Sababa: Kosher Israeli/middle easter food on Overton Road.
Winn Dixie: kosher canned goods as well as some other kosher products
Publix: kosher canned goods, frozen items, chicken, some bakery items as well as some other kosher products
Whole Foods: Various Kosher items especially kosher parve and gluten free
Piggly Wiggly: Very good selection of Kosher meat and cheeses available instore. Additionally they can order some rarer cuts of meat or specific cheeses.
Sexton Fish Market: Have a kosher only knife and cutting board. Make sure that you select a kosher species of fish in addition to mentioning the kosher knife.
KI Kitchen has frozen takeout meals available for purchase from the office.
We encourage community members to get their meat from a local source when possible. When not possible:
Griller's Pride: Delivered from Atlanta to the Shul parking lot once monthly. They carry sausage and some cuts of rare meat.
Communal Kashrut
Knesseth Israel as an Orthodox Synaogue is commited to following the Jewish Law as prescribed by the Halakha.As a community we do not judge anyone for how or whether they implement these laws in their homes. People have a right to grow religiously and move towards observance at a pace appropriate for them. However, it is important for people to know what the community's halachic standards are.
When you invite people to your home, which I would hope becomes a regular activity, you take upon yourself a responsibility to feed those guests food that they are halachically allowed to eat. That means keeping to community standards. In addition to making sure the food you serve is itself kosher according to community standards of kashruth, there are shabbat community standards which you need to observe regarding that food.
I hope that you find that the Kashrut standards found on the right side of this page become tools to enhance you connection to God, observance of the mitzvot and our sense of community.