DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 658 KB)
Situations Where Cooking a Vegetable Changes Its Beracha

The Gemara in Masechet Berachot (38) discusses the status of certain vegetables that are more commonly eaten cooked than raw. When it comes to these vegetables, the Gemara establishes, one who eats them in a raw state would recite the Beracha of "She’hakol," rather than "Boreh Peri Ha’adama," because he does not eat the food in its usual manner. One would recite the Beracha of "Ha’adama" over such vegetables only if they are cooked.

Therefore, one who picks an olive off a tree and eats it in its present state, without its having been softened through pickling or boiling, would recite the Beracha of "She’hakol," rather than "Ha’etz." Likewise, one who chews a raw potato would recite "She’hakol," instead of "Ha’adama." This applies as well to raw squash, raw string beans, raw beets, and raw cabbage that has not been pickled. In all these situations, one would recite the Beracha of "She’hakol," since he does not eat the food in the state in which it is normally eaten. One who eats these foods after they are cooked recites the Beracha of "Ha’adama."

When it comes to some other foods, however, the opposite is true: cooking serves to "downgrade" the food from the Beracha of "Ha’adama" to the Beracha of "She’hakol." One example is garlic. Since garlic is more commonly eaten raw, one who eats raw garlic recites the Beracha of "Ha’adama," whereas one who eats garlic after it is cooked recites "She’hakol." Some people like to place garlic on the grill to soften it; in such a case, the Beracha would be "She’hakol," rather than "Ha’adama."

Tosafot (commentaries to the Talmud by Medieval French and German scholars) note that there is yet a third category, namely, foods that are commonly eaten both raw and cooked. When it comes to these foods, the Beracha is the same in both situations. One who eats an apple, for example, recites "Boreh Peri Ha’etz" regardless of whether he eats it raw or cooked, since apples are commonly eaten in both conditions. The same would apply to carrots, which require the Beracha of "Ha’adama" regardless of whether they are raw or cooked.

The basic rule, then, is that one recites "Ha’etz" or "Ha’adama" only when he eats the fruit or vegetable in the state in which it is normally eaten. If he eats it in a different state, then he recites "She’hakol." If the food is commonly eaten in both conditions, then one recites "Ha’etz" or "Ha’adama" in either case.

Summary: If a fruit or vegetable is commonly eaten only after it is cooked, and not raw, then one who eats it cooked recites "Ha’etz" or "Ha’adama," and one who eats it raw recites "She’hakol." Common examples of such foods are olives, potatoes, string beans, squash and beets. Conversely, if a vegetable is more commonly eaten raw, as in the case of garlic, then one who eats it raw recites "Ha’adama" whereas one who eats it cooked recites "She’hakol." Foods that are commonly eaten in both conditions, such as apples and carrots, require the same Beracha (Ha’etz for apples, Ha’adama for carrots) regardless of the state in which they are eaten.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Can Eliyahu HaNavee Come On Shabbat?
Is It Permissible To Have A Seuda Inside A Bet Kennesset
Is It Permissible To Change Biblical Verses from Singular to Plural Form
Is It Required To Repeat The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit If Removing The Talit For Just A Short While
Is It Required To Make The Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit Again If The 1st Talit Was Found To Be Pasul (Improper)
Is One Required To Stand For An Elderly Lady or Scholarly Woman
Is It Permissible To Simply Answer Amen and Rely On Another's Beracha Of LiHitatef BiTzitzit
Granting Precedence to a Jew When Hiring
Is It Permissible To Give A Non-Kosher Turkey To A Goy For Their Holiday
Yichud- 1) Must An Onen Follow The Laws of Yichud, 2) War and Yichud
Yichud- Is It Permissible For A Man To Be Alone With A Lady On An Express Elevator In A Skyscraper
Yichud- Is It Permissible to Be Alone with Mother, Father, Daughter, Son, Brother, or Sister
Tzineeut and The Proper and Improper Ways Of Socializing With Friends
How Could We Pray To G-d That Korbanot Be Accepted, When Today We Do Not Have Korbanot?
Some Laws Regarding Visiting or Seeing a Cemetery
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found