We offer Pulled Lamb Legs at you next Halall (Kosher) RestoRoyGBiv wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 3:32 pmNo Pulled Pork? What?Bitter Clinger wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 2:55 pmhttps://kosherpalatetx.com/Redneck_Buddha wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 12:20 pmI live in DFW. Where pray-tell is this Kosher BBQ? :)Bitter Clinger wrote: ↑Wed Dec 05, 2018 11:34 pm Come to Dallas. I will take you out for the best Kosher bar-b-cue!
Kosher Palate
7989 Belt Line Road, Suite 154, Dallas, Texas 75248, United States
(469) 601-1002
And they are CHL friendly!
Happy Hanukkah
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Beiruty,
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United we stand, dispersed we falter
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Thanks for the offer Bitter Clinger but i'm too far away. Its been 35 years since i have been to Dallas. Only been there twice when i had a couple of friends living there back then in the Calinas area. I think thats what it was called.Bitter Clinger wrote: ↑Wed Dec 05, 2018 11:34 pm Come to Dallas. I will take you out for the best Kosher bar-b-cue!
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Thanks for the info RoyGBiv. If i find it at Kroger when i go i will get a box to try my hand at making it. However, i'm thinking they'll look more like flap jacks when get through with them since i'm not much of a cook.RoyGBiv wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 12:43 pmManeshewitz makes a pretty decent Matzoh ball soup in a box. You can probably find it at your local grocery store. Very easy to make... Just need to be patient about letting the matzo mix set up for a short while before making balls, AND, don't roll them too tight or they'll come out hard in the middle.Take Down Sicko wrote: ↑Wed Dec 05, 2018 8:42 pm Happy Hanuka my friends. I wish i had some Jewish friends so i could eat some homemade matzo ball soup, rugelach and sufganiyot and other tasty stuff.
The Lipton version isn't as good, but still isn't bad.
I like to add some small noodles to mine. Rice isn't bad either. Wife likes to add leftover chicken (pulled, never sliced), but I don't like chicken. If you're into Asian Fusion, I like to add some sliced Kamaboko fish cake as well.
LOL.
Re: Happy Hanukkah
It's a huge error to assume that someone keeps kosher because they're Jewish. A Jewish friend turned me on to chocolate with bacon in it (which is amazing).
Re: Happy Hanukkah
Very true. My grandmother kept a kosher house for my grandfather but she and the rest of us were spoiled and had non-kosher as well as kosher foods. Grandma kept three sets of dishes in order to do this. And during WWII all of the bacon grease was saved for the war effort. Not sure what the military did with it but we did our share.
Interestingly enough, where I live the only place to really get kosher products were at a Lebanese grocery. Not meat but packaged kosher foods.
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Kashrut (practice of keeping Kosher) is not well understood. The animals that are considered Kosher in the Bible are by and large vegetarian and do not eat of dead flesh. The separation between life and death, good and evil is fundamental to the practice of Judiasm. I am certain that chocolate and bacon is awesome, and I am equally certain that I will not intentionally partake.
"You may all go to H3ll, and I will go to Texas." - Davy Crockett
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
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לעולם לא תשכח
Re: Happy Hanukkah
rotor wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 7:10 pmVery true. My grandmother kept a kosher house for my grandfather but she and the rest of us were spoiled and had non-kosher as well as kosher foods. Grandma kept three sets of dishes in order to do this. And during WWII all of the bacon grease was saved for the war effort. Not sure what the military did with it but we did our share.
Interestingly enough, where I live the only place to really get kosher products were at a Lebanese grocery. Not meat but packaged kosher foods.
The reasons for the multiple sets of dishes is not for kosher/non-kosher, but maybe your grandma used them that way. It is to ensure that meat and dairy products are not eaten or stored on the same dish. This was done in ancient times for health/sanitary reasons, as cleaning/washing were minimal at best. My Grandma did this and that's where I learned "milchadech" and "flechadech" from her in Yiddish.
Re: Happy Hanukkah
Kosher, non kosher and Passover.G26ster wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 11:07 pm The reasons for the multiple sets of dishes is not for kosher/non-kosher, but maybe your grandma used them that way. It is to ensure that meat and dairy products are not eaten or stored on the same dish. This was done in ancient times for health/sanitary reasons, as cleaning/washing were minimal at best. My Grandma did this and that's where I learned "milchadech" and "flechadech" from her in Yiddish.
