Neither of these factors affects the kosher or non- kosher meat sold at Hiller's, said Jim Hiller, the chain's owner. "I know where the beef we sell comes from," he said, "and that beef is kept healthy until the moment it's slaughtered. "There is no evidentiary link between BSE and mus- cle meat — steaks, loins and chops," Hiller said. 'And, instead of using 'tubed' ground beef, which could have come from many sources, we grind our own ground beef from the same steaks, loins and chops we sell." This week, Hiller's began adding fresh organic beef to its meat offerings. This comes from cattle fully certified as completely vegetable-fed. "That will eliminate any concerns whatsoever," Hiller said. Kosher Regulations Kosher meat would never include a "downer" to begin with. 'An animal that is a 'downer' would not be used," said Rabbi Avrom Pollack, president of the Baltimore- based Star-K, a major international kosher-certification agency. A shochet, or ritual slaughterer, would never accept a visibly sick cow, such as the infected cow found in Washington, industry insiders -say. If the animal were sick, it could not be considered kosher. In addition, animals raised for kosher meat are grain- fed only. Kosher consumers are further protected because of the way kosher beef is slaughtered, said Sam Duben, kosher butcher at the Orchard Lake and Maple Farmer Jack supermarket. Kosher slaughterers first slit the animal's throat, Duben said. "A kosher butcher who shechts [cuts] the meat first takes the brain away," Duben said. "That's where the disease comes from. "Then they drain the blood. So even if there was a disease, it couldn't come into the meat." Non-kosher slaughter methods include shooting or stunning an animal in the head, which causes brain matter, where BSE resides, to be scattered to other parts of the body. According to the Torah, Jews may not eat certain parts of a cow, including the sciatic nerve, various mem- branes, attachments to the liver, and even some organs — even if everything else is kosher about the cow. Consequently, the laws of kosher "mitigate against the possibility of disease," said Rabbi Menachem Genack, rabbinic administrator of the kosher division of the Orthodox Union (OU), which supervises the kosher status of 275,000 products worldwide. Discerning Shoppers Farmer Jack has seen no decrease in sales of kosher meat, Duben said. "I've always bought kosher meat," said Barbara Jonas of Bingham Farms, as she chose several packages of ground beef. "My family doesn't eat a ton of meat, mostly roast, lean hamburger, boneless chicken breasts. I guess I'm worried about mad cow disease, but kosher meat is slaughtered differently." Added customer Carol Weberman of West Bloomfield, "I always buy kosher meat, wherever I am. I'm not worried." At the Hungarian Kosher Grocery in Skokie, Ill., one of the nation's largest kosher food supermarkets, store managers have posted new signs reassuring customers that, in light of the recent scare and media hoopla over mad cow disease, kosher beef is safer than non-kosher meat. "Some people are paranoid. You tell them something on television, and they think that's the way it is," said Sandor Kirsche, the supermarket's owner. Kirsche said he had expected a drop in demand for kosher beef because of the mad cow scare but added that he still is seeing his typical $25,000 in weekly beef sales. Abe Hollander, manager of the meat department at Supersol in Lawrence, N.Y., another major kosher out- let, says he, too, has fielded questions from worried cus- tomers. But if the mad cow outbreak remains confined to a )) few states, he says, "it should have no effect whatsoever on the kosher beef industry. "I don't pay any attention to it," Hollander said. Hoping For A Boom Menachem Lubinsky, president of Integrated Marketing Communications, which produces the annual Kosherfest trade show in New York, says he expects that the mad cow scare will boost sales of kosher beef the same way that several outbreaks of salmonella in recent years sent kosher poultry profits soaring. Lubinsky, also editor of Kosher Today, said some retail- ers told him they anticipate a rise in the sale of kosher beef to people who don't keep kosher. In Canada, which experienced a mad cow scare of its own last year, sales of kosher beef dropped less than those of the non-kosher products, Shlomo Shem-Tov, plant manager of Shefa Meats in Toronto, told the New York Jewish Week. "It definitely slowed down a little bit — [but] it wasn't major." Shem-Tov said the manager of a Toronto grocery store told him that "some people who usually bought non-kosher meat, went into the kosher section," feeling there was "less risk" by buying kosher. Still, even assurances by experts that kosher meat is safe won't alleviate all fears. Said Atlanta's Gilmer: "Someone at the - Shabbos table Friday said they were afraid of eating meat. I think you might see people try to eat less meat. Maybe people will eat more chicken. "But I have no reason to believe that kosher meat isn't better. It is better." Rabbi Sanford Abramowitz, president of Zalman's Glatt Kosher, a wholesaler of premium kosher cuts to supermarkets in the East and Midwest that claims a 25 percent stake in the kosher beef market, agreed. Only 35-40 percent of the cows that arrive at kosher slaughterhouses end up being used, he said, because many do not meet kashrut standards because of other health issues, such as diseased lungs. "I heard that non-kosher butchers are going to start using the same methods we do," said Farmer Jack's Duben. Gabriella Burman of the Atlanta Jewish Times, sister pub- lication of the Detroit Jewish News, contributed to this report. Butcher Closes Dexter-Davison Kosher Meats shuts its doors for now. DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer T he only female kosher butcher in metropolitan Detroit is ceasing opera- tions — at least for the time being. "We are closing our business at this time due to several freezer breakdowns and difficulty settling with the insur- ance company," said Sherry Gilman, proprietor of Dexter-Davison Kosher Meats. The Oak Park area suffered two power outages last fall. In addition to Gilman's business, which is located at 10 Mile and Coolidge roads, the out- ages also caused considerable losses at One Stop Kosher market and Zeman's New York Kosher Bakery, both on Greenfield Road. Gilman purchased Dexter-Davison Kosher Meats late in 1999. Before tak- ing over management of the store, she worked several months without a salary for its former owner, Eugene Feldman. "She has worked very hard, but she's had a convergence of bad luck," said Rabbi David Nelson of Oak Park's Congregation Beth Shalom. Rabbi Nelson has worked as mash- giach (supervisor of kashrut) at the butcher shop since Gilman took over, Without receiving a salary. "She is a fabulous worker and a loyal friend," he said. "I have never had a steak as good as her steak, and I have never been in a place as clean." The store's existence also spoke well of the Conservative movement, he said, showing that "we also have strong convictions about kashrut." "I'm hopeful that all her experience and hard work will pay off in the future," Rabbi Nelson said. I 1 1/16 2004 35