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Udderly kosher: (or if you prefer) Locusts and sparrows and udders, oh my. Diners feast on exotics
Chicago Jewish News ^ | 5-10-04 | Uriel Heilman

Posted on 05/11/2004 6:46:11 PM PDT by SJackson

Udderly kosher: (or if you prefer) Locusts and sparrows and udders, oh my. Diners feast on 'exotics,' thanks to O.U. By Uriel Heilman

NEW YORK-At $161 a head, most people paying for dinner at an upscale Manhattan restaurant would be upset to be served dessert while eyeing a locust crawling around not far from their plates.

But that's exactly what diners sought when they signed up for the Orthodox Union's exotic kosher event May 2 at Levana restaurant in New York.

Diners paid for a multicourse meal including cow udder, wild turkey, quail, bison, venison, goat, sheep stew, pigeon, dove and sparrow. In between courses, O.U. kosher officials explained what makes the animals kosher, why they are rarely eaten and how to identify and prepare them.

"The whole point of this event is to keep the mesorah alive," said Menachem Genack, head of the kosher division at the O.U., as waiters collected plates of cow udder from diners. "Mesorah" is Hebrew for "tradition."

The aim of the dinner-and a daylong conference that preceded it-was "to eat animals to re-establish the fact that they are kosher," he said, so that the tradition of what animals are kosher can be passed on to a new generation.

While some animals can be identified as kosher using empirical characteristics-beasts that chew their cud and have split hooves are considered kosher-others, such as bird species, are kosher only because they traditionally have been known to be so and have been eaten by observant Jews.

Diners ate quail and dove and sparrow to ensure that the memory that these birds are kosher is not forgotten, Genack said.

If reaction to the food was any indication, that memory is safe.

"I'd never eaten quail before," said Frada Nager, from Manhattan's Upper East Side, a kosher observer who said she came because she wanted to taste something unusual.

"Being kosher, you don't have that much choice," she said.

Though Nager was not so impressed with the taste of the exotic meats she was served-when asked what she liked best, she noted that the seven-grain bread rolls had been good-she said she nevertheless was glad she came.

"It was an experience-a costly one, but an experience," she said.

Some members of Jewish vegetarian organizations, however, said they were appalled by the event.

Dr. Richard Schwartz, the author of "Judaism and Vegetarianism" and a longtime Jewish vegetarian activist, said, "While the Orthodox Union deserves much credit for many of their positive activities, their insensitive feast of exotic animals sends a very bad message at a time when animal- based diets are causing an epidemic of disease in the Jewish community, and animal-based agriculture is having devastating effects on the environment of the planet. I urge the O.U. to help make Jews aware of how the production and consumption of animal products violates basic Jewish mandates to protect our health, treat animals compassionately, preserve the environment, conserve natural resources, and help hungry people. This would be a great kiddush Hashem (sanctification of G-d's name."

Earlier in the day, the Orthodox Union held a daylong conference at the Lander College for Men on kosher species, how to recognize them and how to make them kosher.

About 450 people turned out for the conference, O.U. officials said. Some were rabbis, some were professional kosher slaughterers, but most merely were curious, kosher-observant Jews, the union said.

At one point during the conference, a Yemenite Jew prepared a kosher locust- Sephardi Jews, unlike Ashkenazim, ate such kosher insects until recently-but there weren't many takers when it came time to eat the fried grasshopper.

Stuart Shaffren, a New York dentist, said he canceled a day's worth of patients to go to the conference.

Even if he had skipped the dinner, he said, "the lectures alone were far worth it."

Shaffren, who received the dinner as a birthday gift from his family, said he also was excited to be keeping the tradition alive.

There wasn't a vegetarian in the house on Sunday night. Yet while the tables were full until late into the evening, some plates went back into the kitchen nearly untouched.

"I couldn't eat anything," said one woman, who left shortly before waiters began passing out plates of cubed goat and sheep stew. "I want to get out of here before they serve goat. Goat I can't take."

Another diner, Pinchus Merling, a Chasid who lives in Manhattan, said he came for shibuta, a fish that purportedly tastes like pork. But shibuta was unavailable.

"That's what I really wanted. To tell my friends I ate pork. To say I know what pork tastes like," he said.

Nevertheless, Merling said the soup, whose ingredients included pigeon, dove, sparrow, duck and a "fleishig egg"-an unhatched egg found in a slaughtered chicken that is considered meat, rather than pareve, according to Jewish law-brought him back to his childhood.

