Products without kosher certification requirements
Products without kosher certification requirements are foods, drinks, and food products that do not require kosher certification or a hechsher to be considered kosher. Products that are kosher without a hechsher may nonetheless need a hechsher during Passover.[1][2]
List of products without hechsher requirements
| Product | Notes | 
|---|---|
| Aluminum foil | |
| Applesauce | Plain only, even with high fructose corn syrup and vitamins | 
| Baking powder | |
| Baking soda | |
| Barley | |
| Beer | domestic, unflavored | 
| Bran | unprocessed | 
| Buckwheat | |
| Carob powder | |
| Cocoa powder | |
| Coffee | unflavored | 
| Corn meal | |
| Corn powder | |
| Corn starch | |
| Dish washing gloves | |
| Farina | |
| Grains | |
| Honey | pure, unflavored | 
| Lentils | raw | 
| Lip gloss | even flavored | 
| Molasses | unflavored | 
| Mushrooms | sliced or unsliced | 
| Oats | |
| Oven cleaner | |
| Paper | |
| Plastic | |
| Popcorn kernels | |
| Rice | raw or parboiled | 
| Salt | |
| Silver polish | |
| Split peas | |
| Sugar | |
| Tea | unflavored | 
| Water | unflavored, even with fluorides | 
See also
References
- ^ "NO HECHSHER REQUIRED". Star-K. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
- ^ "Food that Doesn't Require Kosher Certification". Kashruth Council of Canada. Retrieved 2023-04-12.