DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For The Hatzlacha of
 Binyamin Ben Yitzhak HaCohen

Dedicated By
Anonymous

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 478 KB)
Gluttonous Bites

The Shulchan Aruch writes (170:7; listen to audio for precise citation) that one should not eat a large piece of bread – the size of a Ke'beitza or larger – as doing so appears gluttonous. From the Kaf Ha'chayim's discussion of this Halacha it emerges that this applies even to taking small bites from a large piece of bread that one holds in his hand. One should cut the bread into smaller pieces before eating it.

Many conventional eating habits today appear to violate this Halacha. When one eats a sandwich, pita or piece of pizza, he takes a large piece of bread in his hand and eats directly from that large piece. The work "Mishneh Halachot" mentions that he does not allow into his yeshiva students who eat pizza, since this violates the Halacha mentioned in the Shulchan Aruch.

It is not clear why most people today do not make a point of cutting their bread into smaller pieces before eating it; it would appear that one should, indeed, be careful not to pick up an entire sandwich, pita or slice of pizza to eat from it, and should rather first cut it into smaller pieces.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May a Woman Apply Makeup During Abelut?
Nail-Cutting During Abelut
If Somebody Did Not Observe Abelut After a Parent’s Passing
If a Woman is in Mourning and Her Husband Insists That She Join Him at a Social Function
Extending a Greeting to a Mourner
Halachot of Proper Conduct in a Cemetery
Eulogies and Memorial Gatherings on Days When Tahanun is Omitted
The Obligation to Bury the Deceased
A Mourner’s Exemption From Misvot Before the Burial as it Applies to Sissit, Charity, Berachot and Sefirat Ha’omer
May a Mourner Attend His or Her Child’s Wedding?
Is it Permissible for a Mourner to Move Into a New Home or Renovate His Home?
Wigs Made From the Hair of a Deceased Person
Sheloshim – The Thirty-Day Mourning Period
May a Kohen Attend the Funeral of a Non-Jew?
Abelut: Reciting Birkat Ha'lebana, Studying Torah, Hallel, and Birkat Kohanim
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found