DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 864 KB)
Is It Permissible To Smell/Inhale Dairy Products Within 6 Hours After Eating Meat

Halacha forbids partaking of milk or dairy products within six hours of eating meat.  But is it also forbidden to smell dairy foods within six hours of eating meat?  For example, may a person go over to fresh pie of pizza to smell it, if he had eaten meat less than six hours earlier?

 

Rabbi Feivel Cohen (contemporary), in his work Badei Ha'shulchan (p. 50), rules that it is forbidden to smell dairy foods within six hours of eating meat, as a precaution lest one actually eat the dairy food after smelling it.

 

Chacham Yishak Yosef, however, as recorded in Yalkut Yosef (Yoreh Dei'a, vol. 3, p. 355), disagrees and allows one to smell dairy products within six hours of eating meat.  He draws proof from the Halacha allowing a person who had recently eaten meat to eat parve foods at the same table with people eating dairy foods.  (This Halacha was discussed in an earlier edition of Daily Halacha – "Sitting with People Eating Dairy Foods, or Preparing Dairy Foods, After One Has Eaten Meat," dated August 9, 2006.)  Just as Halacha allows one who has eaten meat to sit at a table where dairy foods are served, and is not concerned lest he partake of the dairy foods, so should we allow a person to smell dairy foods after eating meat.  It is therefore permissible to smell dairy foods within six hours of eating eat, and we are not concerned that one might then come to partake of the dairy food.

 

Summary: Although one may not eat milk or dairy products within six hours of eating met, it is permissible to smell dairy products within six hours of eating meat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Sisit: Closing the Sides of a Tallit
Sisit: Do Collared Shirts and Frocks Require Sisit?
Sisit: If a Corner of the Tallit Became Rounded
Sisit-Reciting a New Beracha After Removing the Tallit
Sisit: Must One Wear Sisit Over His Garments
Sisit: Checking the Strings Each Morning
“Lazut Sefatayim” – Avoiding Rumors and Suspicion
Ascertaining One’s Children’s Lineage
Honoring One’s Father in the Synagogue
The Obligation of “Ma’ake” – Building a Fence Around a Roof or Porch
Halachot at the Time of Passing
If a Person Marries a Mamzeret
If a Person Declares Himself a Mamzer
Choosing a Proper Spouse; Breaking an Engagement Due to Financial Considerations
Is it Permissible to Sell Pet Food?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found