DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Shmuel ben Leah

Dedicated By
Children and Grandchildren

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 276 KB)
Is It Permissible To Cover a Pot of Fully Cooked Foods Containing Bones?

In general, there is no problem covering a pot of fully cooked food on Shabbat. Since it is already cooked, the covering does not enhance or speed up any cooking. However, Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Jerusalem, 1910-1995) held that it is prohibited to cover a pot containing chicken bones, even if the rest of the food is fully cooked. The bones give the pot a different status, because if cooked long enough, the bones will become edible. Therefore, even if the rest of the food is fully cooked, the covering will accelerate the cooking of the bones.

Hacham Ovadia and Rav Moshe Feinstein (Russia – New York, 1895-1986) held that if a person does not normally eat bones, there is no problem if the bones become cooked. Even if he does eat marrow, it is not a problem, as the marrow is most probably cooked with the rest of the food. But, if he does eat bones, he may not place a cover on the pot.

SUMMARY

If one is accustomed to eating chicken bones, he may not place a cover on a pot of otherwise fully cooked food that contains chicken bones.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
May a Woman Apply Makeup During Abelut?
Nail-Cutting During Abelut
If Somebody Did Not Observe Abelut After a Parent’s Passing
If a Woman is in Mourning and Her Husband Insists That She Join Him at a Social Function
Extending a Greeting to a Mourner
Halachot of Proper Conduct in a Cemetery
Eulogies and Memorial Gatherings on Days When Tahanun is Omitted
The Obligation to Bury the Deceased
A Mourner’s Exemption From Misvot Before the Burial as it Applies to Sissit, Charity, Berachot and Sefirat Ha’omer
May a Mourner Attend His or Her Child’s Wedding?
Is it Permissible for a Mourner to Move Into a New Home or Renovate His Home?
Wigs Made From the Hair of a Deceased Person
Sheloshim – The Thirty-Day Mourning Period
May a Kohen Attend the Funeral of a Non-Jew?
Abelut: Reciting Birkat Ha'lebana, Studying Torah, Hallel, and Birkat Kohanim
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found