Eating Dairy and Meat at the Same Table: Difference between revisions

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# It is forbidden for one person to eat meat and another person to eat dairy at the same table. <ref>Mishna Chullin 103b, S"A YD 88:1. The concern of the Rabbis was that if a person was eating meat at the same table as someone eating dairy, they might come to exchange food and come to eat meat and dairy together.</ref> This also applies both to poultry and dairy.<ref>Mishna Chullin 104b, S"A YD 88:1</ref>
# It is forbidden for one person to eat meat and another person to eat dairy at the same table. <ref>Mishna Chullin 103b, Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1. The concern of the Rabbis was that if a person was eating meat at the same table as someone eating dairy, they might come to exchange food and come to eat meat and dairy together.</ref> This also applies both to poultry and dairy.<ref>Mishna Chullin 104b, Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1</ref>
# It is permitted to leave a meat dish and a dairy dish next to one another on a serving table or the kitchen counter, from where people aren't eating.<ref>S"A YD 88:1, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:2</ref>
# It is permitted to leave a meat dish and a dairy dish next to one another on a serving table or the kitchen counter, from where people aren't eating.<ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:2</ref>
# It is permitted for one person to eat fish at the same table as someone eating meat. <ref>Yalkut Yosef YD 88:3. [Such is implied from Mishna Chullin 103b.]</ref>
# It is permitted for one person to eat fish at the same table as someone eating meat. <ref>Yalkut Yosef YD 88:3. [Such is implied from Mishna Chullin 103b.]</ref>
# It is only forbidden for one person to eat meat at the same table as someone eating dairy if both people are familiar with each other. For example, if a person is eating meat at a public table next to someone eating dairy and they don't know one another, it is permitted. <ref>S"A YD 88:2, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:7</ref>
# It is only forbidden for one person to eat meat at the same table as someone eating dairy if both people are familiar with each other. For example, if a person is eating meat at a public table next to someone eating dairy and they don't know one another, it is permitted. <ref>Shulchan Aruch YD 88:2, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:7</ref>
==Sources==
==Sources==
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Revision as of 08:34, 18 November 2015

  1. It is forbidden for one person to eat meat and another person to eat dairy at the same table. [1] This also applies both to poultry and dairy.[2]
  2. It is permitted to leave a meat dish and a dairy dish next to one another on a serving table or the kitchen counter, from where people aren't eating.[3]
  3. It is permitted for one person to eat fish at the same table as someone eating meat. [4]
  4. It is only forbidden for one person to eat meat at the same table as someone eating dairy if both people are familiar with each other. For example, if a person is eating meat at a public table next to someone eating dairy and they don't know one another, it is permitted. [5]

Sources

  1. Mishna Chullin 103b, Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1. The concern of the Rabbis was that if a person was eating meat at the same table as someone eating dairy, they might come to exchange food and come to eat meat and dairy together.
  2. Mishna Chullin 104b, Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1
  3. Shulchan Aruch YD 88:1, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:2
  4. Yalkut Yosef YD 88:3. [Such is implied from Mishna Chullin 103b.]
  5. Shulchan Aruch YD 88:2, Yalkut Yosef YD 88:7