DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.04 MB)
Is it Permissible to Cook Foods on Surfaces Heated by Fire?

One of the thirty nine Melachot-prohibited activities on Shabbat is "HaOfeh"-baking. Although baking was not actually done as part of the construction of the Mishkan, cooking was done. They would cook the various plants to extract the dyes for the fabrics and skins. The Hachamim explain that cooking and baking are the same process-using fire to change the consistency of an entity, by making hard objects soft or soft objects hard. Therefore, both cooking and baking are prohibited by the Torah.

The Mishna in Masechet Shabbat (p. 38) states that one may not place an egg next to a hot urn in order to roast it. That is, not only is cooking directly from a fire prohibited, but even cooking via surfaces which were heated by a fire, in this case the metal of the urn. The Talmud Bavli understands this to be a Torah prohibition. The Rambam in Hilchot Shabbat (Ch. 9) and Shulhan Aruch (318:3) rule in accordance with this Gemara that there is no difference between cooking with "Ur"-fire and "Toldot HaUr"-indirectly cooking with thing materials heated by the fire.

It should be pointed out that the Talmud Yerushalmi argues with this assumption and holds that "Toldot HaUr" is only prohibited M’Drabanan. The Halacha is in accordance with the Talmud Bavli.

SUMMARY
It is prohibited by Torah law on Shabbat to cook on surfaces heated by a fire.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Importance of Giving Charity Before Praying; If One’s Prayer is Disrupted by Charity Collectors
The Yartzheit of the Ben Ish Hai
Feeding a Child Before Shaharit or Before Kiddush; Feeding a Child Dairy After He Ate Meat
May a Person Receive Two Aliyot in a Single Torah Reading?
Is it Permissible to Refer to One’s Father or Rabbi by His Name if He Adds a Title?
Calling Somebody With the Same Name as One’s Father
The Importance of Studying the Halachot of Respecting Parents
The Procedure When a Bet Din Announces Its Decision
Reciting Kaddish for a Parent
Ensuring Not to Receive a More Prominent Aliya Than One’s Father
Calling One’s Son in the Presence of His Father With the Same Name
Berit Mila – Eliyahu Ha’nabi’s Chair
Birkat Kohanim – The Unconditional Blessing
The Halachic Status of the Period Between Amud Ha’shahar and Sunrise
Can the Officiating Rabbi at a Wedding Serve as One of the Witnesses?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found