DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Eliezer Ben Abraham Zvi
"With great admiration ro having led us in always in Torah and Mitzvot"

Dedicated By
His grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 776 KB)
Taking A Portion When Making Hallah

There is a Mitzva to take a piece of dough from the batter when one bakes and give the piece to a Kohen (Bamidbar 15:19-20). Nowadays, this Mitzva is binding only on the level of rabbinic obligation. This obligation entails taking a piece of dough when one bakes and declaring, "Harei Zu Hallah" ("This hereby is Hallah").

The Mitzva of Hallah applies only to dough produced from the five principal grains: wheat, barley, oats, rye and spelt. Furthermore, the obligation takes effect only if one bakes dough that could potentially become bread – meaning, that was kneaded with water. If one kneaded dough with only eggs, for example, the obligation does not apply. Nevertheless, even in such a case one should take Hallah, only without reciting the Beracha.

One takes Hallah with a Beracha only if he prepares dough of an amount of 1,660.5 grams, or approximately 3-3.5 lbs. Although the Ben Ish Chai (Rabbi Yosef Chayim of Baghdad, 1835-1909) indicates that one must separate Hallah with a Beracha only if he kneads a larger amount – approximately 5 pounds – nevertheless, Chacham Ovadya Yosef rules that the obligation applies even if one kneads only 3-3.5 lbs.

In the past, there was a specific amount of dough that one had to separate to properly fulfill this Mitzva. But nowadays, when the obligation applies only on the level of rabbinic enactment, one need take only a minimal amount. And since today we are all – including Kohanim – presumed Tamei (ritually impure), the Hallah is burned, rather than given to a Kohen.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Reciting "Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto" Silently
Visiting the Sick and Comforting the Mourner: Which Takes Precedence?
“Berachot Parties” to Bring Merit to Ill Patients
Some Laws and Customs of Traveling
Avoiding Anger
Shobabim – Suggestions for Maintaining a State of Purity and Avoiding Sin
May Birkat Halebana be Recited When the Moon is Covered by a Thin Layer of Cloud?
Yihud – Driving in a Car with Tinted Windows or Curtains Over the Windows
Saying "God Willing" Before Every Undertaking; the Delicate Balance Between Effort and Excessive Work (Work-A-Holics)
Some Rules About Counting Jewish Persons
The Issue of Gambling
May a Man and Woman Drive Alone Together in a Car?
Is it Improper to Date a Girl Who Has an Older Unmarried Sister?
Convening a Bet Din and Incarcerating Criminals on Shabbat
Washing One's Hands After a Haircut or After Nail-Cutting
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found