Kashrut

From Un-Kosher to Kosher

Making a kitchen kosher

By Lise Stern

Kashering, the act of making a kitchen kosher, is a complicated process and is best done in consultation--or even cooperation--with a rabbi. The following article offers a basic introduction to the terms and concepts involved in kashering. Also, in this and subsequent articles on kashering, the author frequently references Orthodox and Conservative legal opinions; she omits the remaining denominations because they do not have the same sort of detailed halakhic (Jewish law) rulings on this issue. Reprinted with permission from How to Keep Kosher (HarperCollins).  

 

Kashering your kitchen is at least a two-day process. You will need to clean all the ele­ments and then wait 24 hours before kasher­ing them. This goes back to the rule [known as] eino ben yomo, "not of the day"--a full 24-hour day must pass in order for the various parts of your kitchen to lose any unkosher flavor they might have absorbed.

 

After 24 hours, those flavors are considered ta'am lifgam, having a bad taste. This minimizes the chance that traces of treif [unkosher food] could still contaminate the kitchen while it is being kashered.

As It Is Absorbed...

The basic rule of kosherizing is k'volo kakh polto, an expression that means, literally, "as it is absorbed, so is it purged." (Interestingly, the same expression means "easy come, easy go"; not necessarily the case when it comes to kashering.) In other words, the way a potentially kosher item became unkosher determines how you can make it kosher.

 

There are four methods of kashering. Because a heat source is what caused various items to become unkosher (an oven, a pot, a pan), heat is used to remove unkosher substances from these items. And some items cannot, by nature, be purged.

 

The methods of koshering include the following:

 

Libun is used for items heated directly on a fire, such as a grill, baking pans used in an oven, or frying pans used to heat oil. The word libun means "purify" and comes from the same Hebrew root word for "white." There are two types of libun:

 

1)      Libun Gamur, "complete purification." When the term libun is used by itself, this is the kind of libun being referred to. Libun means heating a pan or grill until it is red hot. To heat pans until they are red hot usually requires a blowtorch, as your standard oven does not reach temperatures that are hot enough, and this is a procedure most often performed by a rabbi.

 

2)      Libun Kal, "simple purification." Heating metal hot enough that paper (traditionally, a broom straw) touching it scorches. When an oven goes through a self-cleaning cy­cle, it gets this hot. This is a method you might use on a frying pan.

 

Hag'alah, "scouring" or "scalding," is used for items such as pots or flatware that have become treif through contact with hot liquids. Hag'alah means kashering the item in a large pot of boiling water.

 

Irui, "infusion," is kashering by pouring boiling water over something, a method used for countertops and sinks.

 

Milui v'irui, "filling and infusing," means soaking. It is a procedure reserved only for glassware, and is used most often for Pesach [Passover].

Some Details

The laws of purging don't exactly match the laws of absorption. A baking pan, for ex­ample, doesn't simply need to be heated in an oven as you would bake it; it needs to be heated until it is red hot, which in most cases would damage the pan. The liquid that in­fused your forks with treif was probably not boiling at the moment the fork pierced the ham, but such higher heat ensures that all treif flavors are removed.

 

Some materials are undebatably kasherable, namely stone, such as granite and mar­ble; metal; wood; and natural rubber. Other materials are subject to debate, both within the Orthodox movement and between Orthodox and Conservative. Plastics, such as Formica countertops, melamine (Melmac) dishes, and nonstick pans such as Teflon are debatable, as is glassware used for baking, such as Pyrex.

 

Earthenware, which includes stoneware (contrary to its name, it is not made of stone, but is a category of ceramics), and enameled porcelain are not usually kasherable, but there are some exceptions.

 

Selections from How to Keep Kosher, by Lise Stern. Copyright (c) 2004 by Lise Stern. Used by permission of HarperCollins Publishers Inc.