NY Post
That's so not kosher.

A kosher-food company is suing the Mets, claiming that it has lost a half-million dollars in profits because the team has forbidden its stands to sell snacks at Citi Field on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons.

Kosher Grill does brisk business peddling hot dogs, sausages, knishes, hamburgers, beer and other food from three portable stands around the stadium.

The owner, Kosher Sports Inc., got approval from kosher-certifying authorities to sling wieners on the Sabbath and even customized its stands so it could sell its pastrami hot dogs and other wares on Friday nights and Saturdays, the vendor said.

Snack Sabbath Flap at Citi Field

NY Post

That’s so not kosher.

A kosher-food company is suing the Mets, claiming that it has lost a half-million dollars in profits because the team has forbidden its stands to sell snacks at Citi Field on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons.

Kosher Grill does brisk business peddling hot dogs, sausages, knishes, hamburgers, beer and other food from three portable stands around the stadium.

The owner, Kosher Sports Inc., got approval from kosher-certifying authorities to sling wieners on the Sabbath and even customized its stands so it could sell its pastrami hot dogs and other wares on Friday nights and Saturdays, the vendor said.

But the Mets superseded the rabbis and caused a frankfurter fracas, never allowing the vendor to go ahead with the move, Kosher Sports claims in a lawsuit it filed last week against the team in Brooklyn federal court.

The Englewood, NJ-based company signed a 10-year deal with the team when Citi Field opened last year.

It allowed the company to sell food on Friday nights and Saturdays, when many Jews don’t work and observe a day of prayer, the suit claims.

The Mets’ decision cost the vendor more than $500,000 in lost profits last year, Kosher Sports — which is seeking $1 million in damages — claims in its lawsuit.

But the rabbi who monitors Kosher Sports’ compliance with Jewish dietary laws denies giving the company the OK to operate on the Sabbath.

“There’s no way they can be kosher if they operate on Friday nights and Saturdays,” said Rabbi Shmuel Heinemann.

The Mets, owned by the Wilpon family, which is Jewish, said Kosher Sports’ claims are “without merit.”

Kosher Sports owner Jonathan Katz declined to comment.

4 Comments

  • memyselfandI

    It makes me wonder how companies like H&H bagel on the UWS who are also certified Kosher can be open 24 hours a day. 7 days per week – how is that Kosher? I never understood that

  • Possibly

    Someone correct me if i’m wrong, but bagel place that is not owned by a Jew can be open b/c you dont need a mashgiach timidi. A meat store needs a mashgiach timidi and therefore has no posibility of being open on Shabbos.

  • lazerbeam@comcast.net

    an interesting side to this–In downtown major city there is the kosher Halavev Israel/Pas Israel Cafe and according to his lease he has to be open 52 weeks a year. What to do, the Certifying Rabbis made an arrangement similiar to selling Chumatz–and do not qute me on the details–he sells the whole business to his non-Jewish employes for a specified time and back to normal. Details of the arrangement I do not know, but All the major Orthodox Rabbium got together on this procedure.

  • picture

    The guy in the picture is Lubavitch, he davens by Rabbi Vigler in Flatbush.