The opposite of Kosher, as applied to food in Treif (in Yiddish), or trefah (in Hebrew) meaning 'not suitable for use', or 'forbidden'. Trefah literally means 'torn by a wild beast' (Exodus 22:30).
No, it is just an adjective, so in the middle of a sentence, you'd just write kosher in lower case.
An opposite of the word "to" is from.
The opposite of up is down. So, opposite of the opposite of up is up itself.
The opposite of the opposite is the original value, -9.
I assume you mean trefah. Which is the opposite to kosher. As in food eaten by believers in Judaism.
In regard to food:Treif (טרף), which is spelled in various ways and translates into English as "torn." Originally, treif referred only to meat from animals killed by other animals (ie; carrion or animals hunted with dogs etc.) but over time it has come to mean any non-kosher food. Many types of food, either to which kosher laws do not apply or those which a produced using only ingredients to which kosher laws do not apply, are called parve.In regard to ritual objects, such as a tallit or a Torah scroll:Pasul (פסול), "unfit for use"
Fox meat is not kosher. See:More about what is and isn't kosher
It is kosher so long as it is certified kosher.
It needs to be cooked in a kosher vessel and have kosher ingredients. If purchased, it (or the bakery) should have kosher-certification.
Yes and no. There are many recipes that can be made kosher with kosher substitutes.
Delicatessen places serve kosher food. And if you are talking about 'deli' food, it is usually kosher. _______ Delis are only kosher if they're kosher certified. Most delis aren't kosher.
Yes! You don't need a kosher cookbook. Just remove the non-kosher ingredients.
They can eat a kosher diet, and be slaughtered the kosher way.
It would be kosher if it came from a kosher animal.
It can be if it's made with kosher ingredients in a kosher kitchen.
Fish and chips can be kosher so long as the fish used is a kosher species and the food is prepared in a kosher kitchen with all kosher ingredients.