The Jerusalem Post

How the US capital got a bunch of new kosher restaurant­s

- • By BEN SALES

For years, the United State’s capital had only one full-fledged kosher restaurant. But as of this month, that changed. The clergy at Ohev Shalom-The National Synagogue, a Washington DC Modern Orthodox congregati­on, have given kosher certificat­ion to three vegan restaurant­s in the District (along with two others in the suburbs). Leading the effort is Maharat Ruth Friedman, a member of the synagogue clergy, along with synagogue Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld.

“We have never seen such a positive response to anything we’ve done in our lives,” said Herzfeld. “People are clamoring for more opportunit­ies and ways to eat kosher. Basically, the job of the religious leaders of synagogues is to help our congregant­s keep Jewish law, so we felt this is something we could do for the community.”

For more than a decade, DC had only one kosher restaurant. Eli’s, a meat deli that opened in 2003 and shut its doors a decade later. The same owner opened Char Bar, also with a meat-centric menu, at the beginning of the following year.

Along the way, there have been other kosher ventures. Sixth and Rye, a food truck launched by the historic Sixth and I Synagogue, ran for several months in 2011. Another kosher food truck, Brooklyn Sandwich Co., opened in 2016 and still parks around town. Nosh, a kosher deli option at George Washington University, closed in 2012. Soupergirl, serving – you guessed it – soup, salad and sides but not entrees, has two locations in the city. DC’s suburbs also boast a selection of kosher restaurant­s.

But now, the number of kosher restaurant­s in the District where you can sit down and order a full meal has tripled. Evolve and Vegaritos are within a couple miles of Ohev Shalom in northern D.C., and Khepra’s Raw Food Juice Bar is close to the National Mall.

Two more are over the border in Maryland: Sweet and Natural, and Everlastin­g Life.

“The most significan­t reason [to become kosher] was because of the number of people requiring or asking whether we were kosher,” said Baruch Ben-Yehudah, who owns Evolve and Everlastin­g Life, and affiliates as a Hebrew Israelite. “As a vegan and as a restaurant with a reputation for serving healthy food and doing what we can to elevate the eating experience, this is consistent with what we set out to do.”

This is Friedman’s first time heading a kosher certificat­ion operation. Beyond the expanded kosher options, she appreciate­s the new offerings as a longtime vegetarian.

“I think it’s a really interestin­g process,” said Friedman, who was ordained at Yeshivat Maharat, the first institutio­n to ordain Orthodox women as clergy. “I’ve been a vegetarian for 23 years, and it’s very important to me personally that we’re making food that is healthy and that doesn’t mistreat animals more available to me.”

Vegan restaurant­s are a natural fit for kosher certificat­ion because they don’t serve – and therefore don’t mix – meat and dairy products. They also do not serve non-kosher dishes like pork and shellfish, or meat and chicken that weren’t slaughtere­d under kosher supervisio­n. And because some vegans take their dietary restrictio­ns as seriously as kosher-keeping Jews, the restaurant­s are already used to being sticklers for the rules.

But Herzfeld said there are still plenty of ways for a vegan restaurant to not be kosher. Evolve had to change its wine menu to only serve kosher-certified wines. Some vegan restaurant­s also use unkosher varieties of wine or vinegar while cooking. Jewish law also prohibits some foods cooked by a nonJew – a restrictio­n restaurant­s can circumvent, for example, by having a Jewish person light the pilot light on a stove. And kosher laws demand a closer inspection for bugs in produce than many typical restaurant­s are used to.

“Just because it’s vegan doesn’t mean there aren’t issues involved in it,” Herzfeld said. “We looked at other restaurant­s, and some were difficult to deal with.”

The kosher supervisor at Char Bar, who asked to remain anonymous as he is not the restaurant’s manager, told JTA he’s not worried about the increased competitio­n. He said the vegan restaurant­s largely serve a different market.

“This is a fleishig place,” he said, using the Yiddish word for “meat.” “Vegan is vegan. Fleishig is fleishig. People who want vegan can have vegan. I seriously doubt it would affect Char Bar at all.”

Friedman’s role, however, has led one industry expert to reject the kosher certificat­ions. Rabbi Yosef Wikler, publisher of the monthly Kashrus Magazine, which covers kosher food and cooking practices, objects to Friedman, a woman, being in charge of kosher certificat­ion.

Unless she steps down, Wikler plans to remove Herzfeld and Friedman’s local rabbinic organizati­on, the Beltway Vaad, from his annual list of kosher-certifying agencies. Both clergy are members of the Beltway Vaad, but their certificat­ion of the vegan restaurant­s is not occurring under the Vaad’s auspices. (Char Bar is certified by a different authority, the Vaad Harabanim of Greater Washington.)

“A kashrus agency has to abide by traditiona­l Orthodox procedures,” Wikler told JTA, using the Hebrew noun form of the word “kosher.” “[In] the Orthodox world, until today, the only people who certify traditiona­l kosher certificat­ion are men rabbis ordained as rabbis and no one else. Being in charge of a kosher organizati­on, you have to make Jewish legal decisions that only a rabbi is entitled to make.”

But Rabbi Moshe Elefant, COO of the kosher certificat­ion department at the Orthodox Union, the largest kosher certifier in the country, said there’s no problem with a woman running a kosher certificat­ion operation.

“The one that takes care of the kashrut in the kitchen is my wife as well,” he said.

Elefant added that he questioned the sustainabi­lity of using volunteer, unpaid kosher supervisor­s – which Friedman and Herzfeld are doing – but stressed that he was not commenting on the kosher certificat­ion itself.

Friedman and her colleagues have already had to contend with challenges to their qualificat­ions: The Orthodox Union and Rabbinical Council of America, two large umbrella Orthodox groups, both issued bans on Orthodox women clergy in recent years. But she doesn’t focus on the criticism.

And she and Herzfeld both emphasized that they are doing this as a service to their congregant­s and local community. If someone doesn’t want to eat at the restaurant­s, they said, they don’t have to.

“These are not the types of things that bother me,” Friedman said. “Ultimately, folks are going to choose whether they want to rely on it.” – JTA

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? MAHARAT RUTH FRIEDMAN with the manager of Khepra’s Raw Food Juice Bar, a vegan restaurant that she and Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld recently certified kosher.
(Courtesy) MAHARAT RUTH FRIEDMAN with the manager of Khepra’s Raw Food Juice Bar, a vegan restaurant that she and Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld recently certified kosher.

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