DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 610 KB)
The Beracha On Gefilte Fish and Cheesecake

What Beracha does one recite over gefilte fish?

Of course, as we all know, over fish one generally recites the Beracha of She'hakol. Nevertheless, the question was raised as to whether gefilte fish might be different because it consists of flour or matza meal. The answer that is given involves a fundamental principle in the rules of Berachot: although generally we always consider flour to be the primary ingredient, such that foods containing flour require the Beracha of Mezonot, this applies only if the flour is added for the purpose of contributing taste or nourishment. When flour is added to a food purely to serve as a paste to hold the food together, then it is not perceived as the food's primary ingredient. And since the flour or matza meal in gefilte fish serves precisely this purpose – to hold the pieces of fish together – one recites over gefilte fish the Beracha of She'hakol, just as one does over fish generally.

With this principle in mind, let us turn our attention to the question of the Beracha to be recited over cheesecake. Cheesecake is generally made with a thin crust at the bottom. Should that crust be considered the primary ingredient, such that cheesecake would require Mezonot, or would cheesecake resemble gefilte fish in this respect, and warrant the recitation of She'hakol? Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Jerusalem, 1900-1995) ruled that since the crust clearly is not made for the purpose of keeping the cake together – after all, the cheesecake would retain its consistency even without the crust – it is, indeed, seen as the primary ingredient. Therefore, over cheesecake one recites the Beracha of Mezonot.

Summary: A food item containing flour generally requires the Beracha of Mezonot, unless the flour is added only for the purpose of consistency. Therefore, over gefilte fish one recites She'hakol, whereas over cheesecake one should recite Mezonot.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Sephardic Custom Concerning the "Yihud" of a Bride and Groom
The Wedding Ceremony – The Proper Pronunciation of “Al Yedeh Hupa Be’kiddushin”; the Custom to Break a Glass
Reciting Sheva Berachot After Sundown of the Seventh Day After a Wedding
Reciting Sheba Berachot at a Meal That Was Not Specifically Prepared for the Bride and Groom
May a Person Who Did Not Eat at a Sheba Berachot Celebration Recite One of the Berachot?
Sheba Berachot – If Somebody Did Not Eat Bread at the Meal, Reciting the Berachot Seated
Are the Sheba Berachot Recited if the Bride and Groom Did Not Eat?
Reciting the Sheba Berachot if the Bride and Groom are Not Present
Nidda – Abstaining During “Onat Ha’hodesh” and “Onat Hahaflaga”
The Obligation to Abstain From Relations at the Time When the Wife is Likely to Become a Nidda
The “Tikkun Ha’kelali” – Repairing the Damage Caused by Making Oneself Impure
The Proper Procedure for Sheba Berachot That is Not Held in the Couple’s Home
Making Weddings at Night
Does Dandruff in the Hair Disqualify a Woman’s Immersion in a Mikveh?
Understanding The Beracha of ‘VeTzivanu Al Ha’Arayot’ At The Wedding Ceremony
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found