DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 564 KB)
Reviewing The Laws of Meat After Milk

Just one Halacha that is applicable to Shavuot but actually applies all year round. The law of Milk and Meat. Since it is our custom to have milk on Shavuot and some have milk foods first, and then they have their official Seudah, which is meat, you have to be reminded of some laws, which apply between milk and meat. Now we know if you had meat, then you have to wait 6 hours before you have milk. According to the Halacha there is no time that you have to wait from milk to meat. Although the Kaf Hachayim says, from the Zohar that it’s proper to wait an hour. And the Arizal actually waited a full day between milk and meat, however, that is Midat Chasidut. From the law, all you have to do is wash your mouth out, and clean your hands, and of course change the tablecloth. And if there was bread that you were eating with the milk meal, you take the bread off the table, and you put on a new loaf of bread. More than that, you don’t have to do.

Some are careful to wait a half hour. Again, this is Midat Chasidut. From the law, you ate a piece of cheesecake. Now you are going to have your lunch, subsequently after that, so long as your cleaned and rinsed your mouth out, and you washed your hands and changed the tablecloth, according to the Halacha you can eat it immediately.

It should be pointed out however, when it comes to hard cheeses, the Halacha says "Gevina Kasha’, since it leaves a strong taste, then one would have to wait 6 hours after he ate the cheese, before he has meat. That would apply, Rav Elyashiv says, that applies today to let’s say, the yellow cheeses that we have, like the cheddar cheese or the strong cheeses that leave a strong taste. He’s not referring to the American cheese that we have, not that yellow cheese, that’s a process cheese and doesn’t have a strong taste. But the cheddar cheese and the old cheese, if they have the Kosher in the stores, then you would have to wait 6 hours. Otherwise, immediately after cheese, washing the mouth, cleaning the hands, changing the tablecloth and changing the bread, then you can eat it right away.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If a Candle Falls on the Table During Shabbat
May One Ask a Non-Jew to Light the Shabbat Candles After Shabbat Has Started?
Using Olive Oil and Wax Candles for the Shabbat Candle Lighting
Making a Verbal Declaration When Preparing for Shabbat
Covering the Bread on the Table on Shabbat and Yom Tob
Must One Eat Bread at Seudah Shlishit?
Must the Halla be on the Table During Kiddush?
Adding Aliyot on Shabbat
The Requirement to Eat Bread at Se’uda Shelishit
Until When Can One Recite “Asher Natan Shabbatot Li’mnuha” in Lieu of “Reseh” in Birkat Ha’mazon?
Shabbat – Practicing Penmanship in the Air; Observing a Mechanic
Having Children Perform Melacha on Shabbat; Halachot of Children During the Nine Days and Hol Ha’mo’ed
Leniencies That Apply During Ben Ha’shemashot at the Beginning and End of Shabbat
Separating Pages in a Book That are Attached
Annulling Vows on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found