Color
Is carmine kosher?
No. Carmine (cochineal) is an insect-derived red pigment, and insects are not kosher — which makes it one of the most common reasons an otherwise-clean formula fails certification.
Why it’s not that simple
Carmine is the classic hidden disqualifier:
- Carmine is extracted from insects. The Torah forbids eating insects, so carmine is not acceptable — no matter how small the quantity.
- It hides in plain sight: yogurts, candies, drinks, and baked goods, sometimes as a minor tinting component inside a color blend.
- It goes by several names on a spec sheet — carmine, cochineal extract, carminic acid, Natural Red 4, E120.
- Certified alternatives exist (beet, lycopene, paprika, anthocyanins), which is why certification, not the label, is the practical answer.
How to actually know
The only reliable way to know a specific product is kosher is a trusted kosher symbol on the package. Learn the designations — D (dairy) and Pareve (no meat or dairy) — and never rely on the ingredient panel, the brand’s reputation, or the name on the front. When you’re unsure about a product or a symbol you don’t recognize, ask your rav.
And it can change
A supplier can change a colorant between runs — supervision is what catches it.
For shoppers
Check for carmine under all its names; when a red product has no reliable symbol, don’t assume.
For manufacturers
One pigment can disqualify an otherwise clean formula — we trace every colorant to source. See our color certification →
Educational only — not a halachic ruling. Kosher status depends on the specific product and its certification, and can change. Verify the symbol and consult your rav. Reviewed by the Pure K rabbinic staff.