DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 2.72 MB)
Determining the Quantity of "Ke'zayit" in Some Common Snack Foods

Halacha requires reciting a "Beracha Aharona" after eating the quantity of a "Ke'zayit" of food. This quantity is determined by volume, rather than by weight. Regardless of a food's weight, its consumption requires one to recite a "Beracha Aharona" only if it is large enough to displace 1 fluid ounce of water. This volume is approximately the amount of food that can fill a cube measuring 1.2 cubic inches.

Therefore, one cannot determine the amount of a given food requiring a "Beracha Aharona" by calculating its weight in grams; since the determining factor is volume, the status of any given amount of food depends on the volume of water it displaces.

We list here a number of common snack foods and precisely how much of the food one must eat to become obligated in the recitation of a "Beracha Aharona." These amounts are taken from Rabbi Yisroel Pinchos Bodner's work "Halachos of K'zayis" which is a very useful resource of information concerning this topic:

1) Animal crackers: Seven animal crackers constitute a Ke'zayit, despite the fact that this amount of animal crackers weighs only 14 grams.

2) Butter cookies (standard size): Five cookies constitute a Ke'zayikt despite the fact that they weigh a total of only 15 grams.

3) Large "black and white" cookies: 1/6th of a cookie constitutes a Ke'zayit.

4) Sandwich cookies: 2.5 cookies constitute a Ke'zayit.

5) Standard thin wafers: Two wafers constitute a Ke'zayit.

6) Tea biscuits: Three biscuits constitute a Ke'zayit.

7) Candy corn: 26 pieces constitute a Ke'zayit.

8) Chocolate jelly rings: 3.5 rings constitute a Ke'zayit.

9) Licorice bites: Seventeen "bites" constitute a Ke'zayit. When licorice is sold in "nibs," then thirty such nibs constitute a Ke'zayit.

10) "Snacker crackers": 4 crackers constitute a Ke'zayit.

11) "Tam Tams": Six crackers constitute a Ke'zayit.

12) Flat bread: 1.75 pieces constitute a Ke'zayit.

It should be noted that this basic principle – that the amount of Ke'zayit is determined by volume, and not by weight – affects other areas of Halacha, as well. On the first night of Pesah, for example, Halacha requires eating a Ke'zayit of Masa. Were we to measure a Ke'zayit of Masa by weight, one would be required to eat one or possibly two Masot. Since, however, we measure a Ke'zayit by volume, it is generally assumed that one fulfills his obligation by eating approximately one half of a machine-made Masa.

Likewise, if a person eats 8 Ke'zetim of a "Mezonot" food, such as cake, he must recite Birkat Ha'mazon. Since we measure a Ke'zayit by volume, rather than weight, one who eats a large danish or raisin bagel could conceivably be required to recite Birkat Ha'mazon, if it has a volume of 8 Kezaytim or more (commonly referred to as 8oz.)

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
How is the Rabbi’s Erub Tabshilin Able to Cover All Members of His Congregation?
Can One Rely on the Rabbi’s Erub Tabshilin?
If a Person Remembers During Minha That He Forgot to Prepare an Erub Tabshilin
Which Preparations for Shabbat Become Allowed Through the Erub Tabshilin?
Which Kind of Cooked Food Items May be Used for the Erub Tabshilin?
Preparing a Baked Food Item and a Boiled Item For Erub Tabshilin
Introduction to Erub Tabshilin
May a Visitor to Israel Perform a Berit Mila on the Second Day of Yom Tob?
Measuring Food Ingredients on Yom Tob
Carrying Keys to the Synagogue for Arbit at the End of Yom Tob
Does One Tear Keri’a at a Family Member’s Funeral on Hol Ha’mo’ed?
Laws Regarding Electric and Fire on Yom Tov
Is it Permissible to Light a Yahrtzeit Candle on Yom Tob?
Using a Tape Recorder on Shabbat and on Hol Ha’mo’ed
Is It Permissible To Take Medicines on Yom Tov That Are Forbidden On Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found