DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is For Refuah Shelemah for
 Abraham ben David Ben Shushan

Dedicated By
his family

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 582 KB)
Is It Permissible To Mash Potatoes, Avocado, and Bananas On Shabbat

Is it permissible to mash soft foods such as avocado, cooked potatoes or bananas on Shabbat?

One of the thirty-nine "Melachot," or areas of forbidden activity on Shabbat, is "Tohen," grinding.  Essentially, grinding means transforming a single object into many objects; when preparing cinnamon, for example, a person takes a cinnamon stick and transforms it into many small particles.  As such, this prohibition applies to mashing, as well.  When a person mashes a banana, for example, it is only due to the moisture in the banana that it remains a single mass.  The act of mashing essentially breaks the banana into many small particles, and these particles are held together by the moisture.  Therefore, mashing falls under the category of "Tohen" and is forbidden on Shabbat.  (Tosefta Shabbat, Perek 15, Halacha 10.)

However, the Sages permitted mashing soft foods with a fork to prepare them for immediate use.  Thus, if one wishes to serve mashed potatoes at his Shabbat meal, he may mash the potatoes immediately prior to the meal to prepare them.  Similarly, if one wishes to feed banana to an infant, he may mash the banana just before feeding the infant.  One may not, however, mash foods to prepare them for a meal later in the day.  This is the ruling of Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Yehave Daat (5:27).

Rabbi Moshe Halevi, in his work Menuhat Ahava, Helek 2, page 278, writes that even when one mashes food for immediate use, he should preferably do so in an unusual manner, such as by using the handle of the fork.  Even though one may, strictly speaking, mash foods for immediate use even in standard fashion, it is nevertheless admirable to act stringently in this regard and mash in an unconventional manner, in order to satisfy all opinions.

Summary: Halacha permits mashing soft foods – such as avocado, potatoes and bananas – with a fork on Shabbat for immediate use, but not for use later in the day.  When one mashes food for immediate use, some authorities recommend doing so in an unusual manner, such as by using the handle of the fork.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Aseret Yime Teshuva- The Statement of 'Michok Berachamecha' in the Avinu Malkenu
Insight Into Shabbat Shuva
The Beracha of Shehehiyanu on the Second Night of Rosh Hashanah
Rosh Hashanah – “Yom Terua”, and “Zichron Terua” if on Shabbat
Staying Up On Rosh Hashana Day, Must One Wake Up at Dawn on Rosh Hashanah?
Rosh Hashana- One Who Cannot Eat the Traditional Rosh Hashanah Foods
Rosh Hashanah – The Custom to Eat Sweet Foods, Pomegranates and Apples
Rosh Hashanah – The Importance of the Special Rosh Hashanah Foods
Rosh Hashana- Candle Lighting If On Shabbat or Saturday Night
When Rosh Hashanah Falls on Shabbat
Rosh Hashana- Se’uda Shelishit When Rosh Hashanah Falls on Shabbat
Does One Recite Shalom Alechem, Eshet Hayil and Azamer Bishbahin When Yom Tob Falls on Friday Night?
Rosh Hashana- The 1st Mitzvah on Rosh Hashana Night and Saying Meen Sheva on Shabbat Rosh Hashana
Rosh Hashana- Fasting on Ereb Rosh Hashanah
Applying Oil to One’s Skin on Shabbat
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found