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)
Preparing Fruit Juice on Yom Tob

Although it is permissible to cook and bake on Yom Tob, not everything necessary for food preparation is allowed. For example, the Sages enacted a prohibition against plucking fruits and vegetables on Yom Tob, even if one plans on eating them that day. Another exception is squeezing fruits to prepare fruit juice. On Shabbat, as we know, squeezing fruits is forbidden, and squeezing certain fruits (grapes and olives) is forbidden on the level of Torah prohibition. This prohibition applies on Yom Tob, as well. Although food preparation is generally allowed on Yom Tob, squeezing fruits for juice marks an exception. And thus it would be forbidden to use a juicer on Yom Tob to squeeze fruits, even if one wants to drink the juice that day. The Helkat Yaakob (Rav Mordechai Yaakov Breish, Zurich, 1895-1976) suggested allowing the use of a juicer on Yom Tob, because the apparatus extracts both the juice and the pulp from the fruit, such that no actual separation is being done. Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, in Hazon Ovadia – Yom Tob (pp. 73-74), disputes this ruling, and rules that juicing fruits on Yom Tob is forbidden. This Halacha is codified in Yalkut Yosef (p. 131).

Summary: Although food preparation is generally allowed on Yom Tob, one may not squeeze fruits on Yom Tob to extract juice, even if one wishes to drink the juice that day.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Using a Plunger, Detaching a Fastener & Pins from New Clothes, Inserting New Shoe Laces
May One Use an Electric Blanket on Shabbat?
How to Remove Bones and Shells Which Are Mukse from the Shabbat Table?
Is It Permissible to Measure on Shabbat or Yom Tob?
Is a Discarded Item Considered Mukse on Shabbat?
Prescription Medication and Antibiotics on Shabbat
Shabbat – Using Mouthwash, Eating Food for Medicinal Purposes
Pills That are Allowed on Shabbat; Inducing Vomiting on Shabbat
Applying Ice to Reduce Swelling on Shabbat
Shabbat – Treating Dislocated or Broken Bones; the Use of Band-Aids and Iodine
Applying a Bandage with Ointment to a Wound on Shabbat
Shabbat – Using Eyedrops for Lubrication, and Lotions for Chapped Skin
Applying Gel to a Child’s Skin or Gums on Shabbat
Applying Cotton Balls and Alcohol to a Wound on Shabbat
Insulin Injections, Nebulizers, & Vaporizers on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found