Study Menachot folio 104A with parallel Hebrew-English text, traditional commentary, and modern study tools. Free access to Babylonian Talmud online.
R' Beivai concludes: And that man, i.e., I, relies on a baker. Therefore, my mind is not sufficiently settled to answer the question properly.
The Talmud asks: What conclusion was reached about this question? Rav Yosef said: R' Yehuda was the halakhic decisor of the house of the Nasi, and he instructed them according to his tradition that the blood of an animal carcass is impure.
As we learned in a baraita: R' Yehuda says that 6 matters are among the leniencies of Beit Shammai and among the stringencies of Beit Hillel. They include the blood of a carcass, which Beit Shammai deem ritually pure, as in their opinion only the flesh of a carcass imparts impurity; and Beit Hill
Mishnah: One does not pledge a libation of one log, two log, or 5 log of wine, because there are no existing libations with those measures of wine. But one pledges a libation of 3 log, which is the measure of wine brought with a lamb, or 4 log, which is the measure of wine brought with a ram, or 6
Talmud: A dilemma was raised before the rabbis: Is there a fixed amount for libations, in that when one vows to bring a certain number of log of wine they are not offered separately, or is there no fixed amount for libations, and it is permitted to divide them and offer them in smaller amounts?