Study Bava Batra folio 95B with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
Rav Zevid concludes: And this is the case of the storeroom, i.e., the cellar, that A baraita states in the Mishnah. It is clear from this baraita both that it contradicts the suggested addition to the previous baraita, and that the Mishnah concerns a case where one specified which wine cellar he w
Rather, as indicated by the baraita, the Mishnah also concerns a case where one says to the buyer: I am selling you this particular cellar, and because he specified a particular cellar the buyer accepts upon himself the possibility that up to 10 jugs per 100 might be sour.
Having retracted the addition to the first baraita, the Talmud asks: If so, it is difficult to reconcile the first baraita, which rules that if the seller specified that he was selling this cellar, he must provide wine that is all of good quality, with the second baraita, that of Rav Zevid, which ru
The Talmud answers: This is not difficult. This baraita is referring to a case where the buyer said to him that he needs the wine for cooking, and therefore he requires good-quality wine, whereas that baraita is referring to a case where the buyer did not say to him that he needs the wine for cooki
The Talmud concludes: Therefore, the halakha is that if one said that he is selling: A wine cellar, and the buyer said to him: I need the wine for cooking, then the seller is obligated to give him wine that is all of good quality. If one said that he is selling: This particular wine cellar, and t