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From Tibet to Vietnam, a kosher quest

For Rabbi Akiva Padwa of the KLBD, nowhere is too far to ensure kashrut.

March 1, 2018 09:05
China Aug 2010 - 3

By

Victoria Prever,

Victoria Prever

4 min read

Picture the scene. High in the grasslands of Tibet, farmers boil pans of yak milk over stoves fuelled by pungent yak manure. They are cooking the milk to extract a protein called casein which will be sold to a US manufacturer.

A truck pulls up and out steps Rabbi Akiva Padwa, director of certification and senior rabbinical coordinator for the KLBD. He’s an unlikely visitor to the mountainside, in his traditional white shirt, knee length black trousers, long socks and wispy beard.

“An American company was buying it as an ingredient for a processed cheese spread, which they sold as kosher. I thought it must be impossible for it to be kosher, so I went to check,” he explains. “The altitude was so high that when we descended the mountain in our truck, my water bottle sucked in like when you have taken it on an aeroplane.”

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