The
Gemara looks at what is usually said in specific places. For example, in
a place where olive oil is the primary oil used, then sesame oil is permitted
when one takes a vow forbidding oneself consumption of nonsepcified oil.
If both olive and sesame oils are used in that place, sesame oil is
included in that same vow. And if sesame oil is the primary oil used in
that place, then olive oil is not included in one's vow.
As well,
the Gemara considers vows made at unusual times, including shemita, the
sabbatical year. Because the rules are different that year, assumptions are
different, too. If a person vows not to eat vegetables, for example, then
normally that refers to garden vegetables but not field vegetables. The
reverse is true during shemita, for garden vegetables cannot be used during the
shemita year, and so field vegetables are assumed to be the main source of
vegetable consumption. The Gemara also wonders about whether our Mishna
might be referring to differences that apply within and outside of Eretz
Yisrael.
A final
Mishna questions what is included when one vows to not to eat foods that are
included in commonly eaten foods - pounded beans or garlic in stew, for
example. Although they argue about guidelines, the rabbis lean toward
including ingredients that add substantively to the flavour of the dish. Similarly,
if the dish can be made without that ingredient, then the person who has vowed
not to eat that ingredient is permitted to eat the full dish.
Regarding
permitting the use of foods in unusual ways, the Gemara suggests that chewing
on raw beans should be allowed even if one has vowed not to eat beans.
This is because chewing on raw beans is so unusual that it would not have
been an intended part of the vow.
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