Chopsticks
(筷子, "kuàizi",
"quick little fellows") are short tapered sticks used in pairs of
equal length.Generally believed to have originated in ancient
China, they can also be found in some areas of Tibet and Nepal that are close to Han Chinese
populations. Chopsticks are most commonly made of wood, bamboo or plastic, but
are also made of metal, bone, ivory. Chopsticks are held in the dominant hand,
between the thumb and fingers, and used to pick up pieces of food.
Some of the most important rules to remember
when dining
with chopsticks are as follows:
- Hold your chopsticks towards their end, not in the middle or the front third.
- When you are not using your chopsticks, or have finished eating, lay them down in front of you with the tips to left.
- Do not stick chopsticks into your food, especially not into rice. This is only done at funerals with rice that is put onto the altar.
- Do not pass food directly from your set of chopsticks to another's. Again, this is a funeral tradition that involves the bones of a cremated body.
- Do not spear food with your chopsticks.
- Do not point with your chopsticks.
- Do not wave your chopsticks around in the air or play with them.
- Do not move plates or bowls around with your chopsticks.
- To separate a piece of food in two, exert controlled pressure on the chopsticks while moving them apart from each other in order to tear the food. This takes some practice. With larger pieces of food such as tempura, it is also acceptable to pick up the entire piece with your chopsticks, and take a bite.
- If you have already eaten with your chopsticks, use the opposite end to take food from a shared plate.
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