Home › Forums › Decaffeinated Coffee › Why isn't coffee or chocolate kitniyos?
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April 14, 2016 2:32 am at 2:32 am #617556Torah613TorahParticipant
How is it different than cocoa which could easily be confused with whole wheat flour?
April 14, 2016 2:42 am at 2:42 am #1146713☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantI don’t think resemblance to flour is really the issue – matzah is made with flour.
I believe they do actually discuss coffee and cocoa beans being kitniyos because they’re beans.
April 14, 2016 2:52 am at 2:52 am #1146714popa_bar_abbaParticipantI believe they do actually discuss coffe and cocoa beans being kitniyos because they’re beans.
That isn’t very nice of you, and I’m not even sure what that insult is supposed to mean.
You’re barley.
April 14, 2016 3:04 am at 3:04 am #1146715☕ DaasYochid ☕Participanthttp://beta.hebrewbooks.org/tursa.aspx?a=oc_x2208
See Shaarei Teshuvah.
Then do TESHUVA.
You’re cheesecake.
April 14, 2016 3:14 am at 3:14 am #1146716👑RebYidd23ParticipantBeans and barley are ingredients. Cheesecake is a prepared (non)food.
April 14, 2016 3:26 am at 3:26 am #1146717☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantCoffee is a room, and chocolate is an addiction.
April 14, 2016 3:47 am at 3:47 am #1146718The QueenParticipantChocolate is a way of life.
April 14, 2016 4:56 am at 4:56 am #1146719writersoulParticipantThey’re both technically fruit, I believe.
And DON’T TAKE AWAY MY CHOCOLATE.
April 14, 2016 5:08 am at 5:08 am #1146720☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantThey’re both technically fruit, I believe.
Do you say borei p’ri hoeitz?
And DON’T TAKE AWAY MY CHOCOLATE.
Let me have my coffee, and it’s a deal.
April 14, 2016 5:37 am at 5:37 am #1146721writersoulParticipantI think that R Lior of Kiryat Arba just paskened that any chocolate made with recognizable cacao beans (so not white chocolate, which is only cocoa butter) is haetz. Don’t know if anyone but him agrees though.
April 14, 2016 5:59 am at 5:59 am #1146722☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantR’ Shlomo Zalman was asked about chocolate covered raisins and almonds, that since really we should be making hoeitz on chocolate, at least on those we should say hoeitz. He answered that since l’ma’aseh we say shehakol on chocolate, that’s not the case (so we need to determine which is the ikkar).
April 14, 2016 10:38 am at 10:38 am #1146723zahavasdadParticipantQuinoa is a berry , like a strawberry and nothing like a string bean and yet some have called it Kitnyot
April 14, 2016 12:02 pm at 12:02 pm #1146724WolfishMusingsParticipantWhy isn’t coffee or chocolate kitniyos?
<NOT SERIOUS ANSWER>
G’zeirah She-ain HaTzibbur Yachul La’amod Bah. 🙂
</NOT SERIOUS ANSWER>
The Wolf
April 14, 2016 12:19 pm at 12:19 pm #1146725akupermaParticipantCan one make bread or pastry out of coffee. They can be added to flour, but one can’t make them into anything that one could confuse with bread. Corn and rice (and quinoa) can be turned into bread or cakes. Coffee and cocoa are just flavorings.
Of course then you into a discussion of why potatos are allowed, though when you make a flour from it, it is only “bedievad” that it can be turned into bread of cakes, whereas corn can be used to make passable bread and cakes.
April 14, 2016 2:33 pm at 2:33 pm #1146726☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantG’zeirah She-ain HaTzibbur Yachul La’amod Bah
Oh, come one, people can live without bread for eight (plus) days but not coffee or chocolate?
April 14, 2016 2:35 pm at 2:35 pm #1146727theprof1Participantthe chachomim who made the kitniiyos gezeira did not deem cocoa or coffee beans as kitnoyos. cottonseeds arent either. the main idea was making flour. potatoes were almost assured but then european jews would have nothing to eat so it wasnt assured. sefersim didnt accept the gezeira so they do eat. rav abadi actually does make a borei pri ha’etz on chocolate but not on coffee.
April 14, 2016 2:36 pm at 2:36 pm #1146728zahavasdadParticipantPotato bread is more common than you think
April 14, 2016 2:38 pm at 2:38 pm #1146729cherrybimParticipantOnly those Ashkenazic poskim who were part of the original kitnios g’zeira (about 600-700 years ago) were permitted to determine which foods would be part of the g’zeira; we cannot do it on our own.
