DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 R. Yosef ben Neshla

Dedicated By
Simon Masri and Ezra Cattan

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 892 KB)
Foods and Substances One Must Avoid Due to Potential Risks

The Ben Ish Chai (Rabbi Yosef Chayim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in Parashat Pinchas, mentions a number of types of foods and other substances that one must not ingest, due to the potential risks posed by these items (listen to audio for precise citation):

1) One should not eat an onion or garlic if an entire night had passed since it was peeled. This applies only if it was entirely peeled; if a piece of the peel remained, then one need not be concerned. Furthermore, this danger does not arise if the onion or garlic was mixed with other foods, such as in a salad, or if had been cooked or pickled.

2) One should ensure that no human sweat ever enters his mouth, with the exception of the sweat on one's face. The Ben Ish Chai writes that ingested sweat is "poison" to the body.

3) A person should never place money in his mouth.

4) If a person salivates upon seeing food and experiences a craving to partake of it, he should ensure not to swallow that saliva; he should rather expel it from his mouth so as to avoid the harm it could cause.

5) The Talmud Yerushalmi mentions that partaking of hot bread can cause fever, Heaven forbid, and one must therefore avoid hot bread. The Ben Ish Chai records that the practice in Jerusalem was to avoid even mildly warm bread, but in his view this concern arises only with regard to bread that is exceedingly hot, as suggested by the Yerushalmi's formulation ("Chamimei De'chamimei").

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Taking Fertility or Birth Control Pills on Shabbat
May a Doctor Receive Payment for Medical Services Provided on Shabbat?
Violating Shabbat for a Woman and Newborn After Childbirth, and for Fetal Distress During Pregnancy
Violating Shabbat to Care for a Woman After Childbirth
Violating Shabbat For the Sake of a Woman in Labor
Resuscitating an Unconscious Patient on Shabbat
Using Suppositories or an Enema on Shabbat
Taking A Blood Test on Shabbat
Exercising on Shabbat
The Use of a Baby Monitor on Shabbat
Food Cooked by a Gentile on Shabbat for an Ill Patient
Turning Off a Light for an Ill Patient on Shabbat
Desecrating Shabbat to Help a Frightened Child
Violating Shabbat to Treat a Fever
Desecrating Shabbat for a Tetanus Shot or After Ingesting Something Sharp or Toxic
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found