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Getting a kosher cake was thoughtful of you, but I'm sure he'd prefer it was pareve rather than dairy in case he eats it after a meat meal. Also, he may be more stringent and not eat chalav stam, so you should look into a chalav Yisrael cake instead just to cover your bets. You don't want to spend good money on a cake only to have the birthday boy unable to eat from it.
It's kosher?Getting a kosher cake was thoughtful of you, but I'm sure he'd prefer it was pareve rather than dairy in case he eats it after a meat meal. Also, he may be more stringent and not eat chalav stam, so you should look into a chalav Yisrael cake instead just to cover your bets. You don't want to spend good money on a cake only to have the birthday boy unable to eat from it.
It's kosher?
I hadn't even thought of that.
I just had a hanker'n for chocolate.
Observant Jews never accept my invites anyway.
That's kosher (the O with the U inside is the symbol of a kosher certifying agency called the OU) and contains dairy (the D) that was not milked and bottled with Jewish supervision.
You have to know these things for when you've just had a nice bbq'ed bacon dinner and your Jewish guests want to be able to eat the desert.
Of course not.Observant Jews never accept my invites anyway.
Only the secular ones tolerate me.