DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 498 KB)
Making Seltzer on Shabbat

Many people today have in their home non-electrical apparatuses for preparing seltzer. One fills a bottle with water from the tap, and then attaches it to the spout on the machine. He then presses a button that thrusts carbon dioxide into the water to make it carbonated. A cartridge situated in the back of the machine allows one to prepare approximately 60 liters or so of seltzer.

Rav Yehoshua Neubert (contemporary), in his Shemirat Shabbat Ke’hilchatah (vol. 1, p. 114), writes that it is entirely permissible to use such an apparatus on Shabbat for making seltzer. There is no prohibition whatsoever involved in injecting carbon dioxide into water to make seltzer, as long as no electricity is used. And attaching the bottle to the apparatus does not constitute "Boneh" ("building"), because it attaches and detaches very easily without requiring any special effort or tools.

It should be noted, however, that one is allowed to make seltzer only if it is needed on Shabbat itself. One may not prepare seltzer if it is needed only after Shabbat, as it is forbidden to prepare on Shabbat for after Shabbat.

Summary: It is permissible to make seltzer on Shabbat, provided that no electricity is involved (and seltzer machines generally do not involve electricity), and that the seltzer is needed on Shabbat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Procedure for the Recitation of Kiddush on Friday Night
If One Did Not Recite Kiddush on Friday Night
Is It Permissible to Read a Newspaper That was Delivered on Shabbat?
Detaching, Smelling and Watering Plants on Shabbat
Bathing on Shabbat
Sweeping and Mopping Floors on Shabbat
Combing Hair on Shabbat
Toothpicks, Floss, or Toothbrush on Shabbat
Must the Friday Night Meal Take Place Near the Shabbat Candles?
Is It Permissible To Move Shabbat Candles, Even If One Has Not Yet Accepted Shabbat
May One Add Water to the Oil Cups of the Shabbat Candles?
Shabbat Candle Lighting – Unmarried Girls, and Students in a Dormitory
If a Woman Lit Shabbat Candles Before Praying Minha
Lighting Shabbat Candles in an Illuminated Room
Warming a Baby’s Bottle in Hot Water; Cooking Rice or Kishkeh in a Pot of Hamin (Cholent) on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found