No. Tongue is a separate meat.
Bread must not contain meat or milk; thus it can be used with either one.
Kosher D - kosher dairy: Kosher means that a food is "suitable" according to the Jewish religious rules. Dairy means it is treated as dairy product so religious observant Jews won't eat it together with meat.
No ______ Kosher deli meat still has nitrates.
Provided the granola contains no animal products it is parve - that is, neutral, neither kosher nor treif (not kosher) and as such can be eaten by Jews. _______ The above answer is not clear. Any commercial food item must be certified kosher by a recognised organisation to be considered kosher. If the granola product is certified kosher, it is a kosher product. There are four categories of food according to kashrut: meat, dairy, pareve, and treif. Pareve refers to any food item that does not contain meat or dairy but may contain eggs and/or fish. Treif refers to any food that is not kosher.
Yes, but make sure you keep dairy separate from meat.
Assuming a kosher chicken and kosher mayonnaise, there should be no problem. Mayonnaise is traditionally regarded as pareve, meaning that it has no meat or dairy content. Therefore, mixing it with chicken is permitted.
Fox meat is not kosher. See:More about what is and isn't kosher
Yes, Kosher meat is halal for Muslims to eat
A kosher butcher will only sell kosher meat. Regular butchers don't sell kosher meat.
No. Emu meat is not considered kosher because emu resembles ostriches which are not kosher as well. (The rhea and the cassowary are not kosher for the same reason.)
It really depends what type you purchase. regular standar gummies like Haribo and Welches use pig or cow fat. Kosher gummies are different because because they dont contain any meat byproduct. If they would contain meat byproducts they would not be considered kosher.