DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 944 KB)
Adding Water to a Pot of Hot Food on Shabbat

It occasionally happens that food that was left on the fire or hotplate on Shabbat becomes dry, and one wishes to add water to the pot to moisten the food. Is this permissible on Shabbat?

The pot in which food had been cooked on the fire, which is called a "Keli Rishon" ("first utensil"), is considered capable of Halachic "cooking" even after it is taken off the fire. Meaning, while the food is in the original pot in which it had been cooked, it can have the effect of Halachically "cooking" food or liquid poured into it. Therefore, it is clear that one may not pour cold water into the pot on Shabbat, even after it is taken off the stove or hotplate, as this will have the effect of cooking the water.

One might have assumed that pouring hot water into the pot directly from an urn or kettle should be permissible. Since the water is already hot when it enters the pot, no cooking takes place, and it should therefore be allowed on Shabbat. Rabbenu Yona, however, in his Iggeret Teshuba, writes that this is incorrect. For one thing, he notes, often people mistakenly think the water in the kettle is still hot when in fact it has already cooled. But additionally, even if the water is hot, once it exits the kettle into the air it cools somewhat, and then becomes reheated when it enters the pot. Therefore, Rabbenu Yona rules, it is forbidden to pour even hot water into a pot of hot food on Shabbat. This is also the opinion of many other Rishonim, and is the position taken by the Shulhan Aruch (253:4; listen to audio recording for precise citation). Although Ashkenazim do not follow this ruling, Hacham Ovadia Yosef writes (listen to audio recording for precise citation) that Sephardim are bound by the Shulhan Aruch’s position, and may not add water to a pot of hot food on Shabbat.

Hacham Ovadia adds, however, that if one transfers the food into another utensil, he may then add even cold water to the food. Once the food is contained in a "Keli Sheni" ("second utensil"), it is no longer capable of "cooking" in the Halachic sense, and water may thus be added at that point.

Summary: One may not add hot or cold water into a pot of hot food, even if the pot had been taken off the fire, as long as the food is in the pot in which it was cooked. Once the food is transferred to a different utensil, one may add hot or cold water.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Wearing the Shoes of a Deceased Person; Sleeping with Shoes; Wearing Shoes on the Wrong Feet
Hanging Flags in the Synagogue
The Parochet – The Curtain Outside the Aron
Birkat Ha’hama: One Who Sees the Sun Through Eyeglasses, or Who Sees Only a Reflection; Looking at Someone Named Abraham While Reciting the Beracha
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Indoors and in an Airplane; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama During Mourning
Training Children to Recite Birkat Ha’hama; Customs for After Birkat Ha’hama
Should Women Recite Birkat Ha’hama?
Reciting She’heheyanu Over Birkat Ha’hama
If a Berit Mila is Performed on the Day of Birkat Ha’hama; Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Birkat Ha’ilanot
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama Before Shaharit
Reciting Birkat Ha’hama on a Cloudy Day
Eating Before Reciting Birkat Ha’hama
Birkat Ha’hama- I
How Early in the Month May One Recite Birkat Halebana?
Respecting Parents-in-Law
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found