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Ikar and Tafel: Difference between revisions

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====Chicken and Rice====
====Chicken and Rice====
<gallery mode="packed">
Small Chicken and Rice.jpg|Small pieces of chicken mixed with rice
Large_Chicken_and_Rice.jpg|Large pieces of chicken on rice
</gallery>
#If the chicken pieces are large and eaten by themselves without rice in the same bite, the chicken and rice each deserve their own bracha.<ref>Yalkut Yosef 212:5. See similar ideas in Aruch Hashulchan 212:2 and Or Letzion 2:14:30.</ref>
#If the chicken pieces are large and eaten by themselves without rice in the same bite, the chicken and rice each deserve their own bracha.<ref>Yalkut Yosef 212:5. See similar ideas in Aruch Hashulchan 212:2 and Or Letzion 2:14:30.</ref>
#If chicken and rice is mixed together and the pieces of chicken are small enough that on each bite of chicken there is rice, the bracha is made on the majority; if the rice is majority the bracha is mezonot, while if the chicken is the majority the bracha is shehakol.<ref>Yabia Omer OC 7:32, Halacha Brurah 212:6, Yalkut Yosef 212:5. Vezot Habracha (11:3:5 p. 91) quotes Rav Elyashiv that if there are two foods mixed together and one wants both, the bracha depends on the majority even if the minority ingredient is more important and expensive. However, the Shaarei Habracha (ch. 15 fnt. 22) disputes this opinion of Rav Elyashiv and holds that the more significant food determines the bracha, even if it is in the minority. His opinion is based on Taz 202:2 and Or Letzion 2:14:29.</ref>
#If chicken and rice is mixed together and the pieces of chicken are small enough that on each bite of chicken there is rice, the bracha is made on the majority; if the rice is majority the bracha is mezonot, while if the chicken is the majority the bracha is shehakol.<ref>Yabia Omer OC 7:32, Halacha Brurah 212:6, Yalkut Yosef 212:5. Vezot Habracha (11:3:5 p. 91) quotes Rav Elyashiv that if there are two foods mixed together and one wants both, the bracha depends on the majority even if the minority ingredient is more important and expensive. However, the Shaarei Habracha (ch. 15 fnt. 22) disputes this opinion of Rav Elyashiv and holds that the more significant food determines the bracha, even if it is in the minority. His opinion is based on Taz 202:2 and Or Letzion 2:14:29.</ref>
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