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In light of this quarantine, If someone is spending shabbat at non-observant relatives and the house is not kosher. If the person runs out of paper plates, would he be able to eat from a glass plate that had had non-kosher food on it at one point in the past as long as it was thoroughly washed so there are no visible stains (which is permissible unless I am mistaken according to Sephardic authorities).

Note that this assumes that the person was unable to run to the store to buy new paper plates.

sabbahillel
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user20924
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  • A number of kashrut agencies have guidance on the web (e.g., OU, StarK, CRC) and talk about such topics. Look for terms such as hot, cold, sharp, ben-yomo, ano ben-yomo. For example, https://oukosher.org/halacha-yomis/term-aino-ben-yomo-mean/ – Yehuda W Mar 27 '20 at 20:39
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    Why close this question and not close some questions you yourself asked, e.g.: https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/106956/outdoor-prayer-facing-rainbow
    • Should they face the wrong direction? Proceed as usual? Delay?

    https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/65628/minimum-amount-of-food-for-beracha-rishona

    • How much would one need to eat in order to say a Beracha Rishona

    https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/14213/tevilat-keilim-on-a-gift https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/16513/can-a-woman-drink-the-kos-shel-bracha

    – Yehuda W Mar 29 '20 at 01:09
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    Agreed. This question is a great question and has a lot of potential for answers. I agree with @YehudaW that this should be reopened. – Eliyahu Mar 31 '20 at 01:25

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