DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.09 MB)
Grinding Cooked Meat on Shabbat

The Shulhan Aruch rules that it is permitted to chop cooked meat on Shabbat. This is based on the Terumat HaDeshen, who restricts the prohibition of Tohen-Grinding only to "Geduleh Karka"-foods that grow from the earth, such as grain. Meat is not considered to be from the earth, even though the animal was raised and grew from feed that grew from the ground. The Mishna Berura explains that there is no need to rule in accordance with the strict opinions that consider an animal as Geduleh Karka, since the opinion of the Rosh, who holds that there is no prohibition of grinding any type of food, can also be used as a basis for leniency regarding animals. Therefore it is permitted to chop meat or an egg, even well in advance of the meal.

The Rema brings the principle "En Tehina Ahar Tehina"-there is no prohibition of grinding substances that have already been ground. For example, it is permitted to crumble pieces of bread into crumbs, since the flour that made that bread was already ground. Hacham Ovadia brings an additional application-crumbling snuff. Sometimes the tobacco becomes clumped to together due to the humidity, but there is no problem to rub it into granules, since the tobacco leaves were already ground. The same would apply to banging a salt shaker to re-pulverize the salt that has clumped.

SUMMARY

It is permitted to chop meat or an egg on Shabbat, even well in advance of the meal.
It is permitted to crumble bread into crumbs or separate clumps of snuff and salt.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Beracha Over Puffed Wheat and Granola Bars
Situations When One Does Not Recite a Beracha Before Drinking Water
Does One Recite “Ha’mosi” over Sweet Bread, or over So-Called “Mezonot Rolls”?
What Beracha Does One Recite on Pita Chips?
Which Beracha Does One Recite Over Pizza or Calzone?
What Must the Third Person Eat for Three People to Make a Zimun?
Reciting a Zimun if a Third Person Arrives After the First Two Finished Eating
Making a Zimun in a Moving Vehicle, Boat or Plane
Zimun If Ten People Ate Together But Not All of Them Ate Bread
Insight Into the Text of the Zimun
Can Three People Make a Zimun if One of Them Did Not Eat Bread?
Can a Minor be Counted Toward a Zimun?
Zimun in a Yeshiva Cafeteria
The Beracha Recited Over Chocolate Bars with Nuts, and Over Coated Almonds
Berachot If One Falls Asleep During A Meal
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found