8c35abd0
XPost: misc.consumers, misc.consumers.frugal-living, ba.food
From: bashley101@gmail.com
spamtrap1888@gmail.com wrote:
> On Mar 2, 1:16 pm, "Sanity" wrote:
>> "Sqwertz" wrote:
>> > SMS wrote:
>>
>> >> We urge Costo to bring back kosher hot dogs and polish sausages to the
>> >> snack bar. If necessary raise the price to $1.75 or $2.00 because of
the
>> >> extra cost of a superior product.
>>
>> > How is a kosher dog automatically superior to a non-kosher hot dog?
Among other things, they're supposed to be cleaner. That kind of depends on
how
conscientious the approving rabbi is, though.
>> > What brand is/are they using? I had one yesterday in Austin and it
tasted
>> > the same as the Best's Brand Kosher polish dogs I've been eating all
>> > along, only the bun was different (smaller, sweeter, yellower, moister,
>> > and cut completely in half making making for a really messy dog.
>>
>> No one said it is superior but all kosher hot dogs are 100% beef. You
don't
>> want to know what non-kosher dogs use as fillers.
>
> What do non-kosher dogs use as fillers?
Floor sweepings, apparently. There's probably a reason we don't want to
know.
I don't worry about soy protein as long as it doesn't taste like soy.
> Kosher beef cuts include tongue, cheeks, feet, hearts, sweetbreads,
> and liver.
No ears or snouts? Wait, I guess cows don't have snouts. Noses, maybe. No
noses? What's the rule?
--
Cheers, Bev
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
(On going to war over religion:) "You're basically killing each other
to see who's got the better imaginary friend." -- Rich Jeni
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
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