Transcript
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[Music]
Hi there. Welcome to the show. Today we
got a lot of really neat stuff to talk
about. We're going to talk about one of
my favorite subjects, food. Not just any
food, kosher food. Believe it or not,
most people don't know what kosher food
is. Do you know what kosher food is? One
of our reporters went to the streets to
find out. Some think it's Jewish food,
like princesses or bagels or my bubby's
famous chicken soup. Some people think
that a rabbi blesses the food and that
makes it kosher. Many people think that
if you look at the ingredients on the
package, you can tell the product is
kosher, right? All of these are wrong.
So, what exactly is kosher food? Having
a kosher product means everything that's
in the food and the way it's made is
according to the Jewish dietary laws.
There are four main groups of
non-cooser. Some animals like a pig,
some birds like a raven, and some fish
like a catfish, and insects aren't
kosher. Making food kosher is a
complicated and fascinating process, and
it requires the expertise of a kosher
certification agency such as the
Orthodox Union. They have the
responsibility to ensure that foods
bearing their name are supervised to the
highest standards. The little OU you see
on hundreds of thousands of products is
the most recognized and respected kosher
symbol in the world. I'm going to open
up my computer and introduce you to my
pal, Rabbi Luben. He works at the OU
headquarters. Hi, Rabbi. How are you?
I'm good, Ezra. How are you? I'm great.
So, what can you tell us about the OU?
Well, Ezra, as you know, the OU is the
world's largest kosher supervising
agency. We certify over 500,000 products
made by over 4,500 companies in over 80
countries around the world. Wow, that's
unbelievable. How many people are
involved in supervising all those
products? There are literally hundreds
of people around the world that inspect
these plants. These specially trained
inspectors are called mashikim, which is
a Hebrew word that means supervisors.
Here at the OU, we call them rabbitic
field representatives. So, a lot more
goes into supervising a product than
just visiting the plant. That's right,
Ezra. Kosher supervision is very complex
because companies often use a multitude
of ingredients to make even the most
simple products. Even something as
simple as your bowl of ice cream is
really not that simple. How complicated
could it be? It's just milk, sugar, and
eggs. Ezra, have you ever had cherry
pie? Yeah, my mom makes the best cherry
pie. Just cherries and flour and eggs,
right? I think she uses one of those
cherry flavoring packages. Well, if that
package isn't kosher certified, you
might just be eating parts of an African
cat. Ew, that's gross. Most food
products today have ingredients like
stabilizers, colors, flavors, and other
ingredients that are added that may
contain non-coosher components. Civot is
a flavor enhancer that comes from a
small African mammal called a civet,
which is related to the cat family.
Castorum is a flavor enhancer that comes
from beavers, and carmine is often added
to foods to give them red color. It's
made from groundup beetles. You also
have enzymes which are used in food for
many different reasons. Did you know
there's an enzyme that comes directly
from a pig? Enzymes can be grown on
blood, monkey brains, eels, you name it.
These ingredients are in cereals, fruit
cocktails, and even lunch snacks. In
fact, the average all-American breakfast
most probably contains some of these.
Not mine. Well, I guess that brings us
back to where we started. Ice cream.
Yeah, right. Well, I kind of lost my
appetite. So, maybe we'll take a break
from the monkey brains and show you how
ice cream is made.
My favorite ice cream is made by Safeway
in Seattle, Washington. So, we went to
Seattle to visit their plant. Check this
out. This is really cool. No pun
intended. At Safeway, they make all
kinds of tasty ice cream products in
over 30 flavors. They make gallon and
half gallon containers, Dixie Cups,
different kinds of ice cream sandwiches,
and my favorite, crunchy fudge bars. All
the products made at Safeway are kosher
except for their fruit bars and their
Rocky Road ice cream that has
non-coosher marshmallow in it. This is
important when it comes to kosher
supervision because kosher and
non-coosher products are made in the
same equipment. More on that later.
Let's see how ice cream is made. All of
these great ice cream products start
with basic ingredients. Cream, sugar,
and stabilizers. Stabilizers are used to
give the ice cream its smooth texture.
The milk and cream comes to the plant in
these big trucks. It is pumped from the
truck into a holding tank and from there
it enters the plant where it is blended
into the basic flavorless mixture that
is also called the batch mixture. There
are two basic mixtures that are made.
One is plain and the other has cocoa
added which is used as the base for all
the chocolate flavored products. The
next step is called pasteurization.
Pasteurization is a method of heating
every particle of the mixture so that
it's guaranteed that any possible trace
of bacteria is removed. Some types of
bacteria are good but bacteria found in
food isn't and it can make you very
sick. From there, it goes into storage
silos, which is followed by the mixture
being put into flavor tanks where
various flavors are added, including
eggs and vanilla to create many
varieties of ice cream that Safeway
produces. There can be lots of
ingredients that go into making flavors
themselves. At Safeway, they have a
flavor room where they create every
flavor. Once the flavor is added, the
mixture goes through a complex freezing
process where air is added to give it
the fluffy creamy ice cream consistency.