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Not a deli, but there was a kosher butcher in the Tom Thumb by UTD. They had knishes and similar foods most of the times I was in there. Good salami, which is what I went for.G26ster wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 1:03 pm Having grown up in NYC on "Lawn Giland," in a Jewish family, there were two fabulous Jewish Delis in my neighborhood. Alas, that was the '50s and they are gone now. Are there any true Jewish Delis anywhere in the DFW area? I'd pay big money for a big fat potato knish, and a "real" hot pastrami on rye
As an aside, it is the only place I have ever seen a shelf of kosher sushi being sold.
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Slightly off topic but the bacon grease was stabilized, filtered, then used as a machining lube. I worked in a machine shop in Utah that had pallets of the stuff and we used for drilling, milling and turning everything from aluminum, to stainless, and high carbon steels.rotor wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 7:10 pmVery true. My grandmother kept a kosher house for my grandfather but she and the rest of us were spoiled and had non-kosher as well as kosher foods. Grandma kept three sets of dishes in order to do this. And during WWII all of the bacon grease was saved for the war effort. Not sure what the military did with it but we did our share.
Interestingly enough, where I live the only place to really get kosher products were at a Lebanese grocery. Not meat but packaged kosher foods.
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All lost in a tragic kayaking incident.
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All lost in a tragic kayaking incident.
Bring back BitterClinger
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Deli news on Preston rd, near the galleria mall is what you seek my friend.G26ster wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 1:03 pm Having grown up in NYC on "Lawn Giland," in a Jewish family, there were two fabulous Jewish Delis in my neighborhood. Alas, that was the '50s and they are gone now. Are there any true Jewish Delis anywhere in the DFW area? I'd pay big money for a big fat potato knish, and a "real" hot pastrami on rye
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
Deli News:
17062 Preston Rd #100, Dallas, TX 75248
17062 Preston Rd #100, Dallas, TX 75248
CHL/LTC instructor
NRA basic pistol/home firearm safety instructor.
NRA basic pistol/home firearm safety instructor.
Re: Happy Hanukkah
Kenny and Ziggy's in Houston is amazing (has been called the best deli in Texas and is quietly killing Katz's, which is sad). They have a ton of Kosher options, but literally half of their sandwiches have cheese on them for all the goyim. They still don't do pork, but I just assume that they source their meat from the small number of kosher suppliers in the Northeast that everyone uses.
Re: Happy Hanukkah
It also made a huge difference in public health. Neurocysticercosis is still the LEADING cause of seizures in most of the world and is only really unknown in the West in modern times. Completely avoiding pigs was really the only way to avoid that disease in the ancient world, as the parasite's life cycle involves pigs and humans and actually only causes the awful form of disease in humans if you consume contaminated human feces (which is still prevalent in the age of hand santizer...people are filthy). You can't just cook your food well- you have to trust your entire city/village to do so as well.Bitter Clinger wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 9:38 pmKashrut (practice of keeping Kosher) is not well understood. The animals that are considered Kosher in the Bible are by and large vegetarian and do not eat of dead flesh. The separation between life and death, good and evil is fundamental to the practice of Judiasm. I am certain that chocolate and bacon is awesome, and I am equally certain that I will not intentionally partake.
Likewise, rabbits still carry Tularemia. I just assume that camels and rock badgers are filthy creatures that one wouldn't eat regardless.
Last edited by MaduroBU on Fri Dec 07, 2018 10:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Happy Hanukkah
True. True. Unrelated.MaduroBU wrote: ↑Fri Dec 07, 2018 10:24 amIt also made a huge difference in public health. Neurocysticercosis is still the LEADING cause of seizures in most of the world and is only really unknown in the West in modern times. Completely avoiding pigs was really the only way to avoid that disease in the ancient world, as the parasite's life cycle involves pigs and humans and actually only causes the awful form of disease in humans if you consume contaminated human feces (which is still prevalent in the age of hand santizer...people are filthy). You can't just cook your food well- you have to trust your entire city/village to do so as well.Bitter Clinger wrote: ↑Thu Dec 06, 2018 9:38 pmKashrut (practice of keeping Kosher) is not well understood. The animals that are considered Kosher in the Bible are by and large vegetarian and do not eat of dead flesh. The separation between life and death, good and evil is fundamental to the practice of Judiasm. I am certain that chocolate and bacon is awesome, and I am equally certain that I will not intentionally partake.
"You may all go to H3ll, and I will go to Texas." - Davy Crockett
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח
"Fast is fine, but accuracy is everything." - Wyatt Earp
NRA Life Member
לעולם לא תשכח