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In , the dough offering (or separation of challah, ) is an positive commandment requiring the owner of bread to give a part of the kneaded dough to a (Jewish priest). The obligation to separate the dough offering (henceforth: challah) from the dough begins the moment the dough is kneaded, but may also be separated after the loaves are baked., mitzvah # 385 This commandment is one of the twenty-four priestly gifts. Bava Kamma 110b By biblical law the commandment is only obligatory in the Land of Israel, but rabbinic law applies it also to bread made outside the Land of Israel. ( Orlah 3:7); , ( Hil. Bikkurim 5:7); Jacob ben Asher, Arba'ah Turim ( Yoreh Deah 322:3); ( Yoreh Deah 322:3).

The common modern practice in is to burn (although simply throwing away the dough in a double-wrapped container is allowed) the portion to be given the Kohen, although giving the challah to a Kohen for consumption is permitted—even encouragedIgud HaKohanim, The Torah of Challah; Giving Challah To The Kohen, 2nd ed. 2016, p. 6-24,.—outside Israel (permitted with restrictions, see article below for detail).


Hebrew Bible
The offering is commanded in :

In the above passage "cake" is () while "of dough" is (עריסה).

The return of the Jews from the marked a renewal in adherence to numerous commandments, and the dough offering, "the first fruits of our dough," is listed as one of them ().Shaye J. D. Cohen From the Maccabees to the Mishnah 1987 Page 141 "dealings with "the peoples of the land" on the Sabbath: to observe the seventh year ("the year of release"); and to support the temple and its priesthood through a wide variety of offerings (money, wood, first fruits, firstborn, dough,"


Rabbinic Judaism
The and contain a tractate named Challah dealing with the dough offering. The codification of the mitzvah appears in , Yoreh Deah 322 and Bikkurim 5:1.


Components of the mitzvah
The mitzvah of challah is one mitzvah with two parts: (1) separating the required dough ( Hafrashat challah), (2) giving the dough to a ( Netinat Challah).Nodah b'yehudah Mahadura tenyana ch. 201, with the first making the original dough non-, and the second giving the Separated portion (the "Kodesh") to the Kohein Nachmanides, Hasagot to the Commandments 12 and the Tosafist Isaiah di Tranito Kiddushin ch. 2 (on daf 58b) explain that it is the actual giving of the Challah portion to the Kohen that is the primary component of the Mitzvah.


Types of dough
Only the five species of grain require the separation of the dough offering: , , , wild barley (or ), and . Challah 1:1-2 Challah and tithes may not be taken from dough made from "new" grain () on behalf of dough made from "old" grain ().Baruch M. Bokser Samuel's commentary on the Mishnah: its nature, forms, and content, Volume 1 1975 "One was prohibited to set aside Dough-offering and tithes from dough made from "new" grain in behalf of dough made from "old" grain. 354 The factor determining whether grain belonged to one year's crop or to the next was whether the ..."

Certain preparations of dough were exempt from the duty of separating the dough-offering, such as dough that was made with a thin-batter, variously mixed with spices or milk-products, and deep-fried in oil to be made into fritters., Hallah 1:4, s.v. וסופגנין ודובשנין ואסקיטין: " Sūfgenīn, etc. Different types of bread which from the start of its kneading they mix therein oil or honey or spice and are cooked by different methods prescribed in cooking, and are so-called according to their ingredients and also according to the manner in which they are cooked.") Included in this exemption is dough that has been kneaded with milk and honey to be deep-fried over a stove into honey-cakes (: dūḇshanīn). Although exempt from the dough-offering, they still require the separation of regular tithes. Hallah 1:4 (p. 83) The Hallah 1:4 - end makes the exemption of separating the dough-offering contingent upon breadstuffs that have been cooked in a frying pan or pot over a stove, rather than baked in an oven. If these were baked as bread in an oven, they would still require the separation of the dough-offering. (END QUOTE); cf. , mitzvah # 385; cf. Babylonian Talmud ( Pesahim 37a) A quantity of dough equalling 1.6 kilogram or more which was prepared to make hardened biscuits (: qanūḇqa’ot) requires the separation of the dough offering. Hallah 1:5; cf. , s.v. ( Hallah 1:5), who explains qanūḇqa’ot as ka'akin and which were traditionally baked in an oven.


Quantities
The minimal quantity of dough whose preparation mandates the performance of the Mitzvah is quantified by as a portion of flour equivalent to 43 and 1/5 eggs,Obadiah of Bertinoro's Commentary on Mishnah Hallah 2:6; ; pseudo-Jonathan ben Uzziel's Aramaic translation on Exodus 16:36 who puts 1/10 of an ephah at 1/10 of three seahs; Sheiltot of ch. 73 also known as one omer. In modern terms;
  • The quantity that requires reciting a is about 1.64 kg. brings down its approximate weight in Egyptian , writing in Eduyot 1:2: "...And I found the rate of the dough-portion in that measurement to be approximately five-hundred and twenty dirhams of wheat flour, while all these dirhams are the Egyptian dirham." This view is repeated by 's (Hil. Hallah, 324:3) in the name of the Tur. In Maimonides' commentary of the Mishnah ( Eduyot 1:2, note 18), Rabbi explains that the weight of each Egyptian dirham was approximately 3.333 grams, in which case the total weight of flour requiring the separation of the dough-portion is approximately 1.733 kg. Rabbi ( Sefer Halikhot ʿOlam, vol. 1, pp. 288-291) ruled that the Egyptian dirham weighed approximately 3.0 grams, meaning the minimum requirement for the dough-offering is 1.560 kg. Others (e.g. Rabbi Avraham Chaim Naeh) say the Egyptian dirham weighed approximately 3.205 grams, meaning the minimum requirement for the dough-offering is 1.666 kg. Rabbi Shelomo Qorah (Chief Rabbi of ) brings down the traditional weight used in Yemen for each dirham, saying that it weighed 3.36 grams, meaning the minimum requirement for the dough-offering is 1.77072 kg. (Some only recite a blessing if the quantity is above 2.25 kg.)
  • A quantity of flour weighing between approximately 2 lb 11oz (1.23 kg) and 3 lb 11oz (1.666 kg) qualifies for giving Challah but no blessing is recited.Based on the measurement of Rabbi Chaim Naeh as quoted by in his work הצומח והחי במשנה

