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Domaine Pinnacle Ice Apple Wine
Domaine Pinnacle's apple orchard is
located on the southern slopes of Pinnacle Mountain. The apples are
pressed while frozen, which super-concentrates the juice. Over 80
hand-picked apples go into every bottle, creating an intense, complex
and rich tas ... more info
Domaine Pinnacle Ice Apple Wine
Bottles/Case: 12
Mevushal: No
Alc/Vol: 12%
Size: 375 ml
Region:
Canada
Type: Sweet
Color: White
Varietal: Apple
Supervision: MK
General Information
Domaine Pinnacle's apple orchard is located on the southern slopes of
Pinnacle Mountain. The apples are pressed while frozen, which
super-concentrates the juice. Over 80 hand-picked apples go into every
bottle, creating an intense, complex and rich taste. Enjoy as a
delicious pre-dinner aperitif, to enhance and complement the taste of
poultry, game, spicy dishes or fine cheese, or by itself. Serve cold.
Kosher For Passover
Friday Night Kiddush
Friday Night Kiddush |
| Kosher wine (Hebrew: יין כשר,
yayin kashér) is wine produced according to Judaism's religious
law, specifically, the Jewish dietary laws (kashrut) regarding
wine. However, some non-Orthodox branches of Judaism may be more
"lenient". When kosher wine is produced, marketed and sold
commercially to Orthodox Jews, it must have the hechsher ("seal of
approval") of a supervising agency or organization (such as the "OU"
sign of the Orthodox Union), or of an authoritative rabbi who is
preferably also a posek ("decisor" of Jewish law) or be supervised
by a beth din ("Jewish religious court of law") according to
Orthodox Judaism. In general, kashrut deals with avoiding specific
forbidden foods, none of which are normally used in winemaking, so
it might seem that all wines are automatically "kosher". However,
because of wine's special role in many non-Jewish religions, the
kashrut laws specify that wine cannot be considered kosher if it
might have been used for "idolatry". These laws include Yayin
Nesekh-wine that has been poured to an idol; Stam Yainom-wine that
has been touched by someone who believes in idolatry or produced
by non-Jews. When kosher wine is yayin mevushal ("cooked" or
"boiled"), it becomes unfit for idolatrous use and will keep the
status of kosher wine even if subsequently touched by an idolater.
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