DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is

Dedicated By
Isaac Moses

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 796 KB)
Is A Thermos or Tiger Pot Considered A Keli Rishon

A "Keli Rishon" – a utensil in which food or liquid has been cooked – has the capacity to effectuate "cooking" in the Halachic sense of the term. This means that placing raw food inside a "Keli Rishon" on Shabbat violates the Torah prohibition of cooking on Shabbat. This applies even after the utensil has been taken off the fire, so long as it is still hot. However, if one transfers the contents of a "Keli Rishon" to another utensil, that second utensil – the "Keli Sheni" – does not have the capacity to cook. The walls of that utensil cool the hot liquid such that it is no longer capable of "cooking" as defined by Halacha. Thus, if one pours boiling water from its original pot into another utensil, one may cook raw food in the water in the second utensil.

Rabbi Moshe Halevi (Israel, 1961-2001), in his work Menuhat Ahaba (vol. 2, p. 340), rules that this Halacha of "Keli Sheni" does not apply to a thermos. A thermos is specially insulated to retain the heat of its contents. As such, hot liquid poured from a "Keli Rishon" to a thermos cannot be assumed to have cooled, as it does in a regular "Keli Sheni." We must therefore treat the thermos as a "Keli Rishon," and it would be forbidden to place raw food or a teabag inside the thermos.

However, Rabbi Moshe Halevi adds, it would be permissible to pour hot water from a thermos onto a teabag to make tea. He reaches this conclusion on the basis of a combination of two factors. First, some Rishonim (Medieval Halachic authorities) maintain that liquid poured from a "Keli Rishon" does not have the capacity to cook; in their view, hot liquid can cook only while it is inside the original pot. Secondly, the water poured from a thermos into a teacup has come in contact with air twice – after leaving the original pot, and when leaving the thermos. This allows us to treat water poured from a thermos more leniently than water inside a thermos. Hence, although one may not place a teabag inside a thermos, one may pour hot water from a thermos onto a teabag in a teacup to make tea. This is also the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, as published in the pamphlet Kol Sinai.

This Halacha applies as well to an insulated tiger pot which people often fill with hot water from an urn and then bring to the table. It is permissible to pour from the tiger pot directly onto a teabag to prepare tea.

Summary: One may not place raw food inside a thermos or tiger pot of hot water, but one may pour hot water from a thermos or tiger pot onto raw food, such as a teabag.


 


Recent Daily Halachot...
If Milk Was Cooked in a Meat Pot
May One Cook Parve Food in a Meat Pot With the Intention of Eating it With Dairy Foods?
Must One Wait Six Hours Before Eating Dairy After Eating Parve Food Cooked With Meat?
Eating Meat on a Table Containing Dairy Foods
May Meat and Dairy Foods be Stored Alongside One Another in a Refrigerator or Freezer?
Mixing Meat and Milk in the Drain or Trash Bin
Is it Permissible to Use the Same Dishwasher for Meat and Milk, and Pesah?
Halachot of Ovens and Microwave Ovens
If Acquaintances Eat Meat and Dairy at the Same Table
Three Preparations Needed before Eating Meat after Dairy
Meat and Fish Together at the Same Table, in the Same Oven, or on the Same Grill
Eating Meat After Fish
The Prohibition of Eating Meat with Fish
Selling Non-Jewish Wine or Giving it as a Gift; The Status of Wine Which a Non-Jew Touched But Did Not Move
The Status of Grapes at a Fruit/Smoothie Bar
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found