DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.66 MB)
The Beracha Over Eggplant, Papaya, Banana, Pineapple and Passion Fruit

The Kaftor Va’ferah (work by Ishtori Ha’parhi, 14th century) maintained that it is forbidden to eat eggplant – a plant which grows on trees that dies within three years after it grows. He reasoned that since the Torah forbids eating Orla – the fruit of a tree produced during the first three years after the tree is planted – it is forbidden to eat the fruit of a tree that dies before the end of three years.

This position was disputed by the Radbaz (Rav David Ben Zimra, Egypt, 1479-1573), who writes in one of his responsum that when he arrived in the Land of Israel, he saw prominent Rabbis eating eggplant, proving that it is permissible for consumption. He added that the eggplant tree does not qualify as a "tree" in the Halachic sense, and so the Beracha over eggplant is "Boreh Peri Ha’adama," and not "Boreh Peri Ha’etz." The reason, as explained by the Halachot Ketanot (Rav Yisrael Yaakob Hagiz, 1620-1674) based on a passage in the Tosefta, is because a defining characteristic of a tree is a slow, gradual process of producing fruit. The eggplant tree produces the eggplants very rapidly, within a year of being planted, a quality which sets it fundamentally apart from ordinary trees. It therefore does not qualify as a Halachic "tree," and, as such, it is not subject to the prohibition of Orla, and the Beracha over its fruit is "Ha’adama," and not "Ha’etz."

This ruling is corroborated by a story told by the Hida (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1806), in his work Birkeh Yosef (Yoreh De’a, 294), of the three towering sages in Safed – the Arizal, Rav Haim Vital, and Rav Moshe Alshich – who once approached Maran, Rav Yosef Karo (author of the Shulhan Aruch) and inquired about the Halachic status of the eggplant. Maran replied that it may be eaten, and the Beracha recited is "Ha’adama." This is, indeed, the Halacha.

Summary: Even though the eggplant grows on a tree, its Beracha is "Boreh Peri Ha’adama."

 


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