Eruv Tavshilin Instructions
Take a plate with one whole challah and either a piece of cooked fish, cooked meat or a hard-boiled egg on it,
(it is a good idea to wrap the challah and fish, meat or egg in aluminum foil to easily keep them apart from the rest of the foods in your home).
Recite the following blessing:
ברוך אתה ה‘ אלקינו מלך העולם אשר קדשנו במצותיו וצונו על מצות ערוב
BA-RUCH A-TAH ADO-NAI E-LO-HE-NU ME-LECH HA-OLAM ASHER KID-E-SHA-NU BE-MITZ-VO-TAV VETZI-VA-NU AL MITZVAT ERUV.
Then recite: "By virtue of this Eruv, we (the members of this household), shall be permitted to cook, bake, keep food warm, carry, light candles and do all preparations on Yom Tov for Shabbat."
Put the foods you used for the Eruv away, and eat them on Shabbat.
NOTE: The Eruv Tavshilin allows you to cook on Friday only for Shabbat.
It is permissible to cook only from a pre-existent flame, one that was lit before the onset of the Holiday on Thursday before sunset.
Eruv Tavshilin Lecture Audio - 35 minutes
MP3 audio file [3.1 MB]
What is Eruv Tavshilin and Why
(Pesachim 46B) (Beitzah 12A) and 15b
Although cooking food on Yom Tov for a Yom Tov meal is permitted, cooking or preparing a meal today, on Yom Tov, for tomorrow is prohibited. This prohibition applies equally whether tomorrow is a
weekday, a Yom Tov or a Shabbat. This is because one is not allowed to misuse the rest day in “Hachanah,” preparation for another day. But what happens when Yom Tov is on Friday? May one cook on
Friday-Yom Tov for Shabbat? Or is this also considered Hachanah and prohibited?
The answer is that Biblically, it is permitted to cook during the day on a Friday-Yom Tov for Shabbat. The Talmud, gives two reasons why the Torah permits cooking on Yom Tov for the following Shabbat
day. According to Rabbah, it is because you never know how much food you may need on Yom Tov. There is always the possibility that unexpected guests may arrive. And “since” you are allowed to cook on
Yom Tov for possible guests, you may also cook for Shabbat. The logic of “since,” on which Rabbah bases the permit, is Halachicly referred to as “Ho’il.” According to Rav Chisda, both Yom Tov and
Shabbat are frequently referred to in the Torah as “Shabbat”].
Accordingly, the permission given by the Torah to cook on Yom Tov applies not only to the Yom Tov meal, but also to the Shabbat meal on the following Shabbat day. As pointed out by Tosafot, there is
a practical difference between the two approaches. According to Rabbah, it would be Biblically prohibited to cook on Friday afternoon, shortly before sundown, because by that time, any Yom Tov guests
would have come and gone. According to Rav Chisdah, however, this would be permitted.
Despite the fact that the Torah permits cooking on Yom Tov for the following Shabbat day, both Rabbah and Rav Chisdah forbid it unless one performs, on Erev Yom Tov, a special ceremony called “Eruv
Tavshilin.” Eruv Tavshilin is a ceremony in which one makes minimum preparation for Shabbat on Erev Yom Tov, by setting aside some bread and some cooked food for the Shabbat meal. In this way, the
Shabbat meal has already been prepared (Hachanah) before Yom Tov and all that is required on Yom Tov is its completion. This bridge, spanning from Erev Yom Tov to Shabbat, makes Rabbah more
comfortable relying on the Hoi’l exemption described above. The Eruv Tavshilin ceremony honors both the Yom Tov and the Shabbat. It honors the Yom Tov, because people who see that it is Rabinically
forbidden to cook on Yom Tov, even for Shabbat, without the Eruv, will never violate the Yom Tov by cooking for a weekday. It honors the Shabbat by focusing one’s mind already on Erev Yom Tov on the
needs of Shabbat, which might otherwise lie unattended in the shadow of Yom Tov. Based on the words of the Torah, “Tomorrow is a day of rest… bake what you want to bake and cook what you want to
cook, today,” the cooked food, typically an egg or piece of meat, that one sets aside on Erev Yom Tov, as part of the Eruv, permits one to cook on Yom Tov for Shabbat, and the bread one sets aside
permits one to bake.
When Yom Tov begins on Wednesday night, the Eruv Tavshilin ceremony is performed on Wednesday and when Yom Tov begins on Thursday night, it is performed on Thursday, in each case by the head of the
household. The bread and the cooked food is lifted in one’s right hand and the blessing “Al Mitzvat Eruv” is recited. The following text should be read: “With this Eruv, let it be permitted for us to
bake, cook, insulate, light the Shabbat candles, prepare for and perform all our Shabbat needs on Yom Tov.” Even those who eat out on Shabbat, and therefore have no need to cook on Yom Tov for
Shabbat, are required to perform the Eruv Tavshilin ceremony without a Beracha to enable them to light the Shabbat candles on Yom Tov for Shabbat. The Eruv ceremony should be performed before
lighting the Shabbat candles. When the first day of Yom Tov is Thursday, the Eruv permits cooking on Friday for Shabbat but not on Thursday for Shabbat. The Challah used for the Eruv, should be used
as the second loaf [“Lechem Mishnah”] for Shabbat meals and should be eaten at the third Shabbat meal.
If, when praying Mincha on Erev Yom Tov in Synagogue, you realize that you forgot to perform Eruv Tavshilin, there is no need to run home. You can either call home and ask a family member to do it
for you, or you can do it yourself from Synagogue, by setting aside in your mind, food at home for the Eruv and actually setting aside the designated food when you get home. In most communities, the
Rabbi will perform the Eruv ceremony on Erev Yom Tov for all community members. This ceremony, conducted on your behalf, without your knowledge at the time, is based on the principle that a benefit
can be bestowed on a person in his absence [“Zachin Le’adam shelo befanav.”] As a last resort, this communal Eruv may be relied upon but the Rabbis frown upon those that make a habit of it. Because
the Halachah is in accordance with Rabbah, who prohibits cooking on Yom Tov shortly before sundown, care should be taken to complete cooking for Shabbat well before sundown on Friday. For this
reason, Maariv is usually set early on Yom Tov Friday to encourage people to finish cooking before the early Maariv service. Based on Rav Chisda’s position described above however, the Chafetz Chaim,
permits one, in the case of an emergency, to finish cooking just before sundown.