What glatt means
Glatt originally refers to a stricter standard for inspecting an animal's lungs during kosher slaughter. Colloquially, 'glatt kosher' is often used to signal a stricter overall level of kosher supervision.
For searches like glatt kosher restaurants near me, hechsher, and kosher supervision
Glatt kosher searches usually mean the diner wants a stricter, well-supervised standard than a general kosher label. MenuCheck AI helps you compare available supervision signals, from hechsher marks to cholov yisroel and pas yisroel claims.
Glatt originally refers to a stricter standard for inspecting an animal's lungs during kosher slaughter. Colloquially, 'glatt kosher' is often used to signal a stricter overall level of kosher supervision.
A hechsher is a certification mark or symbol showing which authority supervises the kitchen. Look for a visible hechsher and check whether the supervising body is named, not just implied.
Cholov yisroel refers to dairy produced under direct Jewish supervision from milking onward. Pas yisroel refers to bread and baked goods involving a Jewish role in the baking process. Both are stricter sub-standards some diners specifically look for.
MenuCheck AI pages are designed to help you compare visible signals. They are informational only and are not dietary certifications, medical advice, allergy advice, or guarantees.
| Best quick search | Use kosher near me, then check for a specific hechsher and glatt claim. |
|---|---|
| Best evidence signal | A named certifying agency with a visible hechsher, plus explicit glatt, cholov yisroel, or pas yisroel claims where relevant. |
| Kosher style vs supervised kosher | A kosher-style deli follows a cuisine tradition but is not under religious supervision; a certified kosher restaurant has an outside supervising authority. |
| Questions to ask | Who is the certifying agency? Is the restaurant glatt? Is the dairy cholov yisroel? Is the bread pas yisroel? |
| MenuCheck signal | Informational kosher confidence score with visible supervision signals to confirm directly. |
Glatt originally describes a stricter lung-inspection standard used during kosher slaughter. In everyday use, 'glatt kosher' often signals a stricter overall level of kosher supervision, though the precise meaning can vary by certifying authority.
Kosher certified means an outside supervising authority (a hechsher) actively certifies the kitchen and ingredients. Kosher style describes a cuisine or menu tradition without religious supervision, so the two are not interchangeable.
Cholov yisroel refers to dairy products produced under direct Jewish supervision starting from the milking process. Some kosher-observant diners look specifically for this standard rather than general kosher dairy certification.
Start with MenuCheck AI's kosher near me page, then look for a visible hechsher symbol and an explicit glatt claim, and confirm current supervision status directly with the restaurant when it matters.