The does not specify what quantity of dough must be given to the kohen. This is discussed in the ; the rabbinical stipulation is that 1/24 is to be given in the case of private individuals, and 1/48 in the case of a commercial bakery.

If no separation is done while cooking, it can be done after baking without a blessing.


Consumption or burning
The consumption of Challah by a Kohen in the Land of Israel is forbidden by Torah law due to the absence of the ashes of the necessary for ritual purity.

With this in mind, the ,Tosefta, Challah 4:4 followed by the , encouraged the act of separating "Challah" in order that the Mitzvah not be forgotten entirely, along with the full recitation of a blessing before the dough is separated. The blessing recited is "asher kiddeshanu bemitzvotav ve'tzivanu le'hafrish challah." ( Yoreh Deah 328:1)

The common practice of Diaspora Jewry is to burn the Challah; home bakers fulfill this by tossing the Challah to the back of the oven. to 322:5 However, it is permitted in the Diaspora to give the separated Challah to a Kohen for consumption,as the Mitzvah of giving Trumath Challah outside Israel is only Rabbinic and not D'oraita and even encouraged by some Rabbinic authorities,Tosefta, Challah 4:4. with the provision that the Kohen has immersed in a Mikvah.(rior to consumption) – And no is being excreted from his Body – Shulchan Aruch HaRav 457:20 The Kohen is also required to recite the required thanking God for sanctifying the Kohanim with the sanctity of . to , 322:5 (quoted from the ) : " ברוך את ה' אלהינו מלך העולם אשר קדשנו בקדושתו של אהרן וצוונו לאכול תרומה" In Yemen, whenever baking a quantity of dough which required the separation of the dough-offering, one small loaf of was removed from the batch and designated as Challah and burnt, while another small loaf of flatbread from the same batch, being non-consecrated bread, was given to a small child of the priestly stock and eaten by him, so that the practice of giving the Challah would not be forgotten amongst Israel.See for a comparison ; cf. , vol. 3 of the Makitzei Nirdamim edition, ed. Ezriel Hildesheimer, "Hilkot Ḥallah", Jerusalem 1987, p. 400

The commentators to the record that it is the of some Diaspora Jews to give Challah (in this case fully baked matzah) from the dough used for baking "Matzot Mitzvah" (the Shmurah Matzah eaten during Passover) to a Kohen minor to eat.Be'er Hetev to 322:7; Sha"ch to above chapter


Other laws
The requirement to separate Challah from the dough was imposed on the owner of the dough, not on the person who kneaded it; hence if the owner was not Jewish, even if the kneader was, Hafrashat Challah was not mandatory. The requirement does not apply to bread prepared as animal feed. Jewish Encyclopedia

The requirement applies in Israel even during the (Sabbatical) year.Talmud Bavli, Bechorot 12b Even the pauper who is entitled to collect and would be exempt from giving Ma'aser (Tithe) is obligated to give Challah from his dough portion. The dough from is likewise not exempt from Challah giving. to Bamidbar 15:21


Interpretations
Challah, as one of the twenty-four kohanic gifts, was a means of sustenance for the kohanim, who, because of their expected full-time involvement with Temple duties and Torah instruction, were not intended to have land or income derived from it, unlike the other tribes of Israel (although this was often not the case during the era).

The mitzvah of separating challah is traditionally regarded as one of the three Mitzvot performed especially by women.Mishnah, Shabbat 2:6

Obadiah ben Jacob Sforno reasons that God wished to negate the negative effect of the sin of The Twelve Spies by establishing this Mitzvah in order that ("divine blessing") should rest in the homes and on the dough products of the Jews. to Numbers 15:20

In Shlomo HaKohain of Greece's commentary on the , the performing of this commandment by women, who traditionally did the cooking, uplifts the dough from a state of tevel (spiritual non-readiness) and brings it to a state of khullin (mundane and permitted to its owner), thereby correcting the action of who gave of the forbidden fruit to her husband.Shlomo HaKohain of Greece שעת רצון על הזוהר Sha'at ratzon al ha Zohar vol. 1 p. 36b

The Jerusalem Talmud implies that the commandment was given before the sin of the Twelve Spies, even though it is recorded (immediately) afterwards.Jerusalem Talmud ( Taanit 23b)


See also
  • Presumption of priestly descent


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