Gebrok halacha? Liquids in Pesach Dip recipes (for matza)

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  • #1958194
    ywnjudy
    Participant

    As usual, i couldn’t find the answer to this online. I notice that Naomi Nachman’s Pesach dip (marinated eggplant) includes lemon juice. My question is, when putting that on matza, would that be gebrok?

    I’m asking this because i absentmindedly added about 1/2 TB water to my tomato dip recipe to thin it out for health reasons, so as to make it a bit less fat-saturated. And in case you ask, yes, i used Light Mayo.

    But the truth is, the dip is a mayo texture, so for the life of me, i don’t see how on earth that should be considered gebrok just because it may contain a tiny bit of water?

    So now i’m wondering if it would be OK to dip the matza in it on Pesach (or even Shabbos Hagadol). Anyone know?

    #1958412
    ujm
    Participant

    Any liquid on matzah is gebrochts.

    #1958587
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    Ask your LOR what is part of the custom as it is not a halacha.

    #1958579
    ubiquitin
    Participant

    ujm

    Not necessarily see last line https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=25074&st=&pgnum=486

    ywnjudy
    There isnt really “hilchos Gebrokts” It is a minhag, keeping minhagim are important. The exact nature of the minhag varies some are makpid on keilim some are not. Some are makpid only on cooked dishes or something that is soaked not if it gets wet 30 seconds before it goes in your mouth (where it will get wet anyway) .

    Of course some won’t even put it on the table .

    So ywnjudy is it “ok” to dip the matza n it on PEsach?
    Well there is some water so strictly speaking it is Gebroks. If your family is very strict then don’t dip it. If sort of strict go for it.

    Shabbos Hagadol you have a different issue, as matzah shouldn’t be eaten next Shabbos Erev Pesach

    #1958657
    ujm
    Participant

    Did anyone hear of a Minhag by some people who do not eat gebrochts but nevertheless will eat matzah in a bowl of milk??

    #1959302
    ywnjudy
    Participant

    Well, speak of minhag, as a child we ate gebrok, then a sib got married, and along with the newcomer came all sorts of complications.

    Anyway, it occurred to me to check the mayo bottle itself, which =also= listed water as a main ingredient.

    And if that’s the case, i’m using my dip on Shabbos Hagadol. I can understand not spreading chrein, because that obviously has a liquid texture within it. But my dip is an oily texture, there’s NO WAY it can leavenize my egg matza. So I choose logic, despite the many humans who choose complications. I even have my personal opinion regarding chukim (vis-a-vis today’s findings).

    #1959303
    ywnjudy
    Participant

    ujm, no i didn’t hear about matza and milk, but it’s interesting. Especially that anyone would like that, unless maybe it’s choco-covered matza & milk!

    #1959333
    nishtdayngesheft
    Participant

    I think the biggest problem is that someone would look on line for the answer to a halachic shaila.

    #1959345
    ujm
    Participant

    ywnjudy: What I saw was plain (round) hand matzah broken in pieces put into a bowl with sugar and warm milk.

    #1959384
    ubiquitin
    Participant

    “I think the biggest problem is that someone would look on line for the answer to a halachic shaila.”

    meh
    not a problem and not a halachic shailah

    ywnjudy

    “Well, speak of minhag, as a child we ate gebrok”
    sounds like it isnt your family minhag. ITs nice that your family changed to accommodate a sibling in law, but that in no way obligates you.
    Of course if said sibling will be joining with you , you should check with them (though odds are if they keep gebrokts they wouldn’t put any dip, certainly none containing water on matzah)

    #1959392
    ujm
    Participant

    If a son-in-law is absolutely machmir not to eat gebrochts, including from gebrochts keilim, how can the parents in law have their own daughter, grandchildren and son-in-law over for any part of Pesach other than the eighth day if the parent in laws eat gebrochts and their keilim/utensils/pottery are gebrochts?

    #1959407
    ubiquitin
    Participant

    ujm

    Is that question geared to me?

    If you are asking me, the simplest way is for the parents not to eat Gebrokts , as many do, and it sounds like ywnjudy’s family did.
    The other possibility is to be violate the minhag for the sake of Sholom bayis, her kibbud av, though he might need hatarsa nedarim (ask your LOr) though seems rather obnoxious on the family’s part which understandably might make him not want to go.

    #1959550
    ywnjudy
    Participant

    ujm, about the sugary warm milk, yep that makes a bit more sense.

    nishtday re: halacha, by dint of careful keyword searches, i’ve found helpful/reliable answers online over the years, which were less time-consuming than waiting a long time on a halacha line (which btw didn’t always resolve matters, to put it mildly). As for a rov, most of my life my dad answered my Qs, and also in the past, i think alot more answers were online as well as a great choice of AskTheRabbi options. My dad passed away a few years ago, and since then i sometimes ask the in-laws, but they’re ultra-busy and not always reachable. So next time you’re tempted to be judgmental, i gave you something to chew over a.k.a. farhehr.