This is why we are safe with potato starch even though it’s more like flour than mustard seed (kitnios) yet perfectly ok. Those Ashkenazic Rabbonim never ate potatoes and, therefore, did not experience potato starch to make a g’zeira.
Another example: Rav Moshe zt”l held that peanuts were never part of the kitnios g’zeira mesorah, so he permitted peanuts on Pesach.
When I was young, peanut oil was THE oil used on Pesach by everyone. Whatever happened to that? Today no kashrus agency would put a hechsher on Pesach peanut oil. Why? Because they would be accused of all kinds of nasty things. Enough said.
April 14, 2016 2:39 pm at 2:39 pm #1146730☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantHow common do I think potato bread is?
I think you need some wheat flour to make potato bread.
April 14, 2016 2:42 pm at 2:42 pm #1146731☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantWhy aren’t all sorts of nasty things said about kashrus agencies which certify olive oil or cottonsed oil or butter or chicken schmaltz?
April 14, 2016 2:47 pm at 2:47 pm #1146732zahavasdadParticipantThey sell Potato bread with the Frankfurter or Hamburger Rolls
Only those Ashkenazic poskim who were part of the original kitnios g’zeira (about 600-700 years ago) were permitted to determine which foods would be part of the g’zeira; we cannot do it on our own.
Corn was not available in Europe. Its a totally american crop and was brought back to Europe after the Europeans came to the new world
Mustard is another example of the ever increasing chumralaztion of Kityot
April 14, 2016 3:00 pm at 3:00 pm #1146733cherrybimParticipantDY- except for cottonseed oil in Israel, your examples are not part of the mesorah controversy.
April 14, 2016 3:02 pm at 3:02 pm #1146734yehudayonaParticipantZD, you’re too literal. Strawberries aren’t berries (at least botanically). I don’t know where you get the idea that quinoa is a berry. Wikipedia says it’s a pseudocereal (like buckwheat, which IS considered kitniyos).
DY, three of the four fats you list aren’t derivatives of seeds that some people consider kitniyos. I’ve heard that some people consider cottonseeds kitniyos, but I don’t know of any use of cottonseeds as food for humans.
April 14, 2016 3:03 pm at 3:03 pm #1146735zahavasdadParticipantCorn, peanuts, Mustard and Quiona are part of the mesorah controversy
April 14, 2016 3:05 pm at 3:05 pm #1146736☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantZD, that potato bread is chometz. No need to asser because of kitniyos.
CB, maybe they don’t give a hechsher on peanut oil because they are machmir on the “mesorah controversy”.
I want to know one thing: how many of the kitniyos chumra complainers have actually gone through the sugya, starting from the gaonim and going through all of the poskim who have written about it through the generations, to dismiss the machmirim as unnecessarily harsh?
April 14, 2016 3:14 pm at 3:14 pm #1146737akupermaParticipant“Potato bread” includes wheat flour (check the ingredients). “Corn bread” traditionally did not include wheat, and no one has managed to produce a bread usually coco or coffee beans.
Chocolate (similar to corn and potatoes) are American in origin, and while coffee is African in origin, it didn’t become widespread in Europe until the period of the achronim.
Quinoa is American in origin and didn’t become common on North America until recently, and reasonable aruge whether to treat it like corn or like potatoes (though if one looks, there are online bread recipes for it).
If you held that you eat only foods with a mesorah going back to ancient times, none of the American foods would be allowed, and neither would coffee or sugar, which entered our cuisine post-biblically.
April 14, 2016 3:16 pm at 3:16 pm #1146738zahavasdadParticipantPotato Bread in the store is Chometz as is Corn Bread. Its only because that how they make it
However it doesnt have to be, they could bake them without being Chometz
Continuing to read Wikipedia on Quinoa
As a chenopod, quinoa is closely related to species such as beetroots, spinach and tumbleweeds.
Wild rice is another example of people making things Kitynot that isnt. Wild rice is a GRASS not a rice, the only thing it has in common with rice is the name and it sort of looks like rice, but its a GRASS
April 14, 2016 4:23 pm at 4:23 pm #1146739nishtdayngesheftParticipant“As a chenopod, quinoa is closely related to species such as beetroots, spinach and tumbleweeds.”
