DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 548 KB)
Pesah- Koshering Garlic Presses, Highchairs and Kitchen Counters

Garlic presses do not come in direct with Hametz, and thus they certainly do not need koshering before Pesah, but they should be thoroughly cleaned.

A child’s highchair needs to be cleaned very carefully before Pesah, since children often scatter food particles as they eat. The entire chair, including the straps and the tray, should be thoroughly scrubbed to ensure that all food particles are removed. Since young children’s food is not very hot, no further koshering is required for the highchair.

Kitchen counters should be koshered by pouring boiling water on them directly from the kettle in an uninterrupted stream. The counters must first be thoroughly cleaned and then dried before the hot water is poured. If a counter is slanted, one must pour from the lowest part to the highest part, because otherwise the water will drip down and the lower part will be wet when the hot water is poured on it. Every spot on the counter must have water poured directly on it from the kettle, but this does not have to occur all at once; if necessary, one may pour water over one part of the kettle and then boil more water to pour over the rest.

Although pouring boiling water suffices to kosher the counters for Pesah, many people nevertheless have the custom as an added precaution to also cover the countertops for Pesah.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Nidda – The Status of Stains Found on Colored Garments
Immersing in a Mikveh With Long Nails and Nail Polish (Part 2)
Immersing in a Mikveh With Long Nails and Nail Polish (Part 1)
If a Woman Did Not Immerse In The Mikveh on the Night After the Seventh Day
May a Woman Immerse in the Mikveh Before Sundown on the Seventh Day?
When May a Woman Begin Counting the Seven “Clean Days”?
If No Wine is Available Under the Hupa; The Recitation of Birkat Erusin
The Custom to Refrain From Eating Meat On the Day of Immersion In A Mikveh
Weddings in Synagogues
Laws and Customs of the Meal at a Wedding
Does the Officiating Rabbi Drink the Wine Under the Hupa?
Who Has the Right to Choose the Officiating Rabbi at a Wedding?
If the Sheba Berachot Were Recited Out of Order
The Great Rewards of Hachnasat Kalla – Helping a Couple Marry and Build a Home
Must the Hatan’s Family Lineage Appear in the Ketuba?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found