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What kind of wine, can I fill Sabbath cups with?
Sabbath cups can be filled with any kind of wine, provided two rules are kept:
It isn't libation wine - in old times, wine was given as offering to pagan deities. It is forbidden, since then, to use wine which was handled by gentiles, unless it is a cooked wine (Mevushal). Sabbath cups can be filled with wine, even if it isn't cooked, as long as the bottle was sealed.
Sabbath cups must be filled with fresh wine - Sabbath cups cannot be filled with wine, which someone already sipped from. Such wine is deemed tainted. In order to use such wine, it is enough to mix with it an untainted wine (even a drop is enough), to render it ok. If you do not have wine in your position, or the wine you have isn't Kosher, Sabbath cups can be filled with grape juice.
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The Kiddush cup:
Every Saturday eve, Jewish people are ordered to bless the 'coming in' of the Saturday, by reciting a blessing over a Kiddush cup.
The word Kiddush in Kiddush cup comes from Hebrew. Kiddush means to make something holy out of something mundane (lekaddesh). Kiddush cup is the Jewish wine cup that Jews use, in order to bless over the wine.
Are there rules regarding Jewish wine cups?
Jewish wine cups come in a variety of sizes and forms. Jewish wine cups can be made of many materials. The most important thing about Jewish wine cups is their minimum size: Jewish wine cups must be at least 4 1/2 ounces.
A second rule about Jewish wine cups, which is of similar importance, is that they can not be made of a disposable material (paper cup, for instance, cannot serve as Jewish wine cups).
The third rule regarding Kiddush cups is that they have to be complete - Kiddush cups which are chipped, broken or malformed, can no longer serve as Kiddush cups. For this reason, it is important to treat Kiddush cups with cautious, and to examine the Kiddush cup for hidden cracks prior to the incantations of Kabalat Sabbath (the coming in of the Sabbath, in Hebrew) blessings.
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