DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 5.6 MB)
The Prohibition of Poultry and Milk Together

The Torah prohibits eating, cooking and deriving benefit from meat and milk cooked together. However, the Torah transgression applies only to beef. The meat of fowl or Hayot (wild game), such as venison, is prohibited only M’drabanan (rabbinically). While, of course, such a mixture is also forbidden to be eaten, it is more lenient in that one may derive benefit from it. For example, it is permitted to sell cooked chicken and milk to a non-Jew or to feed it to animals. Maran even permitted to cook it (without eating), but the Ben Ish Hai (Rav Yosef Haim of Baghdad, 1833-1909), in Parashat Baha’alotcha, was strict and prohibited cooking chicken and milk. Even the Ben Ish Hai recommends being lenient in deriving benefit so as not to waste the money of Jews, which throwing out the forbidden mixture would entail.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Hatmana: Insulating from Erev Shabbat to Shabbat Morning
Preparing an Urn for Shabbat
Hatmana: The General Principles
Reheating Frozen Soup on Shabbat
Using a Non-Jew to Reheat Foods on Shabbat
If One Accidentally Did Not Use a Blech
The Definition of a Liquid Food As It Pertains To Heating on Shabbat
Re-Heating Food on Shabbat
Use of Blech or Hotplate on Shabbat
Is It Permissible to Cut Fruit or Crush Ice on Shabbat?
Squeezing Fruits Over Foods on Shabbat
May One Wash Dishes on Shabbat?
The Status of Coffee Brewed on Shabbat by and for Non-Jews
Desecrating Shabbat for a Dangerously-Ill Patient Without Delay
Asking a Non-Jew on Shabbat to Do Something That Could be Done in a Permissible Way
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found