Chopstick etiquette: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Jump to: Main Page • Micropedia • Macropedia • Icons • Time Line • History • Life Lessons • Links • Help
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root
m (Text replacement - "East Asia" to "East Asia") |
m (Text replacement - "{{Page-ok|09/20}}" to "") |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Header|Chopstick etiquette 09/20}} | |||
==Chopstick etiquette== | ==Chopstick etiquette== | ||
[[Image:Chopsticks.jpg|thumb|right|Chopsticks]] | [[Image:Chopsticks.jpg|thumb|right|Chopsticks]] |
Latest revision as of 22:44, 30 November 2020
Chopstick etiquette
Forbidden is:
- Placing the chopsticks straightup into a bowl of food; this signals an offering to the deceased in East Asian cultures
- Pointing or gesturing with the chopsticks in hand
- Sticking the chopsticks into the food
- Licking the chopsticks or biting the food off the chopsticks
- Offering table members a taste of your meal using the chopsticks
- Accepting a bowl using the hand you use to hold your chopsticks
- Taking the food from the dish with the back of the chopsticks (not used for eating) to put it into your own bowl.
- Taking food from the far side of a dish.
Obligations are:
- Placing the chopsticks next to each other on the especially intended holder when you pause or finish eating
- A bowl of soup or rice can be picked up to decrease the distance between food and mouth (to prevent spilling).[1]
- Taking the food in each dish starting from the side nearer to you.
Placement of the chopsticks
The correct handling of chopsticks goes as follows:
- The lower chopstick is to be placed between thumb and hand, the end is kept in place using the ring finger. The lower chopstick should not move while picking food.
- The upper chopstick balances on the thumb and is moved up and down using the middle and/or forefinger.
Protocol / Manners / Etiquette related topics | |
---|---|
Protocol | Formal Dinner • Formal Dinner Utensils • Workshops • Formal Four • Protocol: By definition -- |
Manners | Formal Four • Manners • Social grace • Table manners |
Etiquette | Etiquette • Chopstick etiquette • Fork etiquette |
Play Party Etiquette | Etiquette for the scene • Master/slave Dinner Party • Dungeon Etiquette • Play Party Etiquette • Play Party Etiquette - asb • Play Party Etiquette - Lauren • Public play • SCONY • Sirens Party |
Chat rooms • What links here • Copyright info • Contact information • Category:Root
- ↑ Etiquette in het buitenland by Kevin Strubbe, Liesbeth Hobert