DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Asher Grunfeld, Asher benTzvi Chaim
"To our Dad and our children's loving Saba, we miss you and love you on your third Yahrzeit. May your neshama still receive many aliyot. "

Dedicated By
His family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 6.99 MB)
Reciting the Beracha Aharona As Soon as Possible After Drinking

As we know, Halacha requires reciting a Beracha after eating a certain quantity of food, or drinking a certain quantity of liquid. For example, one who eats a "Ke’zayit" or more of bread recites Birkat Ha’mazon, one who eats a "Ke’zayit" or more of "Mezonot" food recites "Al Ha’mihya," and one who drinks a "Rebi’it" or more of water recites "Boreh Nefashot."

What is less known, however, is that the Beracha must be recited within a certain time period. Specifically, it must be recited before the food has been digested. Once a person no longer feels satiated from the food he consumed, he can no longer recite the required Beracha.

When it comes to bread, it is generally assumed that one can recite Birkat Ha’mazon within 72 minutes of eating. However, people with slow digestion, who still feel satiated even hours later, can recite Birkat Ha’mazon even well beyond this point.

When it comes to water and other beverages, however, there is considerable discussion among the Poskim as to the duration of time one has after drinking to recite "Boreh Nefashot." Some Poskim maintained that the Beracha may be recited within a half-hour of drinking, but others ruled that the Beracha must be recited within two minutes, because often, especially in the summertime, when one perspires, the water one drinks is digested very rapidly in the body. It is not uncommon in the summer – particularly if one is playing sports or exercising – for one to feel thirsty within minutes of taking a drink, and his renewed thirst indicates that the water he had drunk has already been fully processed, such that he can no longer recite "Boreh Nefashot."

For this reason, Hacham Bension Abba Shaul (Israel, 1924-1998) ruled that one should try to recite "Boreh Nefashot" immediately after drinking, to ensure he recites the Beracha within the required time frame. Even if one will need to drink again soon afterward, he should still recite "Boreh Nefashot" now, after drinking, because the water he drank might go through his body’s system very rapidly, and he will then have missed the time frame for the recitation of the Beracha.

This applies also to the Beracha of "Al Ha’gefen" which one recites after drinking a "Rebi’it" of wine. If one drinks wine at a Kiddush on Shabbat morning, for example, he should not wait too long to recite "Al Ha’gefen," because it does not take all that long for the wine to go through his system. Even if he still feels full from the food he ate at the Kiddush, nevertheless, the Beracha of "Al Ha’gefen" is required for the wine which he drank, not for the food, and so it must be recited before the wine has been fully digested. Therefore, like "Boreh Nefashot" after drinking other beverages, "Al Ha’gefen" must be recited as soon as possible after one has drunk wine.

Summary: It is not entirely clear how much time one has to recite a Beracha Aharona after drinking ("Al Ha’gefen" after wine, "Boreh Nefashot" after other beverages), and therefore, one should recite the Beracha Aharona immediately after drinking.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Speaking Words of Torah and Other Matters During a Meal
Reciting "Le'Shem Yichud" Before Performing a Mitzva
Is It Permissible or Required To Donate A Kidney To Save A Life
Recommended Procedures After Experiencing a Dream
Cutting Down Fruit-Bearing Trees
May a Yeshiva Accept a Child Born to a Jewish Mother and Non-Jewish Father?
Teaching Complex Matters of Halacha to Students Who Might Misunderstand
Announcing the New Month on the Shabbat Preceding Rosh Chodesh
Reciting Birkat Ha'levana Before Seven Complete Days Have Passed Since the Molad; Reciting Birkat Ha'levana Indoors
Some Halachot Concerning Hallel
Avoiding Items That Causes One To Forget His Learning
From The Concept of Havilot Havilot- Is it Permissible To Have One Sedua for 2 Siyumim
Eating or Drinking in a Synagogue or Beit Midrash
The Requirement of Mechitza During Prayer and Other Events
Foods and Substances One Must Avoid Due to Potential Risks
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found