Komentarz do Challa 2:6
חֲמֵשֶׁת רְבָעִים קֶמַח, חַיָּבִים בַּחַלָּה. הֵם וּשְׂאֹרָן וְסֻבָּן וּמֻרְסָנָן חֲמֵשֶׁת רְבָעִים, חַיָּבִין. נִטַּל מֻרְסָנָן מִתּוֹכָן וְחָזַר לְתוֹכָן, הֲרֵי אֵלּוּ פְטוּרִין:
Pięć ćwiartek [ Kav ] mąki jest obowiązkowych w Challah . Jeśli oni i ich kwas, i ich lekkie otręby i ich grube otręby stanowią pięć czwartych, są zobowiązani [w Challah ]. Jeśli ich grube otręby zostały usunięte, a następnie zwrócone im, [jest to wykluczone z całości] i jest zwolnione z chałki .
Bartenura on Mishnah Challah
חמשת רבעים – of Kab are liable for Hallah, as it is written (Numbers 15:20): “As the first yield [of your baking, you shall set aside a loaf as a gift…],” and the flour of the wilderness was the quantity of grain in a sheaf as a capitation tax, and the Omer is one-tenth of an Ephah. The Ephah is three Seah, and the Seah is six Kabim; hence we have eighteen Kabim in an Ephah, and the Kab is four Logs; which are seventy-two Logs. A tenth of seventy is seen Logim and the tenth of two Logim is an egg’s bulk and one-fifth of an egg, for the Log is [equivalent to] six eggs. When they came to Jerusalem and they added one-sixth on the measurements, it was found that six Logim were five, and the seenth Log was five eggs. For every six became five, and an egg and the fifth of an egg became an egg. It was found that the Omer that was in the wilderness was seven Logim and an egg and one-fifth of an egg. But in Jerusalem it became six logim. When they came to Sephhoris, and they added one-sixth on he measurements of Jerusalem, so that the six Logim became five, and that is equal to the five-fourths of flour. And the Logim were called fourths, because the Log was one-fourth of a Kab, for a Kab was four Logim.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Challah
Introduction
This mishnah teaches the basic law that we have encountered several times 1 ¼ kav of flour is liable for hallah. If there is less, one need not remove hallah.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Bartenura on Mishnah Challah
הן ושאורן – the leaven that they put into it.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Challah
Five-fourths [of a kav] of flour are subject to hallah. This is the basic law, to which we have made reference on several occasions.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Bartenura on Mishnah Challah
וסובן – which is thin
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Challah
If their leaven, their light bran and their coarse bran [make up the] five-fourths, they are subject. When measuring the flour, one includes the leaven (the starter dough used to leaven the bread), and all of the bran.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Bartenura on Mishnah Challah
מורסנן – that is thick – all of which combines with the flour to complete the measurement, for a poor person who eats his bread combined with flour combined with bran flour and coarse flour.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
English Explanation of Mishnah Challah
If their coarse bran had been removed from them and returned to them, they are exempt. If the coarse bran was removed, which is typical in the processing of better quality flour, and then it was added back in, the flour is not subject to hallah. This is because putting back the course bran is unusual.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Bartenura on Mishnah Challah
ניטל מורסנן מתוכן חוזר לתוכו הרי אלו פטורין – for it is not the manner of dough to restore the coarse bran into it after he took it from there.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy