising these special breeds.
The reason EMPIRE has done this is in order to give the customer a high quality
product while at the same time conforming to both "halachic" restrictions and
federal health regulations. Federal health regulations DEMAND that all poultry
be immersed in either extremely hot or extremely cold water for a substantial
time period before ANY processing (even flicking) can be done. "Halachic"
restrictions preclude the hot water option, leaving ONLY the cold water option.
EMPIRE realized very soon that the flicking process would cause many tears in
the skin if done after the poultry has been immersed for several minutes in
extremely cold water (due to constriction). Using hot water would remedy this
but the "halacha" doesn't permit such a lengthy immersion in extremely hot
water. The alternative was to try and raise a breed of poultry which would
not be so sensitive to extremely cold water. EMPIRE has succeeded in doing this
through a combination of special feed and environment, but at tremendous cost.
I know for a fact that the major portion of the price differential is caused by
this factor and NOT because of the Rabbinic supervision (EMPIRE has about 80
full time Shochtim and Mashgichim working for them). True, the supervision is
not cheap, but if this were the ONLY factor involved, then the price
differential would be much less.
Cb.
|
700.11 | Most meat up here kosher slaughtered? | BAGELS::SREBNICK | Bad pblm now? Wait 'til we solve it! | Tue Jun 06 1989 14:15 | 8 |
| An interesting side rumor: I understand that most of the kosher
and non-kosher meat in New England is kosher killed. (That doesn't
mean that it IS kosher!) The rumor mill goes on to state that since
kosher meat is in such demand here that it doesn't pay to have two
methods of slaughter, two slaughter houses, etc.
Of course, once the animals have been slaughtered you never know
what happens to the non-kosher ones...
|
700.12 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Jun 06 1989 15:01 | 3 |
| My impression is that most kosher meat sold in New England comes from
midwest slaughterhouses. I also find it hard to believe that there's
much demand for kosher meat in New England.
|
700.13 | NYC, perhaps? | ACESMK::MALMBERG | | Tue Jun 06 1989 16:28 | 6 |
| I heard that steers were slaughtered in or near New York City for
Kosher meat. Some of the best cuts such as the tenderloin have
a sinew which renders the meat not Kosher and is very difficult to
remove. Rather than remove the sinew, these cuts were sold to
non-Kosher restaurants. The result is a large supply of steaks
in New York City.
|