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Hamburg - First Time In Germany: Dairy Farm Goes 'Chalav Yisrael'

Published on:   May 25, 2010 12:27 PM
News Source:  Lubavitch.com
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Hamburg - Germany’s kosher consumers can now enjoy a full line of locally produced boutique cheeses and milk that come from a small dairy farm near the major Northern city of Hamburg.

Until now, explains Rabbi Shlomo Bistritzky, Chabad representative to Hamburg, “I’d go to the dairy farm myself, and supervise the kashrut of a small quantity of kosher milk for my family and the school’s kitchen,” he says, referring to the city’s Jewish community school.

Chabad representatives and other consumers throughout Germany who observe chalav yisrael (which requires supervision beginning at the milking process), had to do the same, or depend on dairy products imported from France. But with many German Jews now keeping kosher, and given the growing numbers of Chabad representatives across the country, a full line of chalav yisrael dairy products will fill a gap in Germany’s kosher food market.

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The dairy line has fast gained a following, and the numbers are telling. Weekly orders amount to some 300-400 liter of milk per week and 300 kilo of dairy products.

“The beauty of it is that we’ve managed to provide consumers with a truly high quality product, with excellent kosher standards, and all at very fair prices,” says Zev Lluz, the entrepreneur behind Koscheremilch. “We did this so that people find they are actually getting a superior product at a good price and have no reason not to keep the highest standards of kashruth.”

At Koscheremilch, everything from milking the cows to packaging the cheese happens on the farm. “It’s nothing like commercially processed dairy products,” says Zev, where growth hormones and more processing is used to ensure long shelf life and greater profitability.

Consumers are quick to notice the difference in the taste and texture of the dairy products. “If you leave the milk standing for a day, the cream rises to the top, and you’ve got to shake it up,” says Zev.

Koscheremilch products are now sold at shops in ten major German cities, and can be purchased online at www.koscheremilch.de .


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Read Comments (18)  —  Post Yours »

1

 May 25, 2010 at 12:56 PM Anonymous Says:

yasher koach!

2

 May 25, 2010 at 01:00 PM Anonymous Says:

what jew - in their right mind - would want to live in germany. Fehh

3

 May 25, 2010 at 01:24 PM Anonymous Says:

hamburgers and milk? lol :)

4

 May 25, 2010 at 01:29 PM anonymous Says:

An exorbitant price was paid but even in Vienna before 1938 such items were not available

5

 May 25, 2010 at 01:53 PM to 2 Says:

it is the greatest way to take revenge

6

 May 25, 2010 at 02:23 PM Anonymous Says:

you have to be crazy to drop one red cent in the economy of any of these european countries.

7

 May 25, 2010 at 02:44 PM Anonymous Says:

Those yellow caps on the milk bottles are too reminiscent of a more ominous time. Hope there's no star of david on it. Couldn't they have chosen a more appropriate color?"

8

 May 25, 2010 at 02:46 PM Anonymous Says:

Hitler, Eichamnn, Himmler Ym'S must be going nuts in their graves right now!

9

 May 25, 2010 at 02:52 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #7  
Anonymous Says:

Those yellow caps on the milk bottles are too reminiscent of a more ominous time. Hope there's no star of david on it. Couldn't they have chosen a more appropriate color?"

Get a life & stop nitpicking!

10

 May 25, 2010 at 03:16 PM 5T Resident Says:

While I personally am against any Jew VOLUNTARILY living in Germany, there is no question that this is wonderful revenge against Hitler.

11

 May 25, 2010 at 03:37 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #9  
Anonymous Says:

Get a life & stop nitpicking!

Irony is lost on you!

12

 May 25, 2010 at 03:47 PM shtick... Says:

"fill a gap in Germany’s kosher food market"
NEWSFLASH: there is no gap. It's simply not necessary. As living is that country is also not necessary. Let's not recreate jewish life in a place where jewish life is barely tolerated.

13

 May 25, 2010 at 04:38 PM Anonymous Says:

That dairy farm must have been - oif gehakte tzures .

14

 May 25, 2010 at 04:52 PM Anonymous Says:

It 's more like a Fairy-Farm .

15

 May 25, 2010 at 08:03 PM Revenge on Hitler, ym's Says:

Reply to #12  
shtick... Says:

"fill a gap in Germany’s kosher food market"
NEWSFLASH: there is no gap. It's simply not necessary. As living is that country is also not necessary. Let's not recreate jewish life in a place where jewish life is barely tolerated.

Should we abandon our fellow brothers and sisters who DO already live there? Of course it is not a place to live voluntarily; but to bring yiddishkeit to those tens of thousands who already live there is admirable and praiseworthy.

16

 May 25, 2010 at 08:16 PM wb Says:

I was in frankfurt the other week, I davend there it was a packed shul, when I asked some1 if they have chulev yisroal he went up to the fridge n bought me a bottle, I was amazed,
@ a side point: it was funny how some1 next 2 me was davening in a siddur and even saying kadish without a yarmulka, untill some1 sitting close 2 him realized and alerted him, so he was like: OH SORRY ran 2 the door took out of the box a yarmulka n a couple clips n continued,,
I had a good laugh!

17

 May 25, 2010 at 09:17 PM shtick... Says:

Reply to #15  
Revenge on Hitler, ym's Says:

Should we abandon our fellow brothers and sisters who DO already live there? Of course it is not a place to live voluntarily; but to bring yiddishkeit to those tens of thousands who already live there is admirable and praiseworthy.

Well, "tens of thousands" live there because they chose Germany over Israel perhaps, when they left Russia and I can't imagine that all those jews live there involuntarily. Becoming chalav yisroel mahmirim wasn't and probably still isn't their agenda. It's probably Chabad's agenda, who is emphasizing the chalav yisroel aspect, not the kosher aspect. In those countries chalav yisroel was not common. They rather had lists of local products that were acceptable (see Switzerland now)That doesn't mean that stricter kashrus should not be implemented when possible. I'm not bashing even this initiative on chalav yisrael, but proceed with caution. It looks ostentatious. And for that, my friend, there is very little tolerance, especially in countries like Germany, where you may think that one is taking '"revenge on Hitler ym's" by doing this, but Hitler is gone but his people are not. And they don't like to know that what we do is take revenge in their country. Leave them and leave them alone.

18

 May 25, 2010 at 09:17 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #16  
wb Says:

I was in frankfurt the other week, I davend there it was a packed shul, when I asked some1 if they have chulev yisroal he went up to the fridge n bought me a bottle, I was amazed,
@ a side point: it was funny how some1 next 2 me was davening in a siddur and even saying kadish without a yarmulka, untill some1 sitting close 2 him realized and alerted him, so he was like: OH SORRY ran 2 the door took out of the box a yarmulka n a couple clips n continued,,
I had a good laugh!

You , by any chance play the Numbers game .?

19

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