Lady Jessica
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 243
- Location
- Southern California
Thanks Sally and Cecil. I was pretty sure... but not a hundred percent.
Well, that way of holding a fork is the only right wayTalbot said:I hope I didn't come off in my previous post sounding like you should only hold your knife and fork a certain way. Thats the way I was taught, but different cultures have different manners.
Its kind of like hearing English people complain about Americans not speaking the Queens English. Why should you, she's not your Queen.
I say if you want to use your fork as a spoon, its OK with me. When I'm in the States, I do too. When in Rome.
You Did WHAT?lol
In TEXAS as in other "STEAK" States, the use of "ANY" sort of condiment on your steak is a Cardinal SIN !
$ally said:I assume it means reaching in front of someone for a serving dish, rather than asking others to pass it?
Talbot said:When I scooped a small amount of mustard onto the plate next to the steak, people's eyes at the table nearly popped out of thier head. Stunned. Awkward. Silence.
If there had been a piano player, he would have stopped playing, too.
Dear Agony Aunt, What was my gaffe?
Foofoogal said:I was allowed to drink wine and beer at the meals and though not advocating it of course I learned it could be done with certain guidelines. I found it quite a valuable lesson later when friends went nuts in high school.
LizzieMaine said:Exactly. So called because it was the usual way of dining at the communal table in boarding houses. We sat at a very small table, so everything was within arm's-reach of everyone. Usually it was salt, butter, or ketchup we were reaching for -- when there was a serving dish, my grandmother usually went around with it and dished out the food like the lunchroom waitress she had once been. And you better eat every bit of it, beause you're not leaving the table till you do.
I cut my food with the knife in my left hand, but I don't switch the knife and fork afterwards. My excuse? I'm left handed. Those pesky cutting rules obviously being written by a righteous righty.donCarlos said:Well, that way of holding a fork is the only right way
One question: I heard scary stories about american way of eating. I heard that they somewhere eat with fork only in right hand. They cut the meal with the fork in their left hand, then they put it in their right hand and put it in their mouth. Has anyone ever seen such a barbarity?
donCarlos said:One question: I heard scary stories about american way of eating. I heard that they somewhere eat with fork only in right hand. They cut the meal with the fork in their left hand, then they put it in their right hand and put it in their mouth. Has anyone ever seen such a barbarity?
Lily Powers said:I And I don't know if this is considered manners or just an odd quirk, but I absolutely cannot leave my cloth napkin piled in a wad on the table after I've finished eating. I fold it neatly into a rectangle and place it alongside the dinner plate.
scotrace said:Note that Talbot later said that everyone else buttered their steak with the mustard, so it wasn't the use of it that was the problem. Talbot did it correctly.
Feng_Li said:...But Cody Pendant: Completely bare? Do you mean grilled meat, with absolutely nothing on it, or bare as it comes from the grill, where it has presumably at least received some salt?
Lily Powers said:I had a friend who thought nothing of dining out and letting her 3-year old run from table to table in the restaurant and engaging other diners in the middle of their conversations, yelling, just generally being a little kid, but in an environment where it wasn't appropriate. It was very embarrassing and obviously irritating to the other people.
Widebrim said:What is really inexplicable is flossing in public. Has anybody else seen this?
Sefton said:I cut my food with the knife in my left hand, but I don't switch the knife and fork afterwards. My excuse? I'm left handed. Those pesky cutting rules obviously being written by a righteous righty.