DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 540 KB)
Is it Permissible to Smear Butter or Other Foods on Shabbat?

Is it permissible to smear food on another food on Shabbat, such as smearing butter on a piece of bread? The Shabbat prohibition of Memare’ah forbids spreading a solid substance such that it becomes like a liquid. Does this prohibition apply also to foods, such that it would be forbidden to smear food? This question is relevant to many different foods which people spread on other foods, such as mashed potato, avocado and banana.

The Rama (Rabbi Moshe Isserles, Cracow, 1520-1572), in his Darkeh Moshe (Orah Haim 321), writes that it is permissible to spread baked apple on food on Shabbat, and he codifies this ruling in his glosses to the Shulhan Aruch. This ruling is accepted by the Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan, 1839-1933). Although in other contexts smearing is prohibited on Shabbat, in this instance it is permissible, since the prohibition does not apply to foods, and in any event the food is perfectly edible even without smearing the other food.

This is also the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in Hazon Ovadia (p. 264), though he adds (in the footnotes) that smearing should preferably be done immediately before one eats, as in this case there is no concern whatsoever.

Summary: It is permissible on Shabbat to smear butter and the like (such as mashed potato and avocado) on bread or other foods, though this should preferably be done immediately before the food is eaten.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Reciting "Baruch Shem Kevod Malchuto" Silently
Visiting the Sick and Comforting the Mourner: Which Takes Precedence?
“Berachot Parties” to Bring Merit to Ill Patients
Some Laws and Customs of Traveling
Avoiding Anger
Shobabim – Suggestions for Maintaining a State of Purity and Avoiding Sin
May Birkat Halebana be Recited When the Moon is Covered by a Thin Layer of Cloud?
Yihud – Driving in a Car with Tinted Windows or Curtains Over the Windows
Saying "God Willing" Before Every Undertaking; the Delicate Balance Between Effort and Excessive Work (Work-A-Holics)
Some Rules About Counting Jewish Persons
The Issue of Gambling
May a Man and Woman Drive Alone Together in a Car?
Is it Improper to Date a Girl Who Has an Older Unmarried Sister?
Convening a Bet Din and Incarcerating Criminals on Shabbat
Washing One's Hands After a Haircut or After Nail-Cutting
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found