Take One Daf Yomi

Tablet Magazine
undefined
Mar 27, 2026 • 7min

Menachot 75 and 76 - Baking Is Just Making a Bomb, Slowly

On today's pages, Menachot 75 and 76, the Talmud gets precise about how oil is mixed into loaves and smeared onto wafers for the meal offering — and one small detail stops us cold: the priest was instructed to smear the oil across the wafer in the shape of the Greek letter chi, essentially drawing a large X with his fingers. It raises a question about whether Jewish observance is really as rule-bound and mechanical as we sometimes assume. Can a single stroke of oil on a cracker be an act of genuine creative expression? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 26, 2026 • 9min

Menachot 74 - Piped Dreams

On today's page, Menachot 74, the Talmud's discussion of drainpipes beneath the altar opens into a sweeping story about King David, a rising flood, a scheming advisor, and fifteen Psalms sung to pull the world back from the brink. At the center of it all is a king who knew what to do about the flood, but waited anyway, because his rabbi was in the room. The drainpipes, it turns out, are a metaphor — two small holes that channel everything fearsome so the waters never overwhelm us. What are the two things we need to keep the flood at bay? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 25, 2026 • 6min

Menachot 73 - Sharing is Caring

On today’s page, Menachot 73, the Talmud outlines a strict protocol for the Kohanim: the meal offering must be divided equally, and no priest can trade his portion for another. While this prevents the Temple from becoming a marketplace of transactions, it also reveals a profound understanding of human psychology. By ensuring everyone partakes in the exact same experience, the rabbis created a "soulful community" that protected against isolation. How can the simple act of sharing an experience—whether a meal or a moment—fundamentally change how we feel? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 24, 2026 • 7min

Menachot 72 - Caviar Is Easy, Toast Will Cost You Everything

On today's page, Menachot 72, the Talmud opens a new chapter on meal offerings and lands on one of its most quietly moving ideas: that the poor person who brought a handful of flour to the Temple was considered to have offered his very soul, because he gave what he could barely afford to lose. From there, a line from Ian Fleming and a conversation between a businessman and a billionaire both point to the same truth. It's never hard to be generous with the caviar. Why is the toast always the real test? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 23, 2026 • 8min

Menachot 70 and 71 - The Nightmare Before Passover

On today’s pages, Menachot 70 and 71, we jump into the most hotly contested debate in the history of the Seder table: can you eat rice on Passover? While the Torah defines chametz through five specific grains, the evolution of Kitniyot—the custom of avoiding legumes and rice—has created a deep cultural divide between Ashkenazi and Sephardic traditions. Producer Josh Kross joins the show to recount the life-changing night he discovered a whole new world of Passover treats that his ancestors never dreamed of. How can a simple bowl of rice transform our understanding of the "correct" way to celebrate freedom? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 20, 2026 • 8min

Menachot 68 and 69 - The Elephant in the Restroom

On today’s pages, Menachot 68 and 69, the Talmud asks a question only the rabbis could devise: What happens to the ritual purity of a basket that has been swallowed—and then excreted—by an elephant? While it sounds like a 12-year-old boy's punchline, this debate about "poop-adjacent" utensils serves a serious purpose. It challenges us to look past the technical status of our "tools" and remember the actual goals of our service. When we become so obsessed with the purity of the object, how do we avoid losing the scent of the sacred? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 19, 2026 • 7min

Menachot 67 - Smooth Operators

On today’s page, Menachot 67, the rabbis deliver a masterclass in ancient economic policy through the process of Meruach—the "smoothing" or cleaning of a grain pile. The Talmud navigates a complex loophole: can a Jewish merchant avoid tithing his grain by having a Gentile "smooth" the pile for him? While the law seeks to prevent "financial chicanery," it reveals a deep respect for private property and hard work. In a world of clever financial workarounds, how can the ancient struggle between divine ownership and human means help us navigate our modern pursuit of wealth? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 18, 2026 • 12min

Menachot 66 - A Soul-Stretching Countdown

Kylie Unel, creator of 49 Days to Stretch My Soul and journalist exploring Jewish spiritual practice, revisits her Elul-origin journey and the Sefirat HaOmer. She frames the seven-week count as a tool for soul-stretching. Kylie discusses the Arizal’s seven-sephirot framework, making sacred time personally meaningful, and practical ways to plan a seven-week practice.
undefined
Mar 17, 2026 • 8min

Menachot 65 - 10 Things I Know "As a Jew"

On today’s page, Menachot 65, we learn that the members of the Great Sanhedrin were held to an almost unfathomable standard: they had to be masters of all 70 languages so they would never need a translator. This page challenges us to reconsider the depth of our learning in a modern world where anyone can claim authority with a simple "as a Jew." This episode features the viral "Basic Jewish Literacy Test", which you can find in full at this link: Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin’s 10 Questions. How can we return to a culture of high standards for communal representation? Listen and find out.
undefined
Mar 16, 2026 • 8min

Menachot 63 and 64 - How to Lose a Dynasty in One Easy Step

On today's pages, Menachot 63 and 64, the Talmud drops us into one of Jewish history's most painful moments — a civil war between two Hasmonean brothers, each besieging the other for the throne of Jerusalem. What's remarkable is that even in the middle of their war, both sides kept sending up animals for the daily Temple offering, because some things matter more than politics. Then an old man with a good Greek education showed up and ruined everything. What happens when smart people give the worst possible advice? Listen and find out.

The AI-powered Podcast Player

Save insights by tapping your headphones, chat with episodes, discover the best highlights - and more!
App store bannerPlay store banner
Get the app