Guide to Etiquette Basics

Table Manners Refresher Course

Experts in dining decorum weigh in on the social graces that make even the simplest meal a civilized affair

Table Manners Refresher Course
Anna Williams
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Utensil Etiquette Clues
How do I know which fork, knife, and spoon to use for what?
The general rule: Start from the outside and work your way in toward the plate as the meal progresses. Usually the big fork is for the entrée; the big spoon, for the soup. Any utensils placed horizontally above your plate are meant for dessert. (For a diagram of a formal table setting, go to www.mannersinternational.com.) But with creative modern food, you may need to get creative with utensils too. “With different textural elements on one plate—strands, puddles, solids—one utensil won’t necessarily serve all well,” says Alan Richman, a contributing writer for Bon Appétit and GQ. “I tend to grab what is functional.” When in doubt, “the host and hostess should be your guides,” says Dupree. “Use whatever they are using.” At a restaurant, though, everyone at the table might be stumped. William Grimes, former restaurant critic for the New York Times, once encountered “a strange device that looked like a medical plunger mechanism.” (He later learned that it was meant for handling a single stalk of asparagus.) “If you can’t tell what something is for, then it isn’t much of a tool, and it’s fine not to use it,” he says.


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