DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 874 KB)
Heating a Partially Cooked Food on Shabbat

The classic prohibition of Bishul (cooking) on Shabbat consists of applying heat to a completely raw food. What is the Halacha regarding heating a food which was already partially cooked from before Shabbat? Such a food is known in the Gemara as a "Ma’achal Ben Drusai," referring to a food which is either half or one-third cooked, but edible to some people.

This question is a Mahloket Rishonim (dispute between the early authorities). Rambam (Shabbat 9:3) maintains that it is a Torah prohibition to advance the cooking of a partially cooked food. Maran adopts this strict position of the Rambam.

On the other hand, the Ramban and Rashba hold that it is permitted. They bring a proof from the Mishna which states that anything that was immersed in hot water before Shabbat may be immersed in hot water again on Shabbat. The intent of this Halacha is that there is no prohibition to cook foods that were already cooked. Yet, the fact that the Mishna used the example of items immersed in water, which implies not a full cooking process, as opposed to simply saying, "That which was cooked before Shabbat…" indicates that even foods that were partially cooked are exempt from the prohibition of Bishul.

Even though the Halacha is in accordance with Rambam and Maran, Hacham David writes a Chidush in Halacha Berura that one may instruct a non-Jew to continue cooking an item that was already partially cooked. Since doing so is subject to a Mahloket Rishonim, the Halacha allows instructing a non-Jew which is always only M’drabanan.

SUMMARY
It is prohibited to cook or heat a food which was already partially cooked before Shabbat. However, one may instruct a non-Jew to do so.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Passover- Searching for Hametz in the Synagogue
Passover- Do Not Regard Meat As 'This Is For Pesach'
Passover- If A Hametz Pot Was Mistakenly Used For Pesach Cooking
Passover- The Laws regarding Glass Dishes On Passover and Throughout The Year
Passover- The Time To Start the Seder and Saying HALLEL At The End of The Seder
Passover- The Importance of MAGID In The Seder , and Leaning on the Night of Pesach
Passover- Is It Permissible To Drink Milk from A Non-Jew Owned Farm Cow Which Itself Consumed Chametz
Passover- Kashrut Questions and Answers Regarding Baby Formula, Sugar, Rice, and Food for Live Fish
Passover- Is It Permissable To Eat ROASTED Foods On Seder Nights
Passover- If A Tiny Amount of Hametz Falls Into A Pot & Cooking in Hametz Pots
May Two People Eat Meat and Milk at the Same Table?
Smelling Forbidden Foods; Heating Meat and Dairy Foods in a Microwave Oven
Drinking Non-Dairy Milk While or After Eating Meat
Serving at a Meat Meal Parve Foods That Were Served at a Dairy Meal
Is It Permissible to Use A Meat Pot To Cook A Parve Item That Will Be Mixed With A Dairy Item
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found