[Avodah] Vegan Restaurant Without Hashgacha
Prof. Levine
larry62341 at optonline.net
Thu Oct 15 05:14:40 PDT 2020
From today's OU kosher halacha yomis
Q. There is a vegan restaurant in my community, but it does not have
hashgacha. Someone told me, that you can go in and order a coffee and
roll because these are made on dedicated equipment and nothing can go
wrong. Is one permitted to do so?
A. No. Rolls may contain non-kosher oils, stabilizers and
emulsifiers. Though unlikely, coffee may be made on non-kosher
equipment. Even if the kosher status of the coffee and rolls was
verified, entering an uncertified vegan restaurant, which sells
kosher and non-kosher products, may appear suspicious to an onlooker.
Igeros Moshe (OC II:40) discusses this very issue, whether one may
enter a non-kosher restaurant to purchase foods that are known to be
kosher? He writes that this would be a violation of both maris ayin
(literally, ?the vision of the eye?, but the intent is causing the
observer to become lax in their Torah observance) and chashad
(literally suspicious, which means that the person?s reputation may
be compromised). There is an additional concern with entering a
non-certified vegan restaurant. The observer may assume that all
vegan restaurants are kosher, and not realize that the consumer?s
interest was limited to one or two kosher items. Thus, in addition to
maris ayin and chashad at a vegan restaurant, there is also a
possible violation of ?lifnei iver lo si?tain michshol? ? causing
another Jew to ?stumble? and eat non-kosher. As such, frequenting a
vegan restaurant is more serious than entering a non-kosher
restaurant, as lifnei iver lo si?tain michshol is not a concern with
a non-kosher restaurant since the non-kosher status is well known.
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From today's OU kosher halacha yomis</div>
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<em><strong></strong></em>
<p><strong><strong>Q. There is a vegan restaurant in my community,
but it does not have
<em>hashgacha</em>. Someone told me, that you can go in and order a
coffee and roll because these are made on dedicated equipment and
nothing can go wrong. Is one permitted to do so?</strong></strong></p>
<em><em><em></em></em></em></td>
</tr>
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</td>
</tr>
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<p>A. No. Rolls may contain non-kosher oils, stabilizers and
emulsifiers. Though unlikely, coffee may be made on non-kosher
equipment. Even if the kosher status of the coffee and rolls was
verified, entering an uncertified vegan restaurant, which sells kosher
and non-kosher products, may appear suspicious to an onlooker.
Igeros Moshe (OC II:40) discusses this very issue, whether one may
enter a non-kosher restaurant to purchase foods that are known to be
kosher? He writes that this would be a violation of both
<em>maris ayin</em> (literally, ?the vision of the eye?, but the
intent is causing the observer to become lax in their Torah observance) and
<em>chashad</em> (literally suspicious, which means that the person?s
reputation may be compromised). There is an additional concern with
entering a non-certified vegan restaurant. The observer may assume
that all vegan restaurants are kosher, and not realize
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