Still not a Berry. And still does not deflect the reason why some will say that the chashash of kitniyos applies. Obviously there are differences if kitniyos should be extended to include, but for that ask your own Rov, if you have one.
“Potato Bread in the store is Chometz as is Corn Bread. Its only because that how they make it”
SO then, how common is Potato Bread without flour? Your proof was from potato bread near the frank buns. But those all have flour.
But there are some who do not eat potatoes on pesach, what is your response to that?
Mustard being considered kitnyos is not “new”, The same with wild Rice.
What the Oruch Hashulchan says about those who are Mefakfek or Meikel on kitnyos is that they are testifying about themselves that “Ayn bohem yiras shomayim veyiras chet, v’ayn beki’in b’darchei Torah.” (O’C 453.4)
April 14, 2016 4:29 pm at 4:29 pm #1146740zahavasdadParticipantAnd still does not deflect the reason why some will say that the chashash of kitniyos applies. Obviously there are differences if kitniyos should be extended to include, but for that ask your own Rov, if you have one.
the OU and the Star K both allow Quinoa. In fact the OU did a complete investigation into Quiona and even went down to Ecuador and saw exactly how it is cultivated. You can read about it in the OU magazine they had an entire article last year or 2 years ago (I think, but it was very recent)
Anyone can assur anything, It takes a Talmid Chacham to actually mutar something.
There really isnt much differnece between Cake and Bread. There is a differnence but its not huge. Potato Starch cake and cookies is very common, you can make a bread in a similar way
April 14, 2016 4:50 pm at 4:50 pm #1146741nishtdayngesheftParticipantZD,
You will note I did not say the Quinoa is assur, I said that there are those who are makpid, and they do have a real basis to do so. Your quote from Wikipedia does not respond to their reasons.
Please try to provide a reputable halachic source for your comments about things that are not kitnios. Wikipedia is not a source, nor is Google. And accepted halacha seforim (I am not talking about contemporary seforim) contradict whatever you have been saying.
“There really isnt much differnece between Cake and Bread.”
Yes there is. Even the basic bracha is different.
“Potato Starch cake and cookies is very common”
Only by Pesach, as Kosher for Pesach. You want to consider something ossur as a chashash chometz because of something made specifically for pesach??
April 14, 2016 5:11 pm at 5:11 pm #1146742zahavasdadParticipantI quoted from the OU magazine and the Star-K and the O-U on the package (You have to buy the ones that have been koshered for passover, you just cant buy any old Quiona package)
rav moshe allowed Peanuts
They could make Potato cookies and cakes all year round, but they dont because its too expensive, but there is no reason you cant and yes you could bake a bread the same way
April 14, 2016 5:32 pm at 5:32 pm #1146743lesschumrasParticipantBottom line is that kitniyos is not Chametz. If someone wants to equate joy of Pesach with how much new kitniyos they can deny themselves, be my guest. I don’t understand it.
April 14, 2016 5:45 pm at 5:45 pm #1146744☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantNo, kitniyos is not chometz, but still assur for Ashkenazim.
From the Shaarei Teshuvah linked above:
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April 14, 2016 6:07 pm at 6:07 pm #1146745zahavasdadParticipantWe arent debating if Kitnyot is permitted, but about the ever expanding world of Kiniyot.
I am not debating if one should eat Kitnyot, but rather the expanding defination which is really mocking the whole minhag .
April 14, 2016 6:12 pm at 6:12 pm #1146746☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantHave you actually gone through the sugya to know that the poskim who asser certain foods are making a mockery of the minhag?
April 14, 2016 6:19 pm at 6:19 pm #1146748nishtdayngesheftParticipant“We arent debating if Kitnyot is permitted, but about the ever expanding world of Kiniyot. “
And yet as proof for this you mentioned items that have always been considered kitniyos.
As far as your attitude, I refer you to the aforementioned Oruch Hashulchan.
April 14, 2016 6:19 pm at 6:19 pm #1146749MDGParticipant“No, kitniyos is not chometz, but still assur for Ashkenazim.”
That should be “assur for Ashkenazim to eat.”
April 14, 2016 6:30 pm at 6:30 pm #1146750MDGParticipantZD wrote:
“Corn was not available in Europe. Its a totally american crop and was brought back to Europe after the Europeans came to the new world”
and wrote:
“Wild rice is a GRASS not a rice, the only thing it has in common with rice is the name and it sort of looks like rice….”
