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kosher-style

American  
[koh-sher-stahyl] / ˈkoʊ ʃərˌstaɪl /

adjective

  1. (of a cuisine, restaurant, etc.) featuring traditional Jewish dishes, but not adhering to the dietary laws.

    kosher-style cooking.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Have the kiwi cheesecake at the Cuban bakery for dessert, after a kosher-style burrito or the mititei at the Romanian diner, after sitting through a Fellini marathon at a movie revival house fitted out like a Pharaoh’s palace.

From Los Angeles Times

The sharpness of green tomatoes means you’re well on your way to pickles, in the form of relish or kosher-style with dill.

From Washington Post

As a writer who hasn’t been back to her camp, Young Judaea, in New Hampshire, in 25 years, I signed up to learn what’s moving Jews to opt for uncomfortable bunk beds and kosher-style mess halls, in lieu of a real vacation.

From New York Times

Student manager Matt Altman says the Jewish student life group offers free “kosher-style matzah ball soup in chicken and vegetable options.”

From Washington Times

And here — amid the kosher grocery and the kosher restaurant and the kosher-style deli, and where the knotted fringes of tzitzit are familiar features at the corners of the garments of the Orthodox who walk through the area just before sundown Friday evenings — it didn’t require social media for the news of the shooting at the Tree of Life to spread.

From Los Angeles Times