DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 440 KB)
May One Use Measuring Devices on Yom Tob?

If a person cooks rice on Yom Tob, may he use a measuring cup so he can prepare a specific amount of rice? Halacha certainly allows one to cook on Yom Tob, but the question arises as to whether measuring is permissible as part of the process of food preparation.

The Sages forbade precise measuring on Yom Tob, but not making rough measurements. Therefore, it would be forbidden to use a measuring cup for the purpose of arriving at a precise amount. One may, however, use a measuring cup in order to roughly estimate an amount of rice. As long as one’s intent is to arrive at a general estimate, and not to measure with precision, he may use a measuring cup to measure food. Certainly, it is permissible to use an ordinary glass, that does not have measurements, to determine the amount of rice that one wishes to prepare.

Furthermore, Hacham Ovadia Yosef rules that measuring is permissible for the purpose of a Misva. Some people have the practice of weighing Masa at the Seder to know precisely how much Masa they need to eat, and some Haggadot include tables and diagrams to help a person determine the amounts of Marror and other foods he needs to eat. These measurements are permissible on Yom Tob, because they are made for the sake of a Misva.

Summary: It is permissible to use a measuring cup on Yom Tob, provided that one makes a rough measurement, and does not measure precisely. It is permissible to make precise measurements on Yom Tob for the sake of a Misva, such as to determine the precise amount of Masa one must eat.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is it Permissible to Drink Wine or Grape Juice on Ereb Pesah?
Pesah – Bedikat Hametz After the Home Was Thoroughly Cleaned
Pesah – Verbally Designating Meat for Pesah
Passover- Laws of Matza: the Use of Machine Matza or Matza Made from Oats; the Beracha Over Matza; Dipping Matza in Water; Eating Matza Throughout Pesach
Pesah – The Fourth Cup of Wine at the Seder
Pesah – The Reason for Dipping Celery in Saltwater
Pesah- The Prohibition Against Eating Masa on Ereb Pesah
Pesah – Bringing Books to the Table, Using Tablecloths
Pesah – Halachot of Karpas; Reciting “Kadesh U’rhatz…” Before Each Stage of the Seder
Passover- Eating Rice on Pesah
Passover- The Fast of the Firstborn on Ereb Pesah
Ereb Pesah – Customs Regarding the Burning of Hametz; Refraining From Work on Ereb Pesah
Passover- Eating The Afikoman on Pesach Night
Passover- Buying Hametz After Pesah; Giving the Gentile Access to One’s Hametz During Pesah
The Proper Way to Dip the Marror in the Haroset
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found