<div dir="ltr"><div>Let's begin with what we agree on: I think that every Shomer Mitzvos understands the need for gezeros and minhagim, such as those that protect people from accidentally using flour in a way that they mistakenly think is acceptable on Pesach. The disagreements will be over how restrictive those measures should be.<br><br>I wrote:<br>: So what new problem has arisen with "farfel, bread sticks etc"?<br>: Whatever arguments you have against them today existed 200<br>: years ago also, and they were rejected by communities that ate<br>: gebroks.<br><br>and R' Micha Berger responded:<br>> No, we didn't have factory kitchens making gebrochts bread sticks<br>> that seem exactly like real ones. (If not of your favorite brand.)<br>> This really is a recent development.<br><br>Are you suggesting that the frozen non-gebroks pancakes that I can buy in the store today are a bigger problem than the matza meal pancakes that my mother made at home?<br><br>I'm sorry, but I can't buy that. It is true that today's factory kitchens allow an amazing variety of technologies and abilities, including products that are almost indistinguishable from regular bread. But I maintain that this does NOT translate to an increased chance that someone will mix flour and water in their home kitchen, precisely because the factory and home are so far apart - both geographically and sociologically.<br><br>If someone is enticed by the quality of a store-bought breadstick or pizza slice, I cannot imagine that they would attempt to duplicate it at home nowadays without a recipe. Seeing a breaded chicken cutlet at one's neighbor's home *IS* something that you might duplicate in your own home, and there is great danger there. But I just don't see that happening with factory-made goods. Anyone who is awed by the quality will read the box to figure out how they managed such a feat, and they will immediately see the potato and tapioca listed. (But I am willing to listen to other arguments.)<br><br>My suspicion is that the anti-potato sentiments may have originated in the non-gebroks sectors. Pesach pizza and pancakes are very new to them, and I suppose I can understand their concern. But among those who have been eating gebroks for generations, I just don't understand why these new products bother them.<br><br></div>Akiva Miller<br></div><div id="DAB4FAD8-2DD7-40BB-A1B8-4E2AA1F9FDF2"><br>
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