    As for switching over to non-gebrok, my dad didn’t have a problem, and agreed with it. And so we switched. He was never a kanoi, though. I know many people wipe off the romaine carefully, but i don’t have such memories of anyone in the extended family doing that at the seder. And if they did, i’m not the most alert person, so i wouldn’t have noticed. Funny how everyone is spelling it differently, gebrok, gebroch, gebrokst, and i’ve no idea what the root of it is, yet not the least curious either.

    Anyway, thanks for the feedback and i guess that WRAPS IT UP, for me at least! Because i’ve LOADS of stuff to pull off for YT with my severely-deficient anatomy, and miles to go b4 i sleep.

    #1959623
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    I will tell you being familiar with german the meaning and origin of gebrochs is. We break matzas and pour on it hot coffee. Matzah Meal used for making knaidlach is brocken matzahs. Some like to break matzahs into soup.

    #1959624
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant
    #1959625
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    The way it should be spelled gebrochts meaning something broken in german.

    #1960628
    Shalom-al-Israel
    Participant

    BTW Avocado on Matzoh … מי פירות אין מחמיצין…

    #1960632
    Shalom-al-Israel
    Participant

    It was always spelled in Yiddish:

    גיבראקט

    ___

    BTW Avocado on Matzoh … מי פירות אין מחמיצין…

    #1960669
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    I would spell it as געבראקטס.

    #1961096
    shooeey
    Participant

    Why is the mixup with bgan margarine not all over the news? On their website they are reporting that margarine marked kosher lepesach on the box but not on the inside label is in fact not kosher lepesach. If this where an allergy would this information not be posted on all the drum websites? Why do we care more about allergies than kashrus??

    #1961173
    nishtdayngesheft
    Participant

    Shooeey,

    The notice was posted on multiple “drum” websites. ( I agree with your hesitation to call any website frum).

    In addition I received emails about this from a number of shuls and it was announced in shul.

    This was communicated openly and widely.

    #1961219
    Yserbius123
    Participant

    Modern gebroks chumros is a minhag, not halacha. The answer depends entirely on what your mother or community does.

    Is a deli matzah sandwich problematic? What about a cheese melt? Do you put washed lettuce leaves in your Korech? Fruit juices? Is it OK if it’s within 18 minutes? Every question has its own answer and none of these answers are found in halacha, nor should they be.

    #1961443
    rational
    Participant

    If a new non-gebrocht family member, usually a son-in-law, comes to his gebrocht in-laws for Pesach, the proper act is to be mattir neder and eat with them. Gebrochts did not exist before the late 18th century. It is not found in shas, rishonim and early acharonim. The slow creep of non-gebrochts from a minhag to the border of a declaration of spiritual superiority is shameful. It is chutzpah, arrogant and yuhara for the son-in-law to demand non-halachic changes from his new family in order to satisfy his own minhagim. Mi samo? In your own house, he can eat how he wants. As a guest, he should show respect.
    The Rosh Yeshiva of Mir recently told his talmidim to stay in Eretz Yisrael for Pesach and to be mattir nedarim on their personal home minhagim. So should the young tachshit.

    #1961498
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    If someone not eating gebrochts is invited to the seder by someone eating gebrochts, the not eating can follow the eating, the host. as it is only a chumra but not kitniyos and I don’t think he has to be matir neder for one time. When in Rome, do like the Romans do.

    #1961505
    ujm
    Participant

    You cannot drop the Minhagim of your father. If the in-laws cannot accommodate non-gebrochts, the simplest solution is for the son-in-law and his family to not eat by the in-laws for the first seven days of Pesach. They can come on Achron Shel Pesach, when gebrochts can be eaten.

    #1961515
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    If he invites himself, the rule might change.

    #1961522
    🍫Syag Lchochma
    Participant

    “When in Rome, do like the Romans do.”

    Besides the fact that i am fairly certain you are wrong about your response, do you have any idea what this phrase means? How could you use it in a context of Torah observance when it’s source was exactly opposite?

    #1961525
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    I’m not sure what the source for that phrase is, and how it’s being (mis)applied, but the halacha Reb Eliezer made up is wrong (unless someone has a specific minhag otherwise).

    #1961527
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    Ok, I looked it up, the source seems to be based in some christian observance, so to apply it to the idea of minhag hamakom is indeed offensive, although I’ll give R’ Eliezer a pass for not knowing the source.

    I won’t give him a pass for making up halachos though, in this case based on his lack of respect for a genuine minhag which he happens to not share.

