DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 516 KB)
If One Mistakenly Covered a Pot of Uncooked Food on the Blech

It is prohibited to cover a pot of uncooked food on the Blech. Doing so speeds up the cooking process and constitutes an Issur D’oraita-a Torah violation, according to Hacham Ovadia. Therefore, if a woman took off the pot cover to check the food and discovered that it was not fully cooked, she may not return the cover to its place. If she did so, the food is forbidden to her and everyone else until Mosa’eh Shabbat, even if her action was out of ignorance..

This is based on the on the Shulhan Aruch (318:1) who rules in accordance with the opinion of Rabbi Yehuda that food mistakenly cooked in violation of Shabbat may not be eaten, neither by the offender or anyone else, until Mosa’eh Shabbat. Even though it was done "B’shogeg"-without intention, i.e. he was not aware that the action was prohibited, the Hachamim instituted a K’nas (penalty) to prevent benefiting from a violation of Shabbat.

SUMMARY

If one mistakenly covered a pot of uncooked food on the Blech, the food is forbidden for consumption to everyone until Mosa’eh Shabbat.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Wearing Special Clothes on Shabbat, and Whether One Should Wear a White Suit
Heating Liquid on Shabbat
Wearing a Plastic Covering on One’s Hat on Shabbat
Squeezing Lemons on Shabbat
Sending Mail on Friday
Sweeping Floors on Shabbat
Studying Secular Material On Shabbat
Practical Applications of the Shabbat Prohibition of Gozez – Shearing
Allowing Children to Eat Before Kiddush
Wearing Special Clothes on Shabbat
Collecting Dirty Water in a Utensil on Shabbat
Swimming on Shabbat
Bathing in Honor of Shabbat
May One Place a Bag of Raw Rice Inside the Cholent in the Crockpot from Before Shabbat?
Folding a Tallit on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found