I bought a gallon of bottled water from Kroger. The well water tastes that bad.
The jug has the U in a circle hechsher mark, and a “D”. My obvious question is why bottled water would be dairy. Odorless, colorless, tasteless and all that. Perhaps it is bottled in a facility that bottles milk and may have a tiny amount of milk in it?
You never know when there might be lactating microbes in it.
There’s no such thing as treif water, but at the same time, there are some people who will, given the choice, but something with a kashrut symbol, even if it doesn’t matter. I’ve seen kosher symbols on non-food items, like dish soap. Whatever.
You sure don’t want to wash your dishes in soap made from bear fat.
Here’s an interesting article about why intrinsically kosher foods might need kosher certification if they’re going to pass through some kind of processing plant or bottling plant:
http://www.aish.com/jl/m/48969006.html
Ignorance fought. Fascinating link. Thanks!
This seems more like a General Question to me, although it seems Motorgirl’s link may provide all the answers we may need. Just in case others can provide more illumination, though, I’m moving the thread from IMHO to General Questions. If the mods don’t think it’s kosher, well then I’m sure they have the resources to deal with it.
Ellen Cherry
IMHO Moderator
One possibility is that it could be a mistake. Alternatively, it shares some equipment with dairy products, even though there is probably no milk whatsoever in the water. The Orthodox Union used to denote this with “DE” for “dairy equipment” but they changed that policy a few years ago and now use “D” regardless of whether any milk is present.
I ask for a Moderator, they send me a comedian.
The master has addressed this topic here.
Doesn’t address my question, but thank you for your concern.
From the referenced article,
There may be some possibility that the facility uses dairy in some way. Whether it gets into the bottled water or not is moot, only if it comes in contact with something which is then consumed in the water.