Kosher cookies are cookies that have been made with kosher ingredients. For example, no Gelatin from animal sources (so marshmallows must be kosher, which are made with fish or seaweed-based gelatin.)
There are kosher Milano cookies available, you would have to check the packaging for reliable certification.
No, they are not.
The Double Tree cookies are actually made by the Christie Cookie Company and are certified kosher dairy. However, if they're baked in a non-kosher kitchen, they're no longer kosher. Some Double Tree hotels have Glatt Kosher kitchens so if the cookies are baked off in one of those kitchens, no problem, they're kosher.
There are kosher cookies. To be kosher, cookies (or any processed food) need a stamp from a rabbi stating that no non-kosher ingredients were used (like pig fat) and that the kitchen and utensils were kosher (for example if you used utensils for meat products, they would not be permitted for use with milk products).
Gluten per se is not non-kosher. The only question is where the gluten came from. Unprocessed wheat kernels (for example) are not non-kosher; but processed foods containing gluten, such as cookies, crackers, pastas, breads etc., need a certification of kosher-supervision if they are to be eaten by Jews who keep kosher. This need stems not from the wheat or the gluten, but from other ingredients which may have either kosher or non-kosher sources.
Of course not. Making a kosher cookie simply requires that you follow the requirements for kosher cooking, such as preparing the ingredients in a dairy kitchen and using only kosher-dairy ingredients.
It depends on what they had for the main meal. In a dairy meal, the kosher person will typically eat "normal" desserts (such as cake, ice cream, pastries - like panna cotta, fruit etc.). In a meat meal, the kosher person will have to eat options that do not contain dairy, such as fruits, sorbets, tofu-ice-cream, or dairy-free cookies.
The Dr Siegel Cookie diet includes eating cookies and hunger controlling shakes. The cookies are all vegetarian, Kosher and natural under the plan 10. Or one can purchase the classic cookies to use in the shakes. One eats nine special cookies a day plus one main meal to add up to 1000 calories in total a day.
Some include:hummushamantaschen (little cookies that are 3 cornered that you eat on the holiday of Purim)honey cakehot doghash brownshorseradishhalibuthalvaI hope that is satisfying!!!!
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.