I have started using quinoa a lot this past year – it’s a great way to liven up a dish – and its kosher for pesach! As the article from kashrut.com mentions, the ancient harvest brand does not need to be checked and I find its readily available in stores that carry quinoa. Its never to early to begin pesach planning!
Here is a link to ancient harvest’s site with some recipes
Here is a link to a Trader Joes site with some recipes – trader joe’s brand is made by Ancient Harvest and is also fine without checking
http://www.traderjoesfan.com/Articles/Articles/Quinoa:_The_Mother_Grain/
Quonfused about Quinoa
By Arlene Mathes-Scharf, Kashrut.com
Copyright © 2009 Kashrut.com
Quinoa has become a part of the Passover diet for many observant Jews since the Star-K published an article Quinoa, The Grain That's Not, in the Kashrus Kurrents for Pesach, 1997. In this article the Star-K explains that quinoa is not related to the five types of grain that can become chometz, nor it is related to millet or rice. It is a species of goosefoot (Chenopodium) related to the beet and spinach. (http://www.hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/afcm/quinoa.html).
It is grown in the
Quinoa fills a diet hole for many people for Passover. These include people on gluten-free diets, vegetarians, and vegans. It is also a non-meat protein source for dairy-intolerant people. It has become so mainstream that Susie Fishbein has featured recipes using quinoa in her bestselling Passover cookbook that was published last year by Artscroll. Some of the companies that process quinoa do so in a chometz-free environment to enable the product to be consumed by people on a gluten-free or wheat -free diet.
The OU has written (at http://oukosher.org/index.php/passover/article/7555)
“Quinoa is not one of the five grains that can create chametz (wheat, oat, barley, spelt and rye). Nonetheless, there is a difference of opinion among Rabbinic decisors (machloketh haposkim) as to whether quinoa is considered kitniyoth (Ashkenazic custom is not to eat kitniyoth on Pesach). We suggest asking your local Orthodox Rabbi if it is or is not kitniyot.”
The custom of not eating kitiniot evolves from the fact that it is similar to chometz grains.
The question is, is quinoa kitniot or not. Rabbi Blech in Know thy Beans Kitniyos in the Modern World quotes the following characteristics of kitniot that are listed by authorities: cooked grains which may be confused with chometz, grown in fields adjacent to chometz, and ground into flour and confused with chometz. Rabbi Moshe Feinstein (in Igros Moshe O"Ch III:63) said that there is no Halachic basis to extend this to new foods. The Chicago Rabbinical Council accepts the use of quinoa that has not come in contact with chometz on the basis of this ruling. (See also http://www.kashrut.com/Passover/Quinoa/.)
The OU continues to say the following (at http://oukosher.org/index.php/passover/article/7555)
“It should be noted that although Quinoa is not grown in the same vicinity as the five chometz grains mentioned above, the processing of Quinoa is often done at the same facility where they process wheat. Therefore, if you rely on the lenient opinion and treat quinoa as non-kitniyos, we suggest that you sift through the quinoa to make sure that there are no other grains mixed in.”
My research has determined that different manufacturers provide different conditions for the packing of quinoa. This year, the Ancient Harvest plant has been checked and determined that the product is processed in chometz-free environment. Ancient Harvest states on their website “As a grain, quinoa is gluten free. Our Ancient Harvest Quinoa is grown exclusively in the high Andean Altiplano regions of
One of the other manufacturers, Arrowhead Mills packs their product on the same lines as they do flour, though on different days, after a clean up. This was confirmed by the OK who certifies this plant. The OK confirmed that Eden Foods quinoa, also under the OK, is usable for Passover, if checked before Passover.
“The Star-K tested quinoa to see if it would rise It did not, it decayed. The result was as Chazal termed, sirchon; the quinoa decayed - it did not rise.” (http://www.star-k.com/kashrus/kk-passover-quinoa.htm.) The Star-K considers quinoa to be kosher for Pesach provided it is purchased from a company that does not process chometz and the quinoa is checked before Passover.
You should always follow the advice of your own rabbi. If using quinoa, consumers are urged to carefully check grains before Pesach for extraneous matter.
Quinoa should also be rinsed to remove a bitter saponin layer that is found on the outside of the quinoa.
This information is accurate for Passover 2009.
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