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Robert Reynolds
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Sapulpa, OK
Peter May
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Mon Mar 20, 2006 11:24 am
Snorbens, England
Maria Samms
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Thu Dec 28, 2006 8:42 pm
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Redwinger
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Wed Mar 22, 2006 2:36 pm
Way Down South In Indiana, USA
Karen/NoCA wrote:So, how do you eat your peas?
Carrie L.
Golfball Gourmet
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Thu Oct 12, 2006 8:12 am
Extreme Southwest & Extreme Northeast
Maria Samms wrote:or even worse, using a spoon to twirl, that just seems so wrong to me .
Alan Wolfe
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Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
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Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
Carrie L. wrote:Maria Samms wrote:or even worse, using a spoon to twirl, that just seems so wrong to me .
Is this not the traditional Italian way? I always assumed it was based on the soup spoon provided with the pasta course...?
In answer to Karen's questions, I almost always eat American style. That "left hand in the lap" thing is pretty hard to break free from. Rarely, I do eat European style and it tends to be when I'm eating steak in a restaurant, cutting small "polite" bites. I agree it looks much more sophisticated and efficient to eat that way.
The owners of three of the best-known Italian restaurants in Manhattan recently convened to feast on pasta and discuss just how and with what it should be eaten. The diners were Adi Giovanetti, proprietor of Il Nido, and his wife, Rosanna; Sirio Maccioni, owner of Le Cirque, and his wife, Egi, and Luigi Nanni, proprietor and chef of both Nanni's and Il Valetto.
As to the use of a fork plus a spoon for eating pasta, all those at the table were adamant. Spoons are for children, amateurs and people with bad table manners in general.
Egi Maccioni recalled her childhood days of eating pasta. ''My grandparents spent hours teaching me how to eat pasta without using a spoon, how to twirl my fork so that not a strand of spaghetti would be hanging down as I lifted that fork to my mouth.''
''At home,'' she added, ''if I couldn't master the technique, they'd punish me by taking all the food away.'' Is it improper to allow a few strands of pasta to hang down as it is transported to the mouth? ''If the pasta is cooked al dente,'' Mr. Nanni said, ''you are bound to have a few strands hanging.'' If the pasta fits that neatly around the fork, Mr. Giovanetti added, it is overcooked.
Mr. Nanni volunteered one exception to the no-spoon argument: ''If your sauce is very liquid - a juicy primavera, a clam sauce - you might use a spoon to prevent splattering.''
The first bowls of pasta, served with military sauce, were placed before each guest. Mr. Giovanetti forked his way into his bowl and demonstrated that the pasta, perfectly cooked, would not cling wraparound fashion to the fork. He ate with great relish.
It was generally agreed, however, that it is correct to place a spoon at each place setting. ''In Italy it is customary to first place the pasta in a bowl or on a plate,'' Mr. Giovanetti said. ''You then spoon the sauce on top and finally cheese, if you use it at all. You use your fork and spoon to toss the pasta with sauce and cheese, and you then eat it with your fork alone.''
Carrie L. wrote:Is this not the traditional Italian way? I always assumed it was based on the soup spoon provided with the pasta course...?
Karen/NoCA wrote:Interesting how many lefties are here. I am left hand dominate but was forced to use my right hand. My brother is left handed and so is my youngest son. It is said that left handed people are of superior intelligence. I read this somewhere.
Karen/NoCA wrote: It is said that left handed people are of superior intelligence. I read this somewhere.
Jo Ann Henderson
Mealtime Maven
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Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:34 am
Seattle, WA USA
Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
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Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
Stuart Yaniger wrote:Jo Ann, that brings up a personal sore point- apparently it is a MAJOR faux pas to use chopsticks in the left hand. I cannot use them in my right hand. This caused some consternation amongst Chinese when I was there, but what else am I supposed to do? Drop all my food in my lap? (my hosts said, "Yes, that's better.")
Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
8187
Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
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