

Take One Daf Yomi
Tablet Magazine
As Jews around the world engage in a seven-and-a-half year cycle of Daf Yomi, reading the entire Talmud one page per day, Tablet Magazine's new podcast, Take One, will offer a brief and evocative daily read of the daf, in just about 10 minutes. New episodes will be released daily Monday through Friday.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jan 21, 2026 • 7min
Menachot 10 - Ding-Dang Doodily Disqualified
The discussion dives into the significance of intentions behind sacrifices, contrasting those from the righteous and sinners. Leah highlights the Mishnah ruling that a left-handed Kohen invalidates offerings, exploring biblical meanings of 'hand.' The symbolism of mercy and justice plays a crucial role, linking right-handedness to compassion. Cultural biases against left-handers and modern resistance are examined with a humorous touch. Ultimately, the takeaway urges listeners to prioritize mercy over strict justice in both rituals and daily life.

Jan 20, 2026 • 19min
Menachot 9 - Moses of Mixology
On today’s page, Menachot 9, the rabbis debate whether a meal offering is invalidated if its ingredients are mixed outside the Temple courtyard. This technical inquiry into when a mixture reaches its full potency serves as a backdrop for a deeper look at the American cocktail and its "founding father," Jerry Thomas. Can a return to simple, strong traditions save us from a modern spiritual crisis? Listen and find out.

Jan 19, 2026 • 7min
Menachot 7 and 8 - Sanctifying Lunch
On today’s pages, Menachot 7 and 8, the Talmud debates whether holiness can take hold when a sacrifice is offered in parts rather than all at once. Joined by Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin, Liel explores how sanctity doesn’t require a perfect vessel—only a moment worth consecrating—recorded over a very good meal at Dougie’s BBQ. If holiness can emerge in the middle of lunch, conversation, and everyday life, what excuse do we have for not finding it there? Listen and find out.

Jan 16, 2026 • 7min
Menachot 5 and 6 - Inquiring Minds
On today’s page, Menachot 5, a disagreement about the Omer offering leads the rabbis to slow down and ask what this ritual is actually meant to accomplish. By questioning whether intention, validity, and even sacrificial status apply in the usual way, the discussion turns ritual into an invitation to inquire rather than comply. If the Torah wants us not just to perform commandments but to interrogate their purpose, how should that shape the way we live with them? Listen and find out.

4 snips
Jan 15, 2026 • 10min
Menachot 4 - True Possession
Discover the deep meaning behind the omer offering, emphasizing generosity and gratitude over ownership. Explore Rav's ruling on the significance of intent in rituals. Learn about Maimonides' vivid description of the communal harvest ceremony. Delve into the symbolism of offering the first fruits to God, securing future blessings. Finally, reflect on how true possession is about giving and recognizing that everything ultimately belongs to a higher power.

Jan 14, 2026 • 8min
Menachot 3 - Returning to Intention
On today’s page, Menachot 3, the Talmud opens its discussion of meal offerings by examining when a handful of flour taken from an offering is valid or invalid depending on whether it was taken “for its own sake.” Rather than launching into new themes, the tractate underscores a core idea we’ve seen before: even the best offering fails without the right intention behind it. What does it teach us about the place of mindful purpose in ritual — and in life? Listen and find out.

Jan 13, 2026 • 8min
Menachot 2 - A Fistful of Divinity
On today’s page, Menachot 2, the Talmud turns from blood and slaughter to a quieter sacrificial world shaped by grain offerings. Rabbi David Bashevkin helps frame this shift as a move from spectacle to intention, where sanctity emerges through restraint and measure. Can holiness rooted in limitation rival the drama of the altar’s fire and blood? Listen and find out.

Jan 12, 2026 • 14min
Zevachim 119 and 120 - The Small Aleph
On today’s pages, Zevachim 119 and 120, we reach the conclusion of the tractate and step back to ask what the entire world of sacrificial worship has been teaching us all along. Rabbi David Bashevkin joins us to reflect on why the Talmud insists on studying offerings in a modern world that resists them—and how a single diminished letter at the start of Leviticus reframes existence itself as a response to a divine call. What does it mean to live in a world of purpose rather than coincidence? Listen and find out.

Jan 9, 2026 • 11min
Zevachim 117 and 118 - Those Divine Shoulders
On today’s pages, Zevachim 117 and 118, a poetic verse in Deuteronomy becomes a timeline of Jewish history, tracing how divine presence is experienced across eras. Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin helps us explore the shift from miraculous protection to mature partnership—and why the messianic vision is one of clarity rather than concealment. How does holiness change as we grow into it? Listen and find out.

Jan 8, 2026 • 6min
Zevachim 116 - Turning Tricks into Trust
On today’s page, Zevachim 116, the rabbis tell the unlikely story of Rahav, a woman defined by disgrace who transforms the very tools of her past into instruments of redemption. The Presidentscher Rav, Dr. Tevi Troy, joins us to explore how missteps, public failure, and even humiliation can become the raw material for leadership—and why the ability to reverse a narrative matters as much in politics as it does in the Bible. How do you turn your worst chapter into your greatest credential? Listen and find out.


