'Nuff said.
Hallan
Well if it helps any, you've been in more comic strips than I have you've had two story arcs in Nip and Tuck to my one and a pair of single shot cameos. Even with this cameo in Goblin Hollow you still have more strips than I do.BoKiana wrote:Wait!! Wait wait wait wait!
Now Misha has visited Goblin Hollow?
That just ain't right!![]()
With that up, Misha's visited more comics than Bo.![]()
I can't let that happen. I'll have to find a way to arrange a vacation with Bo and Rachel.
But with me jobless, I can't do that.
Donations?
Apparently some take the whole pork thing very seriously. As near as I can tell, Yom Kippur is for clearing the slate with God.Namrepus221 wrote:You know, I've always kinda wondered what one would have to do to 'atone' for eating pork in Judaism.
The only jewish friend I ever had was a "Reform" which ment he didn't have to follow "kosher" dietary laws of regular Judaism as I understand it. He kinda brought it up one day when I asked him why he was eating a cheeseburger and explained how a "reform" is different in regards to the dietary laws.
Still it's a pretty funny comic RH.
True, true. Zoot's joke was below parve, but what Misha did wasn't exactly kosher either.UncleMonty wrote:While I am not of the Jewish faith myself, I'd suspect that God has a certain leniency for anyone tricked into eating pork all unaware...
But Zoot deserved what he got, with extra barbeque sauce and a pickle!!!
That's about right, from what I read. Yom Kippur is (as one site puts it) a "catch-all": The sins of the community are forgiven, all at once. (About the only sins to rate their own section in the liturgy are sins of lying; "evil tongue".)TMLutas wrote:Apparently some take the whole pork thing very seriously. As near as I can tell, Yom Kippur is for clearing the slate with God.Namrepus221 wrote:You know, I've always kinda wondered what one would have to do to 'atone' for eating pork in Judaism.
The only jewish friend I ever had was a "Reform" which ment he didn't have to follow "kosher" dietary laws of regular Judaism as I understand it. He kinda brought it up one day when I asked him why he was eating a cheeseburger and explained how a "reform" is different in regards to the dietary laws.
Still it's a pretty funny comic RH.
As Christians, we're exempt as of the New Testament: However, the "burger with cheese" thing is a real Kosher dietary law, Ralph, all the way back to the Oral Torah. Kosher law states that meat and dairy are not to be served in the same dish, and you can't very well claim that the melting cheese doesn't "seethe" into the burger, can you? (The rabbis did extend the ruling to include eating dairy with poultry, however.)RHJunior wrote:The "burger with cheese" thing, btw, is a rather gratuitous misinterpretation of the dietary law that they were not to eat the flesh of a kid "seethed (boiled) in its mother's milk." An example of people replacing God's laws with Man's tradition.
I remember seeing something on Food Network (I love the original Iron Chef and Alton Brown ok!) that kosher laws mean that meat and dairy cannot even be in the same kitchen space. The restaruant that was shown had a line literally drawn down half of it. Meat dishes were prepared on one side, dairy on the other (pastries and such using cream cheese), The line ment that neither dish was allowed to cross and "contaminate" the other dishes.Wanderwolf wrote:As Christians, we're exempt as of the New Testament: However, the "burger with cheese" thing is a real Kosher dietary law, Ralph, all the way back to the Oral Torah. Kosher law states that meat and dairy are not to be served in the same dish, and you can't very well claim that the melting cheese doesn't "seethe" into the burger, can you? (The rabbis did extend the ruling to include eating dairy with poultry, however.)RHJunior wrote:The "burger with cheese" thing, btw, is a rather gratuitous misinterpretation of the dietary law that they were not to eat the flesh of a kid "seethed (boiled) in its mother's milk." An example of people replacing God's laws with Man's tradition.
Depending on how strictly they observe kashrut (kosher), some Jewish families even use seperate utensils for meat and dairy courses.
Technically, however, it's possible to have a Kosher cheeseburger; all you have to do is use cheese that isn't cheese, or meat that isn't meat. Make either product out of soybeans, and you've reached Pareve (neutral) status, as with the first kosher Subway restaurant.
After all, soy is neither fleishik or milchik...
Yours with a fondness for latkes, (and a good kosher reuben),
The wolfish,
Wanderer
Wait, You gotta admit that both Squeezy-cheeze (the guck that comes out of a spray can) and Velvietta cheeze isn't dairy. . . . I'm not sure it's cheese at that.Wanderwolf wrote:Kosher law states that meat and dairy are not to be served in the same dish
<chuckle> No argument, Bo.:> But it does have milk, so it's milchik.BoKiana wrote:Wait, You gotta admit that both Squeezy-cheeze (the guck that comes out of a spray can) and Velvietta cheeze isn't dairy. . . . I'm not sure it's cheese at that.Wanderwolf wrote:Kosher law states that meat and dairy are not to be served in the same dish
Or food.
o.O;
I am aware that it's a long held tradition, Wanderer. However, Man's Tradition is not God's Law... no matter how old it is, how long it's been held or what traditions have been built up around it.Wanderwolf wrote:However, the "burger with cheese" thing is a real Kosher dietary law, Ralph, all the way back to the Oral Torah. (snip)RHJunior wrote:The "burger with cheese" thing, btw, is a rather gratuitous misinterpretation of the dietary law that they were not to eat the flesh of a kid "seethed (boiled) in its mother's milk." An example of people replacing God's laws with Man's tradition.
Yours with a fondness for latkes, (and a good kosher reuben),
The wolfish,
Wanderer