Waiting Between Meals
What it means to separate meat from milk
By Lise Stern
Separating meat from milk is
one of the fundamental aspects of keeping kosher. To that end, kosher kitchens
have two sets of dishes and utensils, one for dairy and the other for meat;
some have a third for pareve meals, which means they are neither meat nor
dairy. To fully ensure the separation of milk and meat, Jewish law calls for a
waiting period between eating them. As the following article describes, customs
differ regarding the appropriate waiting time between milk and meat. Reprinted
with permission from How
to Keep Kosher (HarperCollins).
We've established that you
cannot eat meat and dairy foods together. This means that a meal is either a
meat meal or a dairy meal (or a pareve meal for that matter). You cannot even
have meat and dairy at the same table; that is, one person can't eat a bagel with
cream cheese at the same table where someone is eating fried chicken.
To clarify further, you can't
have a piece of steak on one plate, prepared without any dairy, then turn to a
second plate and chomp down on a piece of cheese, even if you've swallowed the
steak.
To ensure that meat and milk
not be eaten together in any way, it is customary to wait a certain amount of
time between meals. After eating meat, the wait time varies, but the generally
accepted amount of time to wait is six hours.
Different Traditions
Different traditions
developed as to the exact amount of time that must pass between meat and dairy
meals. Wait time is required because of the nature of meat. In The Laws of
Kashrus, Binyomin Forst explains that the sages give two primary reasons:
Meat leaves behind a fatty residue in the throat, and particles of meat might
remain between your teeth. Time is necessary for the digestive powers of saliva
to break down both that fatty residue and the meat particles.
For Orthodox Jews, the most
common wait time is six hours. According to Sephardic tradition, six hours is
not merely tradition, but halakhah, required by Jewish law. Ashkenazic
tradition says that more lenient options are also halakhically correct. Most
agree that the meat meal should be concluded with appropriate blessings,
signifying the meal is over. You should then clean and rinse your mouth and
wash your hands.
Some say one hour is
sufficient time, and this has been the accepted tradition of Dutch Jews. German
Jews follow a tradition of waiting three hours. Forst says this may be based on
the idea that in winter the time between meals is shorter; therefore, it is
acceptable to wait a shorter amount of time year round.
These are three generally
accepted wait-time traditions. However, even today, I've encountered people
who've developed their own traditions within their communities. Some wait four
hours after eating chicken, five hours after meat. Some start counting the wait
time after saying blessings, some start counting as soon as they've swallowed
the last bite of meat.
Waiting After Dairy
With dairy foods, the wait
time between dairy and meat is minimal. This is based on [the talmudic
tractate] Chullin 105a, where it says, "How long must one wait between
cheese and flesh? And he replied, Nothing at all." Still, you should eat
something like bread to effectively wipe your mouth of any milky taste, and you
should rinse your mouth and wash your hands.
Hard cheese, described as
cheese that has aged over six months, such as Swiss cheese, has a stronger
flavor and is thought to leave a fatty residue, so it requires a six-hour wait.
Selections from How
to Keep Kosher, by Lise Stern. Copyright (c) 2004 by Lise Stern. Used by
permission of HarperCollins Publishers Inc.