DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 3.37 MB)
The Beracha of Yogurt Mixed With Fruit or Granola

People often add fruit to yogurt, and eat the yogurt mixed with the fruit. Generally, there is more yogurt than fruit, such that the yogurt constitutes the primary component of the mixture. As such, one would recite "She’ha’kol" over the yogurt, and this Beracha covers also the fruit. If a person adds so much fruit that the fruit now constitutes the majority, then he recites "Ha’etz," and this Beracha covers both the fruit and the yogurt.

A more complicated question arises in the common case where pieces of granola are added to the yogurt. This question is complicated because the Beracha recited over granola depends on how the granola was produced by the company. Some companies produce granola by dry roasting oats (as do most Israeli companies which produce granola), in which case the proper Beracha is "Ha’adama." Although oats are among the five grains over which one recites "Mezonot," the Beracha of "Mezonot" is required only if the grain was ground into flour and baked, or if the grain was boiled in water. If it was merely dry roasted, then the Beracha remains "Ha’adama." As different companies produce granola through different methods, it is important to determine the method used in the production of the granola one consumes in order to determine the proper Beracha.

With this in mind, let us return to the question of yogurt mixed with granola. If the granola is of the type which requires "Mezonot," as the oats were cooked in water, then we apply the general rule that a "Mezonot" food is always regarded as the primary component of a mixture. Therefore, one would recite "Mezonot" over the yogurt and granola, and both would be covered, even if there is more yogurt than granola. If, however, the granola is of the type that requires "Ha’adama," as the oats were dry roasted, then the Beracha is determined by the majority of the mixture. If there is more yogurt than granola, then one would recite "She’ha’kol," whereas if there is more granola than yogurt, then the Beracha is "Ha’adama."

Summary: If one puts fruit into yogurt and mixes them together, then he recites "She’ha’kol" over the entire mixture, unless there is more fruit than yogurt, in which case he recites "Ha’etz" over the entire mixture. If one eats yogurt with granola, then if the granola is of the kind that requires "Mezonot" (meaning, the oats were boiled in water), then he recites "Mezonot" over the entire mixture regardless of the amount of granola it contains. If the granola is of the kind that requires "Ha’adama" (meaning, the oats were dry roasted), then one recites "She’ha’kol," unless the granola constitutes the majority, in which case one recites "Ha’adama." In general, when eating granola, one must determine the process by which it was produced in order to know which Beracha to recite.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Does Someone Count for a Minyan If He is in a Different Room?
Is There an Obligation to Live in Eretz Yisrael?
May a Woman Return Home From the Hospital on Shabbat After a “False Alarm”?
Revoking Rabbinic Edicts of Past Generations
Accompanying a Woman in Labor to the Hospital on Shabbat
May a Husband be Present During His Wife’s Labor and Delivery?
May Expectant Parents Find Out the Fetus’ Gender?
Is it Permissible to Pray for the Death of a Terminally Ill Patient Who is Suffering?
Using the Mother’s Name When Praying for a Sick Patient
“Opening One’s Mouth to the Satan”
Does One Recite Tefilat Ha’derech Before a Short Flight?
Customs to Observe After Experiencing a Miracle
The Beracha Recited Upon Entering a Cemetery
The Completion of the 13th Daf Yomi Cycle
May a Synagogue Have a Menorah With Seven Branches?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found