DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 512 KB)
Do Pickled Vegetables Need To Be Prepared By A Jew In Order To Be Kosher

Is it permitted to eat pickled vegetables prepared by a non-Jew?

The general prohibition known as Bishul Akum forbids partaking of foods prepared by gentiles. Even if the food is unquestionably kosher, if a gentile turned on the fire and cooked the food it is forbidden for consumption. Now a fundamental principle in Halacha establishes that "Kavush Harei Hu Ke'mevushal" – pickling has the same status as cooking. Halacha considers the process of soaking a food in water or vinegar for a twenty-four period equivalent to cooking. Perhaps, then, we should forbid pickled vegetables prepared by gentiles on the grounds of Bishul Akum; since pickling is equivalent to cooking, if a gentile pickles a vegetable it should become forbidden like any food cooked by a gentile.

In truth, however, this is not the case. Although in other areas of Halacha we do, indeed, equate pickling with cooking, this equation does not apply to the prohibition of Bishul Akum. This prohibition forbids only foods that were actually cooked by a gentile, and does not include foods that underwent a process of pickling through the hands of a gentile.

One might, however, argue that we should still forbid vegetables pickled by a gentile because of an entirely different issue, namely, the concern that the utensil in which he pickles the vegetables had been previously used in the preparation of non-kosher food. If non-kosher food was cooked in this utensil, the food's taste will be emitted during the pickling process and absorbed by the pickled vegetables. Perhaps, then, we should forbid the consumption of foods pickled by a gentile because it may likely contain the taste of forbidden food.

Chacham Ovadia Yoseph rules that this need not concern us, as we may presume that the utensil used for pickling had not been used with non-kosher food within the previous twenty-four hours. Absorbed taste in a utensil after twenty-four hours becomes Pagum, or foul-tasting, and, according to Halacha, can no longer render a food non-kosher. Therefore, even had the utensil been used for non-kosher food at some point in the past, whatever taste absorbed in the utensil has most likely become Pagum, and therefore has no Halakhic effect on the vegetables pickled in this utensil.

In conclusion, then, one may eat pickles and other pickled vegetables prepared by gentiles.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Yom Tob – Using Electrical Appliances; Asking a Gentile to Turn on an Appliance; Riding Elevators
Reciting Birkat Ha’ilanot as Early as Possible in the Month of Nissan
Pesah – Halachot of the Afikoman; Reciting Hallel Before Hasot
Pesah – Mosi Masa
Pesah – Drinking After the Afikoman; The Third and Fourth Cups of Wine
Pesah – Refraining From Roasted Meat on the Night of the Seder
Pesah – What Should One Eat For Marror?
Pesah – The Proper Text for “Min Ha’zebahim U’min Ha’pesahim”
Passover- Halachot of Maggid at the Seder
How to Do Heseba at the Seder
Pesah – Heseba (Leaning) Nowadays
Pesah – Within How Much Time Must One Drink Each of the Four Cups of Wine?
Passover – Eating at the Siyum on Ereb Pesah; Car Repairs During Hol Ha’m’o’ed
Passover – The Spiritual Lights That Come Down at the Seder
Passover – Halachot of Birkat Ha’mazon at the Seder
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found