Etiquette - Chopsticks
 


Home


Etiquette
Food

Table manners
Restaurants
Dining out
Popular dishes

 

Travel
Vacations
Travel Planning
Car Rental
Airline Tickets
Hotel Reservations
Las Vegas
Travel Agent
Adventure Travel
Cheap Airfare

Some of the most important chopstick rules are:

  • Hold your chopsticks towards their end, and not in the middle or the front third.

  • When you are not using your chopsticks and when you are finished eating, lay them down in front of you with the tip to left.

  • Do not stick chopsticks into your food, especially not into rice. Only at funerals are chopsticks stuck into the rice that is put onto the altar.

  • Do not pass food with your chopsticks directly to somebody else's chopsticks. Only at funerals are the bones of the cremated body given in that way from person to person.

  • Do not spear food with your chopsticks.

  • Do not point with your chopsticks to something or somebody.

  • Do not move your chopsticks around in the air too much, nor play with them.

  • Do not move around plates or bowls with chopsticks.

  • To separate a piece of food into two pieces, exert controlled pressure on the chopsticks while moving them apart from each other. This needs much exercise.

  • If you have already used your chopsticks, use the opposite end of your chopsticks in order to move food from a shared plate to your own plate.

Knife and fork are used for Western food only. Spoons are sometimes used to eat Japanese dishes that are difficult to eat with chopsticks, for example some donburi dishes or Japanese style curry rice. A Chinese style ceramic spoon is sometimes used to eat soups.

Click here for more information about Japanese table manners.

Ogasawara-ryu
The web site of the traditional Ogasawara School of Etiquette.
Chopsticks (hashi) (Hiro's Homepage)
How to hold them and other information.
visit the link directory for more links

A Dictionary of Japanese Food
A Dictionary of Japanese Food
Book by Richard Hosking
What's What in Japanese Restaurants
Book by Robb Satterwhite
A Taste of Japan: Food Fact and Fable What the People Eat Customs and Etiquette
Book by Donald Richie
The Simple Guide to Japan Customs & Etiquette
Book by Helmut Morsbach

Favorite Links           

Wedding Favors

Japanese Gifts

 
February 6, 2003
Home
Created by Kinboshi Media - Web Application Development
Copyright © 1996-2003 Kinboshi Media All rights reserved
site map, privacy policy, advertising