DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

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

      
(File size: 608 KB)
How much bread must one plan to eat to require Netilat Yadayim, and within how much time must this amount of bread be eaten?

One who plans on eating a Ke’besa – approximately 2 oz. – or more of bread must wash Netilat Yadayim with a Beracha. Within how much time after washing his hands must he eat this quantity of bread in order to justify the Beracha that he recited over the Netilat Yadayim?

Normally, when Halacha requires the consumption of a Ke’zayit (half a Ke’besa), it requires that one eat the Ke’zayit within a time-frame known as "Kedeh Achilat Pares," which, according to Hacham Ovadia Yosef, is 7.5 minutes. In the case under discussion, then, when one must eat twice this amount, each Ke’zayit must be eaten within 7.5 minutes. Moreover, there must be less than a 7.5-minute interruption between the consumption of the two Ke’zetim. And thus, for example, if a person eats the first Ke’zayit in six minutes, and then three minutes later he begins eating the second Ke’zayit, which he eats in about four minutes, then he has justified the Beracha he had recited. But if a person eats the first Ke’zayit, and then waits until the end of the meal before eating the second Ke’zayit, he has not eaten a Ke’besa within the required time-frame, and the Beracha he recited over Netilat Yadayim thus becomes illegitimate. It is therefore advisable after washing Netilat Yadayim to eat the full quantity of 2 oz. of bread immediately, without any delay, to ensure that the Beracha he had recited is valid.

This Halacha appears in Yalkut Yosef – Berachot, vol. 2, p. 77 (in the footnote).

Summary: One recites the Beracha over Netilat Yadayim only if he will be eating 2 oz. of bread, and each ounce will be eaten within 7.5 minutes, without a 7.5-minute interruption between the two ounces. It is therefore advisable to eat 2 oz. of bread immediately when one begins the meal to ensure that the Beracha does not retroactively become a wasted Beracha.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Is It Permissible to Spread a Talet Over the Children on Simhat Torah?
Is It Permissible On Shabbat To Walk On Grass Or To Have A Picnic On Grass
Reading Shir Hashirim on Ereb Shabbat
Peeling a Hardboiled Egg on Shabbat
Inflating a Ball on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Repair Eye Glasses on Shabbat
Walking in a Public Domain on Shabbat With Food in One's Mouth
Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Cut Tissue Paper; Asking a Gentile on Shabbat to Turn on a Light for a Frightened Child
Mukse- If a Base for a Mukse Item Also Holds a Non-Mukse Item
Mukse- Handling a Corpse on Shabbat
If Part of A Utensil or A Button Becomes Detached on Shabbat
Is It Permissible To Move Frozen Meat On Shabbat Or Is It Muktze
Mukse – the Status of Chicken Bones and Eggshells
Collecting Candies That Were Thrown in the Synagogue on Shabbat
Mukse: Placing Empty Shells on a Plate
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found