Corn and potato products
From Halachipedia
- If one grinds a vegetable or grain not from the five grains and cook it, if the vegetable is still recognizable in the product then the Bracha is the same the vegetable, however if it’s ground and unrecognizable then the Bracha is shehakol unless it’s still intact. [1]
- Corn flakes can either be shehakol or haadoma depending on how they are made. If made from flour – then shehakol. If made from rolled grits – then haadoma.
- Corn tortillas and corn chips would be shehakol since both are processed to the point where they loose their ideal brocha. [5]
- Potato chips are HaAdama because it’s recognizably a thin slice of a potato that was fried. [6]
- Some say that pringles are HaAdama since the result retains a resemblance of the original vegetable. [7]
- Some say that instant potatoes are HaAdama since the result retains a resembalance of the original vegetable. [8]
References
- ↑ Mishna Brurah 202:42 writes that the halacha is if the vegetables were crushed but still it’s intact then it retains the original Bracha, whereas if it’s crushed and unrecognizable the Bracha is Shehakol. So holds Vezot HaBracha (pg 100, chapter 12) and Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 403-4, chapter 22)
- ↑ Vezot HaBracha (pg 100, chapter 12) and Or Letzion (vol 2, 14:11)
- ↑ Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 409, chapter 22) in name of Rav Moshe Feinstein and Rav Shlomo Zalman
- ↑ Vezot HaBracha (pg 100, chapter 12) quotes Rav Mordechai Eliyahu who says that the Bracha on popcorn is Shehakol.
- ↑ Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 410, chapter 22)
- ↑ Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 407, chapter 22) in name of Rav Shlomo Zalman
- ↑ Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 407, chapter 22) in name of Rav Shlomo Zalman
- ↑ Veten Bracha (Halachos of Brochos by Rabbi Bodner pg 407, chapter 22) in name of Rav Shlomo Zalman, Rabbi Pinchas Sheinburg, and Rav Elyashiv