DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 782 KB)
Pesah – Koshering Silverware, Oversize Pots, and Meat and Dairy Utensils Together

Metal pots with an enamel covering may be koshered for Pesah; the enamel has no effect on the pot’s status as far as koshering is concerned.

If somebody purchased before Pesah a used utensil from a gentile, and it therefore requires both koshering and Tebila (immersion in a Mikveh), it should first undergo koshering so the taste of non-kosher food is purged, and then be immersed in a Mikveh.

If one is koshering silverware for Pesah, he may place all the silverware in a bag with holes and then lower the bag into the boiling water, rather than go through the trouble of dipping each piece of silverware separately. He must, however, shake the bag when it is inside the water to ensure that all the pieces come in direct contact with the water.

If one wishes to kosher a very large pot and does not have another pot large enough in which to do the koshering, he has two options. First, he may dip the pot into boiling water one part at a time. Meaning, he dips part of the pot in the boiling water, and then removes it, turns it around, and dips the other side. This is the ruling of the Shulhan Aruch (Orah Haim 451:11). Alternatively, one can fill the pot with water until its rim, place it on fire, and then place in it a rock that had been heated until it became fiery hot. The water will then spill over the rim of the pot, and this qualifies as Hag’ala (immersion in boiling water).

It is permissible to kosher meat and dairy utensils together, as long as one of them had not been used within the previous twenty-four hours. If either the meat or dairy utensil had not been used within the previous twenty-four hours, they may be koshered together. But if both had been used within that period they must be koshered separately.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Sisit: The Minimum Length of the Strings
Sisit-If the String of the Tallit Becomes Torn
Sisit: May One Use Sisit Belonging to Others
Sisit: Using Sisit Made of Cotton and Silk
Sisit: The Proper Color and Fabric for a Tallit
Sisit-Must a Sisit and Tallit Be Made of Wool
Sisit: The Proper Intent When Donning a Tallit
Sisit: May One Person Recite the Beracha on the Tallit for Everyone?
Sisit: How to Properly Put on a Tallit Gadol
May a Married Woman Pour Wine for a Guest?
Supporting Torah Study – The Yissachar-Zevulun Partnership
Rabbenu Gershom’s Edict Banning Polygamy
Asara Be’Tebet That Falls on Friday
If a Host Tells a Guest to Leave
Is it Permissible to make a small sin to avert a Big Sin?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found