Is Balut Halal? What You Need To Know
Advertisements
Is Balut halal? Balut is a dish that is popular in many Southeast Asian countries, particularly the Philippines.
According to information gathered online, balut is an egg that has been incubated for only 18 days, during which they get a real embryo with a primitive skeleton.
When the egg reaches the age of 16-20 days, it is ready to be taken to market, where it will be boiled for thousands of customers who enjoy this food.
This depends on the size of the egg. The egg that is 18 days old is the best. The sellers wash the eggs thoroughly with sponges, then when they are perfectly clean, they are put in a pot and boiled.
Is Balut Halal?
No, Balut is not halal. With regard to the ruling on eating the egg with the embryo that is not fully developed, the ruling is that it is haram, because it comes under the heading of eating maytah (something that has died without being slaughtered properly). Eating maytah is definitely haram according to Islam.
Advertisements
The scholars of the Standing Committee for Issuing Fatwas were asked about the ruling on eating this egg and they ruled that it is haraam.
Read Is Chicken Halal? Everything You Need To Know
They were asked:
When we visited the Philippines, we noticed that the people of that country commonly eat a dish they call balut. This is a chicken egg that is placed in an incubator until it develops the form of a small chick with all its features. Three days before the egg is peeled, they cook the egg in water until it is done, then they break the egg and eat the chick that is inside it.
Please advise us of the ruling on eating this food.
Advertisements
They replied:
If the situation is as described, then the chick is regarded as maytah (something that died without being properly slaughtered) and it is not permissible to eat it, because it had taken shape inside the egg, and the prohibition on maytah is something that is well known and well established in Islam. End quote.
Shaykh ‘Abd al-‘Azeez Aal al-Shaykh, Shaykh ‘Abd-Allah ibn Ghadyaan, Shaykh Saalih al-Fawzaan, Shaykh Bakr Abu Zayd
Fataawa al-Lajnah al-Daa’imah (22/305)
And Allah knows best.
Adopted from Islamqa website.
The Quran forbids consumption of meat if the animal has not been slaughtered properly, making the animal or animal-product “maytah”.
Because balut is an egg containing a partly-developed embryo, this makes it “haram”, or “forbidden”
Advertisements