DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 402 KB)
Must One Recite a Beracha Over Cooked Fruit Eaten for Dessert?

If a person ate a meal with bread and for dessert wishes to eat some cooked fruit, such as a baked apple, does he recite a Beracha over the fruit, or is it exempted by the Beracha of "Ha'mosi" recited over the bread?

Generally speaking, when a person eats a bread meal, the Beracha of "Ha'mosi" covers the foods eaten subsequently that constitute an integral part of the meal. Fruit is generally eaten as either an appetizer or dessert, and thus is not considered an integral part of the meal. As such, one who eats fruit at a meal must recite "Bore Peri Ha'etz" despite the fact that he had recited "Ha'mosi" over the bread. At first glance, however, one might argue that this Halacha applies only to raw fruit. Cooked or baked fruit, perhaps, should be regarded as a more significant part of the meal, in which case it should be covered by the Beracha of "Ha'mosi" recited at the beginning of the meal.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, in his work Hazon Ovadia (Laws of Berachot, in the annotation on p. 142; listen to audio for precise citation), rules that even cooked fruit requires the recitation of a Beracha in a meal. He contends that even though the fruit has been cooked or baked, since it is eaten as a sweet dessert, rather than for nourishment, it cannot be considered an integral part of one's meal. As such, one must recite a Beracha on fruit eaten as dessert after a bread meal even if it had been boiled or baked.

Summary: One who eats fruit for dessert at a meal must recite the Beracha of "Bore Peri Ha'etz," even though he had recited the Beracha of "Ha'mosi" at the beginning of the meal. This applies to raw, boiled and baked fruits.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Se’uda Shelishit
Halachot and Customs of Minha on Shabbat
Reciting “Ata Honantanu” in Arbit on Mosa’eh Shabbat
The Importance of Torah Study on Shabbat
Musaf on Shabbat – The Silent Amida and the Hazan’s Repetition
The Unique Importance of Musaf Prayer on Shabbat
The Status of Food Cooked by a Non-Jew on Shabbat for a Jewish Patient
Asking a Non-Jew to Prepare Food for an Ill Patient on Shabbat
Torah Reading and Using Shabbat as a Day for Learning
Asking a Non-Jew to Carry a Flashlight on Shabbat
Is it Preferable to Ask a Non-Jew to Perform Melacha on Shabbat When Someone’s Life is in Danger?
May One Take Something That is Hanging on a Tree on Shabbat?
Guidelines for When the Refrigerator Light Was Not Deactivated Before Shabbat
Is it permissible to ask a gentile to retrieve something from a car on Shabbat?
“Lehem Mishneh” – Using a Borrowed Loaf, or a Loaf That Had Been Attached to Another
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found