DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 812 KB)
Serving at a Meat Meal Parve Foods That Were Served at a Dairy Meal

The Talmud Yerushalmi (Pesahim 6:4) establishes that if a person eats a dairy meal and then prepares to eat a meat meal, he must remove the pieces of bread that were on the table during the dairy meal (listen to audio recording for precise citation). Given the concern that the bread came in contact with dairy food, it may not be used with a meat meal.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef ruled that this Halacha applies only to the pieces of bread cut from the loaf, but not to the loaf itself. The actual loaf of bread generally remains separate from the other foods on the table, and we are therefore not concerned that it came in contact with dairy food. This concern arises only regarding the pieces that were cut from the loaf to be eaten together with the other foods on the table. Hence, a loaf that was on the table during a dairy meal may be brought to the table for a meat meal. This is, of course, on the condition that one was careful not to cut the loaf with a knife used with dairy foods.

What is the status of other Parve foods, such as salads, with respect to this Halacha? If a person served salads with a dairy meal, may he then bring those salads to the table for a meat meal?

Strictly speaking, one may use the salads for a meat meal, provided that he was careful to keep them away from dairy foods, meaning, that special, Parve serving utensils were used for the salads. So long as one made a point not to serve the salad with the same utensils used for the dairy foods, the salad may, on the level of strict Halacha, be served again at a meat meal.

Nevertheless, Rabbi Moshe Feinstein (Russia-New York, 1895-1986), in his work Iggerot Moshe (Y.D. 38), ruled that as a "Misva Min Ha'mubhar" (higher standard of Misva observance), it is preferable not to serve the salads at a meat meal. Particularly when young children are present at the table, one cannot always ascertain that no dairy food made it way into the salads on the table, and it is therefore advisable not to serve the salads at a meat meal. Thus, although serving the salads at a meat meal is technically permissible, it is preferable not to use them with meat.

Summary: One may serve at a meat meal a loaf of bread that was served during a meal, provided that care was taken to keep the loaf away from dairy food. One may not, however, serve the pieces of bread that were cut from the loaf during the dairy meal. Parve foods such as salads served at a dairy meal may, strictly speaking, be served at a meat meal, though preferably this should not be done.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Decorating Homes and Synagogues With Flowers on Shabuot
Shabuot – The Special Quality of the Month of Sivan; A Reason for Eating Dairy Products on Shabuot
Giving Charity on Erev Shavuot
Shabuot – Netilat Yadayim, Birkat Ha’Torah and the Bedtime Shema
Shabuot – Shaharit and Musaf on Shabuot Morning
Giving Charity Before Shabuot; Learning on Shabuot Night
Shabuot – Reasons for the Custom to Decorate the Synagogue with Flowers
Shabuot-Preparing When Shavuot Falls Out On Mosaeh Shabbat
Shabuot-Is it Permissible to Donate Blood or Have Elective Surgery on Ereb Shabuot?
Shavuot- Should One Repeat Beracha Rishona for Beverages Throughout The Night While Studying Shavuot Night
Shabuot – The Two Different Versions of the Te’amim for the Ten Commandments
Shabuot – The Halachot of Berachot Over Food and Drinks During Shabuot Night; Reciting Birkat Ha’Torah on Shabuot Morning
If an Israeli Resident is Spending Yom Tob in the Diaspora
Shabuot – The Custom to Remain Awake Throughout the Night
Pesah – How Soon After Pesah May One Eat the Hametz Which He Had Sold?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found