While American corn was a new product in Europe, the word corn/korn was an old word which meant the staple grain. Notice that the consonant sounds are similar in corn and grain. I heard that they have the same Latin root. Because of the name, American corn was doomed from the start. It was associated with wheat, oats, or whatever chamets grain European people ate. Had they called it “maiz”, which is what the American natives called it, it might have had a chance.
April 14, 2016 7:00 pm at 7:00 pm #1146751zahavasdadParticipantMDG
I did hear that Maize (American Corn) was mistaken for something else and became Kitnyot
Maize is not a Legume
April 14, 2016 7:24 pm at 7:24 pm #1146752MDGParticipantZD,
Either way, there was some mix up. But it seems to me that eventually American corn would have made the kiniyot list. It’s can be used like a grain as least as good as anything else on the kitniyot list.
April 14, 2016 7:37 pm at 7:37 pm #1146753nishtdayngesheftParticipantI do not think there is anyone who does not agree that corn is kitniyos.
Rice is not a legume either.
April 14, 2016 8:06 pm at 8:06 pm #1146754lesschumrasParticipantDY, I don’t eat kitniyot. I’m referring to the ever expanding list. The OP wants to add coffee and chocolate. Ten years ago it was Qenoa. What is the obsession with adding to the list?
April 14, 2016 8:15 pm at 8:15 pm #1146755zahavasdadParticipantCorn is a very versatile crop. Its uses vary from grain like item (Corn Bread, Corn Muffins etc) to Sweetners (High Fructose Corn Syrup) to Gasoline (Ethanol)
I dont think any other Kityot can be used as a sweetner or gasoline.
All your cars have some Ethanol in them
April 14, 2016 8:24 pm at 8:24 pm #1146756nishtdayngesheftParticipantThe people the Oruch Hashulchan is referring to like to allege thatthere is an ever increasing kitmniyot list.
A commenter made some type of claim, that it takes a Talmud Chochom to be matter something. Well it is clear to everyone that the complainers about the alleged expansion of the kitniyos list and who are averring that certain items, such as wild rice, corn and mustard are not part of the gezairakh of kitniyos are not remotely talmidei chachomim.
April 14, 2016 8:49 pm at 8:49 pm #1146758☕ DaasYochid ☕ParticipantLC, there is a legitimate shailah about the definition of kitniyos and what falls under that category. Those who hold that the minhag wasn’t limited to specific species hold that if something has the characteristics of kitniyos, it falls under the issur. The “ever expanding list” is simply a matter of some species which weren’t eaten until recently, and are subject to analysis of whether or not they fit the characteristics of kitniyos and are therefore assur. It is a legitimate halachah shailah, nothing more or less, certainly nothing sinister.
The OP, as I understand her, was simply asking why, as the powdered form resembles flour, (perhaps she also meant since they are called beans) they don’t fit that category. She wasn’t trying to asser anything, just asking a question.
Of course, despite their name, they’re botanically not beans, but as I linked, the Shaarei Teshuvah brings one opinion (which we don’t pasken like) which actually assers coffee because of its resemblance to a bean.
April 14, 2016 9:01 pm at 9:01 pm #1146759☕ DaasYochid ☕Participant“No, kitniyos is not chometz, but still assur for Ashkenazim.”
That should be “assur for Ashkenazim to eat.”
Not only should it be assur for Ashkenazim to eat, it is assur for Ashkenazim to eat.
April 14, 2016 10:29 pm at 10:29 pm #1146760golferParticipantRice can be used as a sweetener.
Ever heard of brown rice syrup?
April 14, 2016 11:58 pm at 11:58 pm #1146761zahavasdadParticipantMy local supermarket was advertising Quinoa Sushi
April 15, 2016 12:08 am at 12:08 am #1146762golferParticipantThat’s just great.
I was wondering how my family would survive 8 days without sushi.
Moaning and clutching their bellies and lamenting, “zacharnu ess ha’dagah asher nochal…”
April 15, 2016 12:44 am at 12:44 am #1146763WolfishMusingsParticipantOh, come one, people can live without bread for eight (plus) days but not coffee or chocolate?
Hence the “not serious answer” tag.
(And yes, I understand that I “seriously answered” a joke in another thread, so you felt the need to do so here.)
The Wolf
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