Talmud Bavli
Talmud Bavli

Tosefta for Chullin 220:15

מ"ש למיסר נפשה דלא מיבעיא לך דתנן

When he [R'Safra] returned, Abaye said to him: 'I had no doubt at all that it, itself, was forbidden;<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' It is certainly permitted because it is discharging blood all the time during the cooking and will not absorb at all.');"><sup>3</sup></span>

Tosefta Terumot

Rabbi Yosei says, we may pickle terumah onions in chullin vinegar, *but we may not pickle terumah onions in terumah vinegar (*MS Erfurt omits "but...vinegar"), and it goes without saying that chullin onions in terumah vinegar [is forbidden]. Rabbi Akiva says, all [foods] cooked together are permitted with meat (but see Ter. 10:11, "except with meat"). [Terumah] meat [cooked] with [chullin] meat is forbidden, and all [foods] that are [both] cooked and mixed together (following MS Erfurt), behold, they are forbidden. Rabbi Eliezer says, liver renders [other foods] forbidden, and *is rendered forbidden [by other foods]. [*Note: per MS Erfurt, "is not rendered forbidden," see also Ter. 10:11.] Rabbi Yishmael son of Rabbi Yochanan ben Berokah says, stewed [liver] renders [other foods] forbidden and is not rendered forbidden [by other foods]. Boiled [liver] renders [other foods] forbidden and is rendered forbidden [by other foods].
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