    #1961535
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    Yesh chochma bagoyim, sometimes we can apply it. Men darf wissen wie the chamor schteht ein. Sometimes a donkey and sometimes wine. I asked my LOR and by gebrochts he agreed with me to follow the host.

    #1961536
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    If you don’t want to follow the host, don’t go there. I was invited and they served roast beef at the seder, so I ate with them even though my minhag is not to have it.

    #1961539
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    Yesh chochma bagoyim, sometimes we can apply it.

    You missed the point

    #1961540
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    I asked my LOR and by gebrochts he agreed with me to follow the host.

    If your minhag is to not be makpid, that makes sense. But don’t paint with a broad brush.

    #1961541
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    If you don’t want to follow the host, don’t go there.

    Or just don’t eat the knaidlach

    #1961542
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    DY, don’t be a daas yachid, show me otherwise. The Chavas Yair 126, says that the children don’t have to follow the chumras, chasidus, of the father.

    #1961548
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    DY, don’t be a daas yachid, show me otherwise.

    אגרות משה או”ח ח”ג ס”ד

    #1961549
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    The Chavas Yair 126
    ולכן נראה לי שאין בכח בני הקהילה אפילו יסכימו כלם להתיר נדרם והנהגתם להקל במה שנהגו להחמיר הואיל שחל גם על דורות הבאים ועל רחוקים הבאים לדור וזה מוכח

    #1961552
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    R Moshe bring the Chavas Yair

    When gebrokts is a family minhag, it becomes obligatory.

    #1961554
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    I did not see the shaila in א’מ above of being invited and standing out by showing that he is better than the host. We show respect to the host. I did not paint with a broad brush as I excluded kitniyos being an issur from the geonim and not a recent chumra. Kitniyos is also assur on the last day of pesach whereas gebrochts is mutar. The shaila is whether to follow the host or stick by your own chumros which I did not see resolved. Obviously, we don’t break minhagim for no reason.

    #1961558
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    DY, how can you by the host when you have separate kelim for the last day of pesach and he cooks everything in the same kelim?

    #1961561
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    I did not see the shaila in א’מ above of being invited and standing out

    Neither did the חות יאיר who you misquoted

    #1961562
    MDG
    Participant

    DY wrote
    “R Moshe bring the Chavas Yair

    When gebrokts is a family minhag, it becomes obligatory.”

    This seems to me as a contradiction from what RMF wrote about CY milk there he said that if one never took on the “chumrah” – like it was put upon them from their family – then one can just start drinking Chala Companies.

    Any thoughts?

    #1961565
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    You should not take the invitation in the first place because I, who eat gebrochts, know that everything like meat sauce can have matzah meal in it.

    #1961566
    MDG
    Participant

    Reb Eliezer said

    …kitniyos being an issur from the geonim…

    I find that hard to believe, as the Bavli Jews and the communities around them eat kitnyot.
    Do you have a source?

    #1961567
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    Should be above, DY, how can you eat by the host, when …

    #1961573
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    DY, how can you eat by the host when you have separate kelim for the last day of pesach and he cooks everything in the same kelim?

    Some people’s minhag allows.

    #1961574
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    This seems to me as a contradiction from what RMF wrote about CY milk there he said that if one never took on the “chumrah” – like it was put upon them from their family – then one can just start drinking Chala Companies.

    Any thoughts?


    CY isn’t based on old family minhag.

    Perhaps if a few generations keep CY in the US, it can become a minhag, interesting question. I don’t think so, though – it’s based on how to interpret Chazal’s gezeira so is based on halacha, whereas gebrokts is a chumra to be choshesh for an unlikely event of chometz which nobody holds is meikar hadin.

    #1961575
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    You should not take the invitation in the first place because I, who eat gebrochts, know that everything like meat sauce can have matzah meal in it.

    You ask in advance what they serve which is gebrokts.

    We eat knaidlach and a couple of kugels, and matza meal cake, but would be able to accommodate a guest who keeps the minhag to not eat gebrokts.

    #1961578
    Reb Eliezer
    Participant

    If the father follows the Rabbenu Taam’s shkiah, then the children must follow it as it has to do with an issur and not a chumra. At least kitniyos was assered by rishonim as mentioned by the Mordechai 588, and the RMA O’CH 553,1, whereas gebrochts, to my knowledge, became a custom in the 18th century as mentioned in the Sharei Teshuva O’CH 460 s’k 10. They say that potatoes were not included in kitniyos as the geonim did not have any. When the Chayei Adam wanted to asser potatoes, they said you are taking away the Chayei Adam.

    #1961580
    ☕ DaasYochid ☕
    Participant

    I find that hard to believe, as the Bavli Jews and the communities around them eat kitnyot.
    Do you have a source?

    The סמ”ק says it was an old minhag. (He lived in France during the period of the Rishonim.). It’s possible that it dates back to the times of the Geonim but not where the actual Geonim lived.

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