DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 578 KB)
Is It Permissible On Shabbat To Use A Salt Shaker That Contains Rice Or Is It Considered Sifting Which Is Prohibited On Shabbat

The question was raised concerning the status of saltshakers on Shabbat. Many people have the practice of putting some grains of rice in the saltshaker to absorb moisture; when one shakes the saltshaker, the particles of salt fall from the saltshaker while the grains of rice remain behind. At first glance, this would constitute a violation of the prohibition of Meraked. Meraked, one of the thirty-nine Melachot (categories of forbidden activity on Shabbat), means sifting – removing undesirable elements from flour by having the flour fall through the holes of the sifter while the undesirable particles remain on top, in the sifter. This is precisely what occurs in the case of a saltshaker, which allows the salt to fall while keeping the rice on top, inside the shaker.

Nevertheless, Rabbi Moshe Halevi, in his work "Tefila Le'Moshe," permits using a saltshaker on Shabbat, even if it contains rice. He arrives at this ruling on the basis of several factors. For one thing, a saltshaker, unlike a flour sifter, is not an instrument specifically designated for this purpose, of removing undesirable elements from food. Secondly, a person shaking the saltshaker does not intend for the shaker to function in the capacity of a sifter, and has in mind only that salt should fall onto his food. Finally, one uses a saltshaker during his meal, as opposed to sifting flour, which is done as part of the process of food preparation. This type of "sifting" is thus considered "Derech Achila" – a normal part of eating, which Halacha permits.

Thus, one may use a saltshaker on Shabbat, even if it contains grains of rice that are kept behind as the salt falls onto one's food.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Pesah Seder – U’rhatz
Within How Much Time Must One Eat the Masa at the Seder?
Passover- Eating Masa, Marror or Eggs on Ereb Pesah
Passover – Laws of Kadesh
Checking One’s Books for Hametz Before Pesah
Ereb Pesah – The Custom to Bake Masot; Reciting Minha Early
Eating Roasted Zeroa, Meat or Chicken at the Seder
Pesah – Bittul Hames, Preparing the Hames for Burning
Pesah – Does One Recite "She'he'heyanu" Before Searching for Hames?
Pesach - Shulchan Orech, Tzafun, Barech, Hallel and Nirtza
Passover- Eating the Charoset at the Seder
Passover- The Laws of Maror, Korech and Shulchan Orech at the Seder
Passover- Laws of "Heseiba" – Leaning at the Seder
Passover- The Procedure for Rochtza and Motzi-Matza at the Seder
The Proper Procedure for Yachatz and the Recitation of "Ha Lachma Anya" at the Seder
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found