DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 1.96 MB)
If a Person Ate an Amount of “Mezonot” Food Requiring Birkat Ha’mazon, and Cannot Remember if He Recited Birkat Ha’mazon

If a person eats a large quantity of "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin" (the precise definition of which will be discussed in a separate context), such as cake, then the cake is treated like bread, and thus requires Netilat Yadayim, the Beracha of "Ha’mosi," and Birkat Ha’mazon. The amount one must eat for the food to attain the status of bread is 216 grams, or approximately 7.5 oz.

Hacham Ovadia Yosef ruled that in such a case, the requirement to recite Birkat Ha’mazon after eating the cake applies on the level of Torah obligation, just as in the case of one who ate bread (in the amount that brings satiation). The practical importance of this point is that if a person in this situation cannot remember whether or not he recited Birkat Ha’mazon, then he must recite the first three Berachot. Since we deal with a Torah obligation, we must apply the rule of "Safek De’Orayta Le’humra" – that one must act stringently in situations of doubt involving a Torah law. Since eating 216 grams of cake requires reciting Birkat Ha’mazon on the level of Torah obligation, one must be stringent in a situation of doubt, and recite the first three Berachot of Birkat Ha’mazon (which are required on the level of Torah law).

Hacham Ovadia adds that in many instances, there is also a question whether the food indeed falls under the category of "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin," or if it might be considered bread. Sponge cake, for example, is considered "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin" according to some opinions, but according to others, "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin" includes only crackers or pastries with filling, such that sponge cake is considered ordinary bread. In some instances, then, when a person ate 216 grams of "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin" and then cannot remember whether he recited Birkat Ha’mazon, he is under a "Sefek Sefeka" ("double doubt"), and must certainly recite Birkat Ha’mazon. But in truth, as Hacham Ovadia acknowledges, this point is not even necessary, because reciting Birkat Ha’mazon after eating 216 grams of "Pat Ha’ba’a Be’kisnin" in any event constitutes a Torah obligation, and, as such, we must apply the rule of "Safek De’Orayta Le’humra," as discussed.

Summary: If one ate 216 grams (approx. 7.5 oz.) or more of cake or cookies, then he must recite Birkat Ha’mazon, just as if he had eaten bread. If, after eating, he cannot remember whether or not he recited Birkat Ha’mazon, then he recites the first three Berachot of Birkat Ha’mazon, just as he would if he had this doubt after eating bread.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Pesah- Making a Vessel Kosher for Pesah
Pesah- The Status of Oats on Pesah
May One Allow a Non-Jew Into His Home With Hames on Pesah?
Pesah – Does One Recite the Beracha Over Marror if He Lost His Sense of Taste?
Pesah – Mosi Masa, Marror, Korech, and the Afikoman
Pesah – If One Forgot to Lean While Drinking One of the Four Cups at the Seder
Pesah – May One Place Masa in Liquid?
Pesah – If the Dough is Left Unhandled During the Masa Baking Process
Pesah – The Wine Used for Kadesh; The Special Kiddush Recited When the Seder is Held on Mosa'e Shabbat
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – The Mukse Status of Masa
Pesah- Do We Eat a Hardboiled Egg at the Seder If Pesah Falls Out On Mosa'e Shabbat
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – The Procedure for Shabbat Afternoon
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – the First Two Shabbat Meals
Erev Pesah on Shabbat – Shabbat Hagadol, the Fast of the Firstborn, Bedikat Hames, and Burning Hames
Pesah- Proper Procedures to Follow When Baking Masot
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found