Is Tench kosher?
Yes — Tench is kosher under Jewish dietary law.
Tench has fins and scales, which are the two requirements for kosher fish under Jewish dietary law (Leviticus 11:9-12).
Image: Photo by Mattia Nocciola · licensed CC BY-SA 4.0 · source
About Tench
See: Carps The tench or doctor fish (Tinca tinca) is a fresh- and brackish-water fish of the order Cypriniformes found throughout Eurasia from Western Europe including Britain and Ireland east into Asia as far as the Ob and Yenisei Rivers. It is also found in Lake Baikal. It normally inhabits slow-moving freshwater habitats, particularly lakes and lowland rivers. The tench or doctor fish (Tinca tinca) is a fresh- and brackish-water fish of the order Cypriniformes found throughout Eurasia from Western Europe including Britain and Ireland east into Asia as far as the Ob and Yenisei Rivers. It is also found in Lake Baikal. It normally inhabits slow-moving freshwater habitats, particularly lakes and lowland rivers. Taxonomy The tench was first formally described in as Cyprinus tinca by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae with its type locality given as "European lakes". In 1764 François Alexandre Pierre de Garsault proposed the new monospecific genus Tinca, with Cyprinus tinca as the type species by absolute tautonymy. The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classified Tinca in the subfamily Tincinae, alongside the genus Tanichthys, while other authorities classified both these genera in the subfamily Leuciscinae with other Eurasian minnows, but more recent phylogenetic studies have supported it belonging to its own family Tincidae. The Tincidae was first proposed as a name in 1878 by David Starr Jordan. Evolution The Tincidae have a rather comprehensive fossil record in Europe. They first appear during the Late...
Source: kosherfish.co/kosher-fish-list (snapshot 2025-12-19); Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0); Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 3.0)