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Kitniyot (Hebrew: קִטְנִיּוֹת, qitniyyot) is a
Hebrew word
meaning legumes.
During the P****over holiday, however, the word
kitniyot (or
kitniyos in some...
- five
grains but also
kitniyot (lit.
small things),
which refers to
other grains or legumes.
Traditions of what is
considered kitniyot vary from community...
-
permitted eating kitniyot, and in 2015 the
Conservative movement followed suit.
Sephardi Jews have
always permitted eating kitniyot on P****over. Gebrochts...
- chametz) or
kitniyot ingredients, and can be used year-around. OU-
Kitniyot: Like OU-P,
product is
Kosher for P****over but does
contain Kitniyot.
Unlike chametz...
-
people with dementia. Soy-derived
lecithin is
considered by some to be
kitniyot and
prohibited on P****over for Ashke**** Jews when many grain-based foods...
-
regardless of origin, and
despite the
practice of
their forefathers, may eat
kitniyot ("legumes") on P****over, as most
Sefardi Jews do, for it is a practice...
- high-fructose corn
syrup used by most U.S.
bottlers since the 1980s is
kitniyot (derived from grain/seeds/legumes) by the
definitions of
Jewish kosher...
- an
Orthodox rabbi to
certify that the
coffee bean was
technically not "
kitniyot" (because it was more like a
berry than a bean) and was, consequently,...
-
products that are
Kosher for P****over but with
kitniyot ingredients. Like
those marked with the OU's OU-
Kitniyot label,
these products are
permitted to Sephardi...
- in-depth
studies of the
kosher uses of gelatin, as well as
carmine and
kitniyot. One of the main
methods of
avoiding non-kosher
gelatin is to substitute...