DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 978 KB)
Is It Permissible to Pour Salt into a Keli Rishon?

The Shulhan Aruch (318:9) rules that a Pot retains its status as a Keli Rishon, even after it is removed from the fire, as long as its contents remain hot-Yad Soledet. Therefore, in general, it is prohibited to put raw food into such a pot.
Nevertheless, the Gemara records an opinion that salt is an exception to this rule. Since it is very difficult to cook salt, it is only a violation when put in a Keli Rishon on the fire. Maran (318:9) accepts this opinion and allows pouring raw salt onto the contents of a Keli Rishon off the fire.

However, there is another version of that Gemara which holds the exact opposite: Salt is extra-sensitive to heat and becomes cooked even in a Keli Sheni. The Rema rules in accordance with this stricter version.
Sepharadim may follow Maran and pour salt directly into a Keli Rishon off the fire. However, it is prohibited to pour salt onto the contents of a Keli Rishon on the Blech or hotplate.

This discussion pertains to the raw salt mined from the earth. It is possible that the process used today to extract salt involves cooking. If so, it would conceivably be permitted to pour such salt on food on the Blech or hotplate. Nevertheless, because it is not clear exactly how each type of salt is processed, on should avoid doing so. This is the opinion of Hacham Ovadia and Hacham David in Halacha Berura.

SUMMARY
One should only pour salt onto the contents of a Keli Rishon after it has been removed from the Blech or hotplate.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Must a Pilot Recite Birkat Ha’gomel Every Day?
“Kol Yisrael Arebim Zeh La’zeh” – Reciting Berachot on Behalf of Others (Gomel, Shehakol, etc)
Do People Who Travel by Ferry Every Day Recite Birkat Ha’gomel?
The Custom of Hatarat Nedarim on Ereb Shabbat
Is It Permissible to Share Digital Music Files?
Touching One’s Clothing Before Washing Netilat Yadayim in the Morning
Touching Food Before Washing One’s Hands in the Morning
The Importance of Forgiveness, and the Dangers of Anger
The Name of the Month “Marheshvan”
Purifying Oneself by Washing Hands 40 Times
The Status of a Kohen Whose Profession Requires Him to Become Tameh
May a Kohen Attend His Wife’s Funeral if They Were in the Process of Divorcing?
Laws Pertaining to a Kohen’s Wife During Pregnancy
Tum’at Kohanim - The Prohibition for a Kohen to be Under the Same Roof as a Dead Body
Fulfilling the Misva of Kiddush on Shabbat Morning Without Eating; Using the Cup of Wine at a Berit for Kiddush
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found