DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Perla Lily Schinasi bat Marie
"Wishing our Nana complete refuah, Amen."

Dedicated By
Her children and grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 564 KB)
Passover – Brooms, Can Openers, Cookbooks

Strictly speaking, one may keep in his home and use during Pesah the same broom he had used throughout the year to sweep the floors in the kitchen and other rooms. Although the broom likely has small particles of Hametz caught among the bristles, these particles are not significant and do not make the broom forbidden for use during Pesah. Nevertheless, as new brooms are easily available and inexpensive, it is customary to buy a new broom for Pesah.

If one has a can opener which he knows for certain had never been used to open a can containing Hametz, he may use it on Pesah. Otherwise, one should purchase a separate can opener for Pesah. The teeth of the can opener break through the top of the can and could thus come in contact with the food inside the can, and thus since the teeth are very difficult to clean, a can opener used to open a Hametz can should not be used on Pesah.

Very often, people have cookbooks open while they cook in the kitchen, and food quite frequently spills onto the books. Therefore, cookbooks used during the year should be put away for Pesah. If one wants to use on Pesah a cookbook that had been used during the year, it must be thoroughly cleaned to ensure that it is free of all food residue. This applies as well to the Birkat Ha’mazon cards which many people use at the table. These cards often have food residue stuck to them, and they therefore must be thoroughly cleaned if they will be used during Pesah. Otherwise, they should be put away for the holiday.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Pesah Seder – U’rhatz
Within How Much Time Must One Eat the Masa at the Seder?
Passover- Eating Masa, Marror or Eggs on Ereb Pesah
Passover – Laws of Kadesh
Checking One’s Books for Hametz Before Pesah
Ereb Pesah – The Custom to Bake Masot; Reciting Minha Early
Eating Roasted Zeroa, Meat or Chicken at the Seder
Pesah – Bittul Hames, Preparing the Hames for Burning
Pesah – Does One Recite "She'he'heyanu" Before Searching for Hames?
Pesach - Shulchan Orech, Tzafun, Barech, Hallel and Nirtza
Passover- Eating the Charoset at the Seder
Passover- The Laws of Maror, Korech and Shulchan Orech at the Seder
Passover- Laws of "Heseiba" – Leaning at the Seder
Passover- The Procedure for Rochtza and Motzi-Matza at the Seder
The Proper Procedure for Yachatz and the Recitation of "Ha Lachma Anya" at the Seder
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found