DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 578 KB)
The Se’uda Mafseket Before Tisha B’Ab

The Se’uda Mafseket – the final meal that one eats before the onset of the fast of Tisha B’Ab – may consist of only one cooked food. There are no restrictions on raw foods, but only one cooked food item may be included in this meal.

However, two foods that are normally cooked together in a single dish are considered as one food for the purposes of this Halacha. Thus, for example, if a person cooks lentils and rice together, this dish may be served at the Se’uda Mafseket, as the rice and lentils are considered a single food. Even though the pot contains both rice and lentils, we regard this dish as a single cooked food because they were cooked together, and it is common to do so. Another example would be macaroni and cheese. Since it is common to cook noodles and cheese together, this would be considered a single cooked food. It should be noted, however, that if one cooks the noodles and cheese separately, they are considered separate foods and they may not both be eaten at the Se’uda Mafseket.

Pizza, strictly speaking, may be eaten, even though it contains several different foods, since they are all baked together. Nevertheless, Hacham Ovadia Yosef writes that one should preferably not eat pizza at the Se’uda Mafseket, as it is generally associated with fun gatherings and it is thus inappropriate for the mood that should prevail during the Se’uda Mafseket.

Milk is not considered "cooked" with respect to the Se’uda Mafseket even though it has undergone pasteurization. Since the process does not alter the taste in any way, and is done merely to kill bacteria, the milk is considered a raw food as far as the laws of Se’uda Mafseket are concerned. This is the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef as well as Hacham Bension Abba Shaul (Israel, 1923-1998).

Summary: One may not eat more than one cooked food during the final meal before Tisha B’Ab, though two foods that are normally cooked together – like macaroni and cheese – are considered a single food with respect to this Halacha, unless they are cooked separately.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Prohibition of Bishul Akum – Eating Foods Prepared by a Gentile
Is It Permissible To Sell UnKosher Food
Dairy Tuna Fish
Is It Permissible To Eat Bread Made By A Non-Jew
The Prohibition of "Bechor Beheima Tehora" – Eating a Firstborn Animal
Is It Permissible To Utilize The Process Of Hagalah To Continuolsy Change Utensils From Meat To Milk To Meat
Sitting with People Eating Dairy Foods, or Preparing Dairy Foods, After One Has Eaten Meat
Is It Permissible To Eat Fish and Meat Together Or Even Have Them On The Same Table
Bloodspots In Eggs
The Many Laws of Eating Milk After Meat
The Many Laws of Eating Meat After Milk
Delivering Kosher Food Through a Non-Jewish Courier
What To Do If An Unkosher Plate Becomes Mixed Up with and Indiscernible Among Kosher Plates
Is It Permissible To Eat Dairy Foods That Were Cooked In A Meat Pot
Feeding Kosher Meat to Animals
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found