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Does honey need kosher certification? 🍯
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Rabbi Eli Gersten, OU Kosher recorder of psak and policy, breaks down the answer.🐝 Got kashrut questions about Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, or Sukkot? Drop them in the comments! #oukosher #kosher #kashrut #honey #roshhashana
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
What should I know before buying honey? Does it
need to have a hashgacha? Can I buy honey from a
roadside farm, or locally grown honey? The truth
is, it's best to buy with a Hashgacha, because
honey could be heated, it could be pasteurized,
and then the equipment that are used for the honey
need to be kosher. There could be bee parts still
left behind in the honey. So therefore, if you buy
professional honey that has a Hashgacha on it,
then you know that these issues were taken care
of. If you do want to buy from a roadside stand,
what you should look out for is to make sure that
it's not flavored. The flavor of the plant that it
gets from is not considered flavored. You know, it
could be clover honey, et cetera, but it shouldn't
have any other additional flavors added to
it. It shouldn't be heated, it should be a raw,
unpasteurized honey, and you should make sure that
it's clean. It's possible to get clean honey even
without heating it, and even without filtering it.
Oftentimes, the beekeepers, they will centrifuge
their honey to get out the pieces, and they can
also put it through a mesh. You should ask
them, make sure that it's clean. Sometimes
the honey solidifies, it crystallizes, and then
you can't really tell what's going on inside.
Make sure that it's clean honey that you could
see that there's no insect parts inside of it.