"I haven't tasted a fleishig egg since I was a child," Merling said wistfully. "My mother used to open chickens and find fleishig eggs in there."

The egg consists solely of a yolk that is smaller and harder than typical yolks.

Avraham Kirschenbaum, who owns Levana along with two of his brothers, said the biggest challenge was not the food preparation-his non-Jewish chef is well-versed in preparing unconventional meats-but finding the animals to kill according to Jewish law.

"There are people that put things into theory, but theory is not reality," he said. "The hardest part of the project is that someone's got to bring it into reality."

The restaurant's standard menu includes bison and venison, but things got a little trickier when Kirschenbaum wanted to serve goat.

He went to a meat market in Borough Park, Brooklyn, and found the perfect goat. But when Kirschenbaum picked it out, it was given to a non-Jew and slaughtered before Kirschenbaum-and the ritual slaughterer he had brought with him-could intervene.

"They killed my goat!" he said. "I'm like, 'What are you doing, man? You killed my goat!' "

An alternative goat was selected and slaughtered, along with two sheep, one of which Kirschenbaum described as "drop-dead gorgeous."

The shochet-the ritual slaughterer-was a little nervous, Kirschenbaum said.

"All along the way, everybody was shaking," he said.

But "the kill was perfect" he said, and the result made it onto the plate of Rabbi Tzvi Flaum, among others.

"To see firsthand the reality of the kosher bird species we learned about in the Talmud," said Flaum, rabbi at Congregation Knesseth Israel of Far Rockaway, N.Y., "you're finally finding out about what you learned about in childhood."

"It was a unique life experience," he said.

Pauline Dubkin Yearwood contributed to this story.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
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1 posted on 05/11/2004 6:46:13 PM PDT by SJackson
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To: dennisw; Cachelot; Yehuda; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; ...
If you'd like to be on or off this middle east/political ping list, please FR mail me.

>

2 posted on 05/11/2004 6:47:26 PM PDT by SJackson (Slaughter the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, Haj Amin el-Husseini)
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To: SJackson

3 posted on 05/11/2004 6:50:49 PM PDT by SJackson (Slaughter the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, Haj Amin el-Husseini)
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To: SJackson
Don't any of you get me started about what goes on in NYC restaurants, kosher or not.

I have extended my time on this earth immeasurably by preparing my own meals with my own hands.
4 posted on 05/11/2004 6:55:24 PM PDT by Solamente
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To: Owl_Eagle
Ping aroo for yet another fine dining experience...
I really like the part in where one of the sheep was described as "drop dead gorgeous!!". BTW not one bit offended by the archived horse material!!
5 posted on 05/11/2004 7:00:08 PM PDT by cavtrooper21
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To: Solamente
Sorry, I should have included that I am a mechanic who is capable of fixing almost everything in the restaurant biz.

I have seen just about everything.
6 posted on 05/11/2004 7:03:20 PM PDT by Solamente
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To: SJackson
I've heard that people actually eat quail, but the rest of it? Yuuuuck!

7 posted on 05/11/2004 7:07:05 PM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (Torrance Ca....land of the flying monkeys)
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To: mhking
Oy gevalt!...err, just damn!
8 posted on 05/11/2004 7:11:20 PM PDT by Slings and Arrows (The Arab world's only exports are oil and b*llsh*t, and the latter far surpasses the former.)
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To: SJackson
"At one point during the conference, a Yemenite Jew prepared a kosher locust- Sephardi Jews, unlike Ashkenazim, ate such kosher insects until recently-but there weren't many takers when it came time to eat the fried grasshopper."

I thought it wasn't known which specific species of locust was kosher?
9 posted on 05/11/2004 7:12:30 PM PDT by adam_az (Call your State Republican Party office and VOLUNTEER!!!!)
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To: adam_az
I think there are a few kinds kinds defined by color. Telling them apart may well be a lost art, though someone must have figured it out for the restaurant. I wonder where you order locusts?
10 posted on 05/11/2004 7:19:29 PM PDT by SJackson (Slaughter the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, Haj Amin el-Husseini)
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To: TheSpottedOwl
I've heard that people actually eat quail, but the rest of it? Yuuuuck!

Of course people eat quail. Venison, bison, sheep, those aren't yuuuuuck.

