DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 2.94 MB)
The Status of Grapes at a Fruit/Smoothie Bar

It is prohibited to drink wine (or grape juice) which was handled by a non-Jew. This wine is known as stam yenam. However, non-Jews may touch and handle grapes, even if a bit of juice is extracted during contact.

At what point in the process of wine-making is the liquid squeezed from the grapes considered to be wine, and subject to the laws of stam yenam?

The Shulchan Arukh (Yoreh De’ah 123:17) explains that the liquid is considered to be wine, for these halakhot, when one presses the grapes with the intention of extracting the liquid, and the juice is separated from the pits, peels and sediments. This process, known as hamshacha, is performed on a board, positioned on an incline, which would allow the juice to trickle down while the solid matter stayed behind. At this point, one must be concerned with the prohibition of stam yenam.

This may be relevant for those who buy drinks at fruit/smoothie bars. Often, fruits and vegetables, such as apples, oranges, melons and berries, are blended together and made into shakes and "smoothies." At times, grapes are added to the mixture. In this case if a non-Jew puts the grapes into the blender, is the entire shake prohibited?

It appears that this case of making shakes and smoothies, when included, grapes are completely crushed, and the juice is not separated from the peels and pits, and therefore the liquid extracted from the grapes would not be considered wine, and not susceptible to the prohibition of stam yenam.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Does One Make the Beracha of ‘SheAsa Li Kol Tzarki’ on Tisha BeAv
Tisha BeAv- The Prohibition of Laundering Clothes The Week of Tisha BeAv
Tisha BeAv- Seudat Hamafseket (The Last Meal Before The Fast)
Tisha BeAv- The Prohibition Taking Hair Cuts, and Cutting Nails During The Week of Tisha BeAv
Tisha BeAv- The Prohibition of Wearing Freshly Laundered Garments In The Week of Tisha BeAv
Tisha BeAv- Prohibitions During The First 9 Days of Av
Weddings and Engagements During the Three Weeks
Music During the Three Weeks
The Shehehiyanu Blessing During the Three Weeks
Reciting Tikun Hasot During the Three Weeks
The Miracle of 11 Tammuz, 5687 (1927)
Should One Avoid Having to Recite “She’hehiyanu” During the Three Weeks?
What Kind of Siyum Permits Eating Meat During the Nine Days?
Is it Permissible to Eat Synthetic Meat During the Nine Days
Torah Reading on a Fast Day in a Minyan of People Who are Not Fasting
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found