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Bishul: Difference between revisions

From Halachipedia
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==Stirring hot food==
==Stirring hot food==
===Not fully cooked food===
===Not fully cooked food===
# It’s forbidden food that isn't fully cooked <ref> Rambam 3:11, S”A 318:18, Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 1:31, and 39 Melachos (vol 2 pg 560)  bring this law as halacha. </ref>  
# It’s forbidden to stir food that isn't fully cooked <ref> Rambam 3:11, S”A 318:18, Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 1:31, and 39 Melachos (vol 2 pg 560)  bring this law as halacha. </ref>  
# There's no prohibition of stirring a clear liquid such as chicken soup. <ref> 39 Melachos (vol 2 pg 560) </ref>
# There's no prohibition of stirring a clear liquid such as chicken soup. <ref> 39 Melachos (vol 2 pg 560) </ref>
# One can’t even take out a serving utensil from a Kli Rishon (even off the fire), unless the food is cold (not at the level of 113 degrees). <Ref> When Rambam 3:11 and S”A 318:18 quote the law of stirring, they extend it to the case of removing a serving spoon from a hot food which causes a mixing of the food. Bet Yosef explains that when the Rambam forbids by a pot on the fire, it also includes the case of where the pot came off the fire and is still boiling. This is found explicitly in the Ran 6b and Rabbenu Yerucham 3:12 pg 68a. S”A rules this law with the language of a pot removed from the fire. This is brought as halacha in Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 1:31. </ref>
# One can’t even take out a serving utensil from a Kli Rishon (even off the fire), unless the food is cold (not at the level of 113 degrees). <Ref> When Rambam 3:11 and S”A 318:18 quote the law of stirring, they extend it to the case of removing a serving spoon from a hot food which causes a mixing of the food. Bet Yosef explains that when the Rambam forbids by a pot on the fire, it also includes the case of where the pot came off the fire and is still boiling. This is found explicitly in the Ran 6b and Rabbenu Yerucham 3:12 pg 68a. S”A rules this law with the language of a pot removed from the fire. This is brought as halacha in Shemirat [[Shabbat]] KeHilchata 1:31. </ref>