11 posted on 05/11/2004 7:20:56 PM PDT by SJackson (Slaughter the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, Haj Amin el-Husseini)
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To: SJackson
Thanks, but I'll take a T-bone steak and potatoes.

Why would people choose to eat this way?

12 posted on 05/11/2004 7:23:05 PM PDT by Lizavetta (Savage is right - extreme liberalism is a mental disorder.)
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To: adam_az
Ashekenaz Jews do not have a tradition identifying which species of locust are kosher. Sephardi Jews do. Therefore, Sephardi Jews eat certain locusts, while Ashkenaz Jews don't.
13 posted on 05/11/2004 7:24:22 PM PDT by Krafty123
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To: SJackson
If the price is high enough and the name foreign enough, people will eat anything. Do you think anyone would eat fish bait at a penny a pound? No way! But if you charge $20 an ounce and call it calamari and escargot, they'll stand in line for it.
14 posted on 05/11/2004 7:28:11 PM PDT by BykrBayb (5 minutes of prayer for Terri, every day at 11 am EDT, until she's safe. http://www.terrisfight.org)
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To: 1bigdictator; 1st-P-In-The-Pod; 2sheep; 7.62 x 51mm; A Jovial Cad; a_witness; adam_az; af_vet_rr; ..
FRmail me to be added or removed from this Judaic/pro-Israel ping list.

WARNING: This is a high volume ping list

15 posted on 05/11/2004 7:30:49 PM PDT by Alouette (Lesson of "The Last Samurai"=Don't bring swords to a machine-gun fight)
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To: SJackson
Are "Rocky Mountain Oysters" Kosher? How about fried calves brains?

The older members of my family (non-Jewish) eat a soup made with duck's blood.

16 posted on 05/11/2004 7:35:53 PM PDT by Clemenza (Strolling along country roads with my baby...)
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To: SJackson
The most exotic kosher thing I ever ate was goat kebabs at a Sephardic bar mitzvah in Jerusalem. They were so heavily spiced that, yeah, tastes like extra hot buffalo wings!!

Speaking of buffalo, there is a bison ranch in Postville, Iowa, and they supply animals to Agriprocessors, the kosher slaughtering house. I have never had buffalo meat, though. I guess I am "chicken."

I'm sorry that the "Jewish" PETA-freaks have to be such party poopers.

17 posted on 05/11/2004 7:36:50 PM PDT by Alouette (Lesson of "The Last Samurai"=Don't bring swords to a machine-gun fight)
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To: Clemenza
Are "Rocky Mountain Oysters" Kosher? How about fried calves brains?

Those, uh, gourmet delicacies could be prepared according to kosher specifications.

Calves foot jelly! Now there's a kosher "delicacy" I could live without.

18 posted on 05/11/2004 7:40:00 PM PDT by Alouette (Lesson of "The Last Samurai"=Don't bring swords to a machine-gun fight)
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To: SJackson
Venison is good when cooked properly, otherwise you'll lose your teeth trying to chew it. my ex's uncle used to hunt every season. No thanks.

Some folks I know have eaten buffalo burgers. I guess I'm pickier than I thought, because that's right up there with ostrich burgers. Fyi, there is such a thing these days as a cow crossbred with a buffalo. My friend just told me.

Sheep. Hmmm, I remember getting exactly one lamp chop for dinner when I was a kid, when that was on the menu. I could have eaten 10 of them. We used to have lamb for dinner on Easter. It was pretty good, but my mom would scream every year that the butcher sold her mutton, lol! Lamb is too expensive for me, and no one I'm feeding will eat it. I asked my friend if he likes lamb...nooooo.
19 posted on 05/11/2004 7:52:28 PM PDT by TheSpottedOwl (Torrance Ca....land of the flying monkeys)
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To: Clemenza; Alouette
Are "Rocky Mountain Oysters" Kosher? How about fried calves brains?

Alouette will know better about the oysters, I've read they're not but I don't know why. Fried rattlesnake is out though.

My father ate a dish he called pitzah which consisted of fried brains and garlic. I've later heard pitzah is garlic and cows feet, so it's likely anything you can tell the butcher is for the cat, fried with garlic.

Duck's blood soup, yuk, though I have relatives that eat whitefish soaked in lye (lutefisk-a winter thread) so to each their own.

20 posted on 05/11/2004 7:59:33 PM PDT by SJackson (Slaughter the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, Haj Amin el-Husseini)
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