DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 740 KB)
Pouring Water Heated by the Sun on Foods on Shabbat

The Shulhan Aruch (318:3) rules that cooking with a surface heated by the sun, "Toldot HaHama," constitutes Bishul (cooking) M’drabanan. That is, it is Rabbinically prohibited to cook an egg on a cloth heated by the sun. The reason for this is that one may come to use a surface heated by fire to cook, which is a Torah prohibition.

If one would immerse an egg in water heated by the sun, it would be an Issur D’rabanan- Rabbinic prohibition of cooking. However, Hacham David, in his Halacha Berura, permits pouring water heated by the sun over a raw food. He reasons that since there is a general disagreement whether pouring even regular hot water over a raw food can cook it, one can be lenient in the case of solar heated water, which is only an Issur D’rabanan. This question is particularly relevant in Israel where they commonly use solar panels to heat the water.

SUMMARY
While one may not cook raw food by immersing it in water heated by the sun, it is permitted to pour such water over a raw food.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Hanukah – If the Hanukah Candles Burn Out on Friday Before Shabbat
Hanukah – The Custom to Light Candles in the Synagogue
Chanukah- Is It Permissible To Move The Lit Menorah
Shehechiyanu on the Second Night
Chanukah: Lighting the Menorah at Public Events
Hanukah – Where Should One Light If He Lives on a High Floor in an Apartment Building?
Hanukah: How Do Guest Light?
Hanukah: Using the Candles to Light Other Candles
Hanukah – The Status of the Leftover Oil
Hanukah – Reciting Minha Before Candle Lighting on Ereb Shabbat Hanukah
Chanukah- Minha on Friday of Hanukah
Hanukah: The Shamash
Hanukah: The Halachot of "Al Hanisim" 2
Hanukah: The Halachot of Al Hanisim
Hanukah – What Does One Do With the Oil Left Over After the Last Night?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found