DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.04 MB)
Must One Recite Two Berachot When He Eats a Cracker With a Topping?

Very often, hors d’oeuvres served at affairs include crackers with a topping such as fish, tomato, or anchovies. If one eats a cracker with a topping, must he recite two separate Berachot – one over the cracker, and one over the topping – or does he recite just one Beracha that covers both?

The Shuhan Aruch (Orah Haim 212) writes that in such a case, one recites only the Beracha of "Mezonot" over the cracker, and this Beracha covers also the topping. This follows the general principle that whenever a "Mezonot" food is eaten together with another food, the "Mezonot" food is considered the "Ikar" (primary component), and thus one recites only the Beracha of "Mezonot" over the combination, which covers both portions.

Elsewhere (in Siman 168), the Shulhan Aruch appears, at first glance, to indicate otherwise, writing that if one eats a cracker with a topping, he recites a Beracha only on the topping. However, the commentators explain that this passage refers specifically to the case of a tasteless cracker, which is eaten not for its taste, but only in order to hold the topping, so that one’s hands are not dirtied by the topping. A common modern-day example, as Hacham Ovadia Yosef writes, is a tasteless wafer cone eaten with ice cream. The cone itself has no taste, or very little taste, and it is included only to hold the ice cream, and therefore, one who eats ice cream with such a cone recites only the Beracha of "She’ha’kol" over the ice cream, and this Beracha covers also the cone. But in the case of a regular cracker which one eats with a topping, he recites the Beracha of "Mezonot," since the cracker is considered the primary component.

The Mishna Berura (Rav Yisrael Meir Kagan of Radin, 1839-1933) ruled (168:45) differently, claiming that a "Mezonot" food constitutes the "Ikar" only if it was cooked together with the other food. In his view, if a topping is placed on a cracker, then since the two products were prepared separately and are now combined, one must recite two separate Berachot, one over the cracker and one over the topping. Hacham Ovadia Yosef, however, disputes this ruling, citing proofs from earlier sources. Therefore, one who eats crackers with a topping recites only the Beracha of "Mezonot."

Summary: If one eats a cracker with a topping, he recites only the Beracha of "Mezonot" over the cracker, and this Beracha covers the topping, as well.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Halachic Status of Non-Jewish Brandy, and of Wine Containing Other Ingredients
The Status of Wine Touched by a Non-Jewish Child; The Status of Products that May Have Been Mixed with Non-Jewish Wine
Setam Yenam – The Severity of the Prohibition Against Non-Jewish Wine
Setam Yenam – The Prohibition Against Drinking the Wine of Non-Jews
To What Temperature Must Wine be Heated to be Considered “Mebushal”?
The Status of Utensils Used by a Gentile for Cooking
Does the Prohibition of “Bishul Akum” Apply to Tuna Fish?
May One Eat Food Cooked by a Non-Jew if a Jew Kindled the Fire?
Eating Dairy at a Meat Meal Six Hours After Eating Meat; Starting a Dairy Meal Within Six Hours of Eating Meat
What is the Status of Parve Food Cooked in a Meat or Dairy Pot?
Converting Meat Utensils Into Dairy Utensils Through Hag’ala
May One Eat Fish with Milk or Other Dairy Products?
Kashrut of a Giraffe
Selling a Gid Ha'nashe to a Gentile, and Using it to Stitch the Parchment of a Sefer Torah
Washing One's Hands in Between Fish and Meat; Drinking Water Immediately After Eating Fish
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found