Some customers only come in to buy kosher meat around holidays such as Passover.
From the stltoday.com
A mix of ice and kosher salt is an effective cleanser for decanters and carafes.
From the orlandosentinel.com
So lets be safe and take everything I do online with a grain of kosher salt, eh?
From the edeneatseverything.com
As a result, supermarket shelves now groan under the weight of kosher offerings.
From the businessweek.com
With the significantly higher cost of kosher meat, the margin for error is slim.
From the philly.com
Miller's carries hundreds of kosher wines and liqueurs from dozens of countries.
From the delawareonline.com
Season generously with kosher or sea salt and pepper, and serve over brown rice.
From the dallasnews.com
He started receiving anonymous phone calls asking why he sells non-kosher goods.
From the latimes.com
While duck and squash are cooking, saute spinach with olive oil and kosher salt.
From the thestate.com
More examples
Food that fulfills the requirements of Jewish dietary law
Conforming to dietary laws; "kosher meat"; "a kosher kitchen"
Proper or legitimate
Kashrut (also kashruth or kashrus, u05DBu05B7u05BCu05E9u05B0u05C1u05E8u05D5u05BCu05EA) is the set of Jewish religious dietary laws. Food that may be consumed according to halakha (Jewish law) is termed kosher /u02C8kou028Au0283u0259r/ in English, from the Ashkenazi pronunciation of the Hebrew term kashu00E9r (u05DBu05B8u05BCu05E9u05B5u05C1u05E8), meaning "fit" (in this context, fit for consumption).
To make kosher; Prepared in accordance with Jewish religious practices; In accordance with standards or usual practice
From the Hebrew kasher. When talking about food, to prepare it at every stage in strict observance of the Jewish dietary laws. When talking about salt, kosher salt is a coarse salt that does not contain magnesium carbonate.
A set of Jewish dietary rules specified in the Hebrew Scriptures and practiced by many Jews.
Ritually fit for use or valid (cf. kashrus).
Derived from the Hebrew word "kasher," which means "proper" or "pure." Kosher foods conform to strict Jewish biblical laws pertaining to the type of food eaten, the kinds of foods combined in one meal, and how an animal is killed.