ronnie_suburban wrote:... Even though Vienna products are all beef, ...
j r wrote:George R wrote:teatpuller wrote:they probably don't want anyone else to compete with their ballpark and hillshire farms brands.
Vienna Beef lives!
Vienna Beef products are *NOT* Kosher:
http://www.viennabeef.com/about/faq/#FAQ56
j r wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:... Even though Vienna products are all beef, ...
If you follow the link I posted, even that statement is not quite true. Some of their products actually use pork (or sheep) casings. That was a surprise to me as well.
There is a lot more to being Kosher than just using all beef, and having a Rabbi bless things. And being a non practicing, traif eating Jew, I'm probably not the best source for details. I'm sure you can look them up on the web.
I've got a distant cousin who is a Rabbi, so I figure that covers the family.
ronnie_suburban wrote:j r wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:... Even though Vienna products are all beef, ...
If you follow the link I posted, even that statement is not quite true. Some of their products actually use pork (or sheep) casings. That was a surprise to me as well.
There is a lot more to being Kosher than just using all beef, and having a Rabbi bless things. And being a non practicing, traif eating Jew, I'm probably not the best source for details. I'm sure you can look them up on the web.
I've got a distant cousin who is a Rabbi, so I figure that covers the family.
LOL!
Right, as I mentioned in my post, I thought I remembered something about casings and the associated issue that hit the fan last year. Those casings are not pork but they're definitely not beef, either. Ironically, if they were strictly sheep, they'd be kosherable. But mislabeling is a separate issue from Koshering.
=R=
Dave148 wrote:Have you ever seen a sheep wearing a yamulke?
Dave148 wrote:Have you ever seen a sheep wearing a yamulke?
Wiki wrote:Kosher hot dogs may be made from beef, chicken or turkey.
Wiki wrote:Kosher natural casings are difficult to obtain in commercial quantities in the USA, and therefore kosher hot dogs are usually either skinless or made with reconstituted collagen casings.
Katie wrote:I am Catholic too, so the entire contents of my brain on what's kosher will only take up three lines (I did grow up in Highland Park, though; otherwise it wouldn't fill even one line). I thought that, among other things, beef must be from the front half of the cow to qualify as kosher. Is it redundant or inaccurate or amplifying to say that it cannot be from the part of the cow that contains the sciatic nerve? And that removing the sciatic nerve from the carcass does not change the back half's disqualification as kosher-worthy?
That is, of course, not counting all the other rules. Surely someone who keeps kosher can provide better information. Meanwhile, I found this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosher
JoelF wrote:On that note, the latest Costco magazine said that nationwide they were switching to an inhouse-produced brand, instead of the two Kosher varieties that they'd used across the US for years. I'm pretty certain Best was one, and Hebrew National the other. The price also went up by 5 cents locally, to $1.55 for the dog and drink.
RR_Rancher wrote:On a tangential note regarding these dogs, Sun Times reports today about Vienna Beef's replacing the Best Kosher at Sox Park:
(Users: Prepare thy pop up blockers!)
http://www.suntimes.com/lifestyles/food/1475076,CST-NWS-hotdog13.article
If it's true that a hot dog never tasted better than at a baseball game........Then I must further that notion to say that no hot dog ever tasted better at a baseball game than a Best Kosher at Sox Park.
JoelF wrote:On that note, the latest Costco magazine said that nationwide they were switching to an inhouse-produced brand
Yahoo News wrote:The lawsuit alleges that meat processing services provided to ConAgra by privately held AER Services Inc fell short of the standards necessary to label Hebrew National products as kosher. As a result, they said, ConAgra misled consumers and was able to charge premium prices.
dansch wrote:The hotdog of my childhood, Hebrew National, may not be Kosher after all...Yahoo News wrote:The lawsuit alleges that meat processing services provided to ConAgra by privately held AER Services Inc fell short of the standards necessary to label Hebrew National products as kosher. As a result, they said, ConAgra misled consumers and was able to charge premium prices.
-Dan
Binko wrote:I do like the flavor of Hebrew Nationals, too, but I've never seen one in a natural casing, which makes me opt for other brands. Natural casings are considered trayf, correct?
spinynorman99 wrote:
There are Kosher natural casings but as is true for all things Kosher, they're appreciably more expensive.
spinynorman99 wrote:Binko wrote:I do like the flavor of Hebrew Nationals, too, but I've never seen one in a natural casing, which makes me opt for other brands. Natural casings are considered trayf, correct?
There are Kosher natural casings but as is true for all things Kosher, they're appreciably more expensive.
Binko wrote:spinynorman99 wrote:Binko wrote:I do like the flavor of Hebrew Nationals, too, but I've never seen one in a natural casing, which makes me opt for other brands. Natural casings are considered trayf, correct?
There are Kosher natural casings but as is true for all things Kosher, they're appreciably more expensive.
OK, I'm really confused about this. I find some sources that say sheep casings can be kosher. I find other sources that say no intestinal casing of any sort can be kosher, as intestines are trayf, regardless of whether the animal was kosher. For example: this article in the NYT ("A kosher hot dog is all beef and made under rabbinical supervision. It is skinless or stuffed into collagen casings, because natural casings are not permitted.") and here. ("The kosher rabbis in their inimitable wisdom decided some years ago that natural sheep casings are not kosher, so there is no such thing as a natural casing kosher hot dog.")
However, neither of these is coming from the mouths of rabbis. Just to sate my own curiosity, which is correct?
stevez wrote:Also, Costco stopped serving Vienna hot dogs and polishes years ago. Those are now Kirkland products and have been for quite some time. I suppose the Clybourn store may be a outlier, being so close to the Vienna factory and all. I don't normally go to that Costco, so I don't know for sure.
JoelF wrote:Chicago area ones previously had Best's Kosher (wait, is that right?), not Vienna. I believe it carries by region.
stevez wrote:JoelF wrote:Chicago area ones previously had Best's Kosher (wait, is that right?), not Vienna. I believe it carries by region.
But isn't Best's Kosher owned by Vienna?
stevez wrote:JoelF wrote:Chicago area ones previously had Best's Kosher (wait, is that right?), not Vienna. I believe it carries by region.
But isn't Best's Kosher owned by Vienna?
Rene G wrote:(I see Artie already made the same point while I was checking dates but I thought I might as well go ahead and post this.) David Berg is now owned by Vienna Beef, but I don't think Best Kosher ever was. Best Kosher was owned by Sara Lee from 1993 until the brand was terminated in 2009. As far as I'm aware the name hasn't been sold.
Artie wrote:What infuriates me and why I'll never buy a product of theirs again is that Sara Lee,AFAIK,never even looked for a potential suitor for Best.
Rene G wrote: A few months ago Hillshire applied to renew the Best's Kosher trademark so one has to wonder what the maker of Ball Park franks might have in mind.