At that point, if other ingredients like
chocolate chunks need to be added, the
mixture is diverted to a fruit feeder
where the fruit feeder drops those
ingredients into the ice cream at a
certain rate. I don't know why they call
it a fruit feeder if it's adding
chocolate, but maybe we can find that
out another time. The next step is to
fill the containers with the soft ice
cream.
Now the containers are filled and the
ice cream is sent off to this huge
freezer where it is frozen solid. This
place is the size of a football field.
Did you know that ice cream is like fine
wine? It has to sit there for at least
24 hours to blossom. It's kind of like
my mother's chicken soup. It always
tastes better the next day. While the
ice cream is blossoming, they perform
various tests to ensure that the ice
cream meets all the standards of safety
and quality. Now, the ice cream is ready
to go. It's taken from the freezer,
loaded onto the truck, and taken to my
local grocery store. This is where I
come in. I add it to my mom's shopping
list, and bingo, it ends up on my
breakfast table. Well, now that you've
seen how ice cream is made, let's see if
you were paying attention. Did you
notice anything that could be
problematic in ensuring that Safeway's
OU products are guaranteed kosher?
Safeway makes non- kosher products as
well. So, how do we know that
non-coosher ingredients won't be mixed
up with kosher ingredients and end up in
the ice cream by accident? That's an
excellent question. If there are
ingredients used in the plant that
aren't kosher, the U must make sure that
those non-cooser ingredients are not
compatible with the company's kosher
ingredients. Safeway makes a strawberry
fruit bar that is not kosher. They also
make a strawberry ice cream that is
kosher. However, the two mixes are
different. The fruit bar mixture is
chunky and the ice cream mixture is very
smooth. The non- kosher chunky mix can't
be used in the ice cream because it will
change the consistency of the ice cream.
Therefore, the ingredient is considered
incompatible with the kosher ingredient
which removes any concern that will be
substituted in the ice cream. Is that
the only problem that could happen?
Definitely not. Ingredients that are
heated can also be a problem because
heating non-coosher ingredients will
cause the equipment to become non-cooser
as well. Remember when the ice cream
mixture was pasteurized? Because it gets
so hot, the pasteurizer could make the
kosher ice cream mixture non-cosher if
the pasteurizer had non-coosher
ingredients at any time. I guess that's
like what my mom does at home with our
pots and pans. We can't mix them up,
right? Exactly. But Safeway makes
non-coosher products on the same
equipment. They make Rocky Road ice
cream, which has marshmallows in it that
aren't kosher. Really? How can they do
that and still be kosher? Well, the
marshmallows are added to the mixture
when it's very cold. If the mixture is
cold, kosher law says the equipment
won't become non-coosher. Just like if
your mom puts cold milk in a meat pot by
accident, the pot must be thoroughly
cleaned out, but it doesn't become
non-coosher.
The equipment is thoroughly cleaned
every night before they start a new
kosher run in the morning. Wow, look at
how carefully they clean the machines.
They take every bolt apart. Could you
imagine what my mom would say if I did
that when she asked me to clean my room?
She would be so happy. Okay, Rabbi. So,
that pretty much covers everything that
could go wrong, right? Well, not
exactly. The last thing, and perhaps one
of the most important, is to make sure
the label is kosher. What? No one eats
the label unless they're making
spitballs out of it. We're not worried
about anyone eating it. We're concerned
that the wrong label might go on the
package. At the OU, we have to make sure
that kosher certified ice cream bears
the U label. Wouldn't most people know
that ice cream is dairy? Maybe. But if
it just had a plain U logo on it, they
might think it's par of ice cream, which
means that it has no dairy or meat
ingredients in it. Without a D on the
label, they might serve it on their
steak or chicken. Chicken alam mode. It
doesn't sound so appetizing. I can't say
I'd ever do that by accident. Maybe not.
But you might put worse chair sauce on
your steak. What's wrong with that?
There's no rocky road in a bottle of
steak sauce. But there is fish in it.
That's why we put an O fish label on it
because kosher law prohibits mixing meat
and fish at the same time, too. There's
also UP, which stands for Passover.
That's so you know that the product
doesn't have hummets in it, which we all
know we can't eat during the holiday of
Passover. Rabbi, can I offer you some
breakfast? No thanks. I'm having ice
cream for lunch today. I've actually got
to run now. It's been great speaking to
you and I hope I was able to answer your
questions.
Well, now you've got a taste of just how
complex kosher food production is. It's
more than just the label on the box.
It's a lot of highly trained people
working together with the manufacturer
to make sure that the highest standards
of Jewish law is maintained. After all,
when you're eating kosher, you're not
just feeding your belly, you're feeding
your soul.
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Fire.
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