Using a Pot Cover or Teapot for Borer on Shabbos

Machon Smicha | Olam-Hahalachah

Using a Pot Cover to Strain Soup

  • Rav Moshe Feinstein ruled that one cannot use a pot cover to strain soup through the opening while keeping the vegetables or noodles inside.
  • Even if one desires the soup, this is still prohibited since using a utensil for selection is considered borer

Using a Teapot with a Slotted Spout

  • Chazon Ish² permits pouring tea through a slotted spout, allowing the liquid to pass through while tea leaves remain inside.³
  • Ketzos Hashulchan⁴ and Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach⁵ are also lenient because:
    • A utensil designated for immediate consumption after borer is not considered a kli borer.
    • A teapot is always used for borer before immediate consumption, making it permissible.
  • However, some poskim—including the Rav of Debrecen—disagree and forbid using a teapot with a slotted spout.⁶

When Is Pouring Tea Through a Slotted Spout Permitted?

  • All opinions agree that one may pour tea through a slotted spout if:
    • The tea leaves have already settled at the bottom.
    • One pours slowly and leaves some tea at the bottom.⁷

  1. Halachos of Shabbos (Borer fn. 241) quoting Rav Moshe Feinstein; Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach (Shemiras Shabbos K’hilchasah ch. 3 fn. 176) and Rav Elyashiv agree. Ayil Meshulash (ch. 7 fn. 103) and Orchos Shabbos (1:3:76) also agree. However, Orchos Shabbos (v. 1 ch. 3 fn. 83) quotes Rav Shmuel Auerbach, who held that this is not a kli borer but merely a way to avoid getting one’s hands dirty.
  2. Chazon Ish 53 s.v. Min ha’amur.
  3. Ayil Meshulash (ch. 7 fn. 84) explains that Chazon Ish was lenient because:
    • A teapot is designed to pour tea, not specifically to separate leaves from tea, so it is not a kli borer.
    • Rav Chaim Kanievsky (Taama D’kra n. 41, cited in Orchos Shabbos v. 1 ch. 3 fn. 86) testified that they were lenient in Chazon Ish’s home.
    • Rav Ovadia Yosef (Yachava Daas 2:51) is also lenient, reasoning that most people do not mind if tea leaves enter their tea.
  4. Ketzos Hashulchan 125 Badei Hashulchan 21.
  5. Shemiras Shabbos K’hilchasah (ch. 3 fn. 140).
  6. Piskei Shabbos vol. 3, p. 10; Kaf Hachaim (319:113) also seems to prohibit using such a teapot. Orchos Shabbos (v. 1 ch. 3 fn. 85) quotes Rav Shmuel Auerbach as forbidding it, arguing that the lenient opinions lack a strong basis.
  7. Ayil Meshulash (7:30) and Orchos Shabbos (1:3:77), based on se’if yud daled.

Leave a Comment

Back to top button

Sign Up for Our Newsletter

Want to be trendy? Subscribe to our blog and be the first to get the hottest news from all over the world!

Our site uses cookies to improve your browsing experience and provide you with personalized content. By continuing to use our site, you agree to our cookie policy.

Sign In

Register

Reset Password

Please enter your username or email address, you will receive a link to create a new password via email.