Global Manners Make Foreign Food More Fun!
The kimono-clad waitress bows slightly and offers you a moist towel on a rattan tray. Uncertainty sets in. Now what? Moisten your mandible? Clean your clavicle? According to Marjabelle Stewart, mentor of manners, the moist towels, called “oshibori”and found in Japanese restaurants, are for cleaning the hands before dining.Mrs. Stewart is an expert on global globbling in good taste. She spent many years among foreign dignitaries in Washington, D.C., teaching the elite to eat with elan. Working with the chief of protocol, she advised families, who would be traveling abroad in an official capacity, on the proper manners for all kinds of occasions with a foreign flavor. Author of. several etiquette books, Mrs. Stewart is now emissary for the frozen potato people.
According to Mrs. Stewart, ethnic etiquette isn't only for the elite, however. Along with those who breakfast in Belgium, lunch in Liberia and sup in Spain, are millions who are discovering the delights of dining with a foreign flair in their own home towns. The ethnic eatery is the place to be seen. “And,” says Mrs. Stewart, “you’ll feel most comfortable if you’re seen partaking properly. What’s polite in Poughkeepsie could be rude in Rumania.”
For instance, in a Japanese restaurant it is considered correct to hold the rice bowl close to your mouth and, of course, to use chopsticks to carry the food to your waiting lips.
If you find yourself actually in Japan, be sure to say “Thank you” before and after the meal. You are expected to remove your shoes if there is a tatami (woven straw) mat on the floor, says Mrs. Stewart. In rural Japan the diner must keep eating all that is offered, even if he is full. And in all of Japan, slurping noises when eating indicate enjoyment.
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A Dutch “aardappellepel” or a potato spoon. It’s for serving potatoes. It is round with a lip on each side so designed to keep the potatoes from falling onto the table when they are being served. |
Mrs. Stewart reports that Continental manners are being seen more and more here in the States. “It's not at all unusual,” she says, “to see diners holding their forks in their left hands and their knives in their right hands, and eating with their left hands as they do in Europe.” Europeans also keep their right hands on the table, at about wrist length, instead of on their laps, which is considered rude.
If you are in a European eatery, don't expect to find a glass of water. You must ask for the water and the ice. But why bother? The wine that is served is bound to be delicious!
In Germany and Austria you’ll get a sandwich served on a little wooden board. Don't pick it up - use your knife and fork. Europeans eat nothing with their fingers… not even french fries. (“Of course,” asserts Mrs. Stewart, “in the United States, any way you eat a french fry is all right.”)
In Holland, or in Dutch restaurants in this country, you will find a fish fork and fish knife. The short, flat fork has three large tines. The wide, tapered knife is excellent for removing fish bones.
Another Dutch specialty is a potato spoon which is round with a lip on each side so designed to keep the potatoes from falling onto the table. Mrs. Stewart would like to see the potato spoon used in this country.
“No one should chance dropping a tater tot,” she said.
In Ethiopia, as in other Arab countries, one eats from a communal pot with the right hand. Since the left hand is used for sanitary purposes, this custom is adhered to strictly. Not too many years ago, an Ethiopian who ate with his left hand was punished by having his right (eating) hand cut off. He would then starve to death. And you thought your Mother was strict!
Our own state of Hawaii also has a dish eaten with fingers from a communal potpoi. Poi is a glutinous substance made from taro root. It is eaten by putting the index and middle finger in the pot and licking them off. Sharing poi is a very social thing to do ... much like eating fondue, which is. a Swiss dish.
Everyone likes to be social when they dine. The French have carried this to the extreme and aim for an air of style and elegance. A French meal can be a “masterpiece,” reports Mrs. Stewart. She says there is complete attention to detail with an “interweaving” of fine food, good company, sparkling conversation, beautiful service, fresh flowers, and the ever present wines.
However, a guest in a French home or restaurant need not be intimidated by the array of wine glasses and silverware.
Mrs. Stewart says, "The fork and large spoon at the top of the plate are for dessert. When the meal begins, start by using the silverware farthest from your plate and work your way in. Your dinner fork will be removed with your dinner plate. Your dinner knife should be left resting on the small crystal or silver knife holder and used again for the cheese course."
Even in a private home in France, there may be three or four wine glasses per left hand is used for sanitary purposes, this custom is adhered to strict- ly. Not too many years ago, an Ethiopian who ate with his left hand was punished by having his right (eating) hand cut off. He would then starve to death. And you thought your Mother was strict!
Our own state of Hawaii also has a dish eaten with fingers from a communal potpoi. Poi is a glutinous substance made from taro root. It is eaten by putting the index and middle finger in the pot and licking them off. Sharing poi is a very social thing to do ... much like eating fondue, which is. a Swiss dish.
Everyone likes to be social when they dine. The French have carried this to the extreme and aim for an air of style and elegance. A French meal can be a "masterpiece," reports Mrs. Stewart. She says there is complete attention to detail with an “interweaving” of fine food, good company, sparkling conversation, beautiful service, fresh flowers, and the ever present wines.
However, a guest in a French home or restaurant need not be intimidated by the array of wine glasses and silverware.
Mrs. Stewart says, “The fork and large spoon at the top of the plate are for dessert. When the meal begins, start by using the silverware farthest from your plate and work your way in. Your dinner fork will be removed with your dinner plate. Your dinner knife should be left resting on the small crystal or silver knife holder and used again for the cheese course.”
Even in a private home in France, there may be three or four wine glasses per person. Mrs. Stewart says, “In a French home it is considered rude to leave wine in a glass. However, it is perfectly permissible to signal the butler that you've had enough.
‘If you find yourself confused, watch what your hostess does,” advises Mrs. Stewart, “and just follow her lead.”
Course after course, the French meal goes on. It is not unusual for the meal to continue for 2½ hours. It is perfectly all right to smoke between the courses cigarettes only, no cigars and pipes.
Following dinner in France, the guests adjourn to the salon (living room) for coffee, brandy and bon bons. After an especially large meal, with many wines, cold orange juice is also served just before the guests depart.
Interestingly, the English divide the sexes after dinner. The men remain in the dining room for port and cigars while the ladies retire to the living room for coffee. In France, the men and women stay together for coffee and liquers.
Mrs. Stewart further advises that one never tips the maids who serve dinner in a European home, but, if you are a guest overnight, you are expected to leave a small tip on the dresser. — Rancho Cucamonga Times, 1978
🍽️Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber of The RSVP Institute of Etiquette, is the Site Editor of the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia













