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Not related to witchcraft in any way but I have a funny story for y'all.
Okay, so as some of you know I just got back from a long road-trip across country. At one point during this trip I visited my aunt. My aunt is a Jewish girl from Long Island, New York (currently living in FL) and her husband converted to Jewdeism for her.
So, my aunt is in the kitchen getting ready to serve dinner and she calls me in to help her with a judgment call. We're having pork and she doesn't know if she should serve it on the meat china or the dairy china (you cannot mix your meats and your dairies if you're kosher, you have to have separate cookware, and eatingwere for each). I tell her to go ahead and put it on the meat china because pig is still meat even if its not kosher meat, so that's what we do.
Now we all sit down to dinner and her husband asks if he can have a glass of milk with his dinner and my aunt and I both say at the same time, "You can't have milk, that's not kosher!"
My uncle shrugs and gets a coke instead, no big deal. Meanwhile, my aunt and I are snickering behind our hands through out the rest of the meal. We even go so far as to tell some kosher jokes about what to do if you accidentally use meat plates for a dairy meal or vice versa and all that jazz.
It's now a week and a half since that dinner and my uncle still hasn't figured it out.
Okay, so as some of you know I just got back from a long road-trip across country. At one point during this trip I visited my aunt. My aunt is a Jewish girl from Long Island, New York (currently living in FL) and her husband converted to Jewdeism for her.
So, my aunt is in the kitchen getting ready to serve dinner and she calls me in to help her with a judgment call. We're having pork and she doesn't know if she should serve it on the meat china or the dairy china (you cannot mix your meats and your dairies if you're kosher, you have to have separate cookware, and eatingwere for each). I tell her to go ahead and put it on the meat china because pig is still meat even if its not kosher meat, so that's what we do.
Now we all sit down to dinner and her husband asks if he can have a glass of milk with his dinner and my aunt and I both say at the same time, "You can't have milk, that's not kosher!"
My uncle shrugs and gets a coke instead, no big deal. Meanwhile, my aunt and I are snickering behind our hands through out the rest of the meal. We even go so far as to tell some kosher jokes about what to do if you accidentally use meat plates for a dairy meal or vice versa and all that jazz.
It's now a week and a half since that dinner and my uncle still hasn't figured it out.
