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A Guide to Certification
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CONTENTS The World’s Best-Known Kosher Trademark First Steps What is Kosher? You Value Integrity, We Value Integrity Other Major Divisions of the Orthodox Union How the OU Kosher Staff is Structured How Does OU Supervision Work? Communication and Information Getting the Maximum Benefit Helping you Reach the Market Cost and Procedures OU Facts OUKosher.org Home Page PDF Version ![]() |
What is Kosher? The word kosher means proper or acceptable, and it has informally entered the English language with that meaning. But kosher laws have their origin in the Bible, and are detailed in the Talmud and the other codes of Jewish traditions. They have been applied through the centuries to ever-changing situations, and these rulings, both ancient and modern, govern OU Kosher certification. You may already be familiar with some of the more well-known requirements, but you may be surprised at the extent of the regulations with which you are not familiar.
Why do so many foods require kosher supervision? For example, shouldn’t cereals and potato chips be inherently kosher since they are not made from meat, fowl, fish or insects? The answer is that all units and subunits in a food item must be kosher as well. Thus, for example, a cereal may be non-kosher because it has raisins which are coated with a non-Kosher, animal-based glycerin. Potato chips can be non-kosher if the vegetable oil used in the fryer has been pasteurized and deodorized on equipment used for tallow production. In fact, equipment used for hot production of non-kosher products may not be used for kosher production without kosherization (a hot